John Wagner
Documents of Shakespeare's England
John Wagner
Documents of Shakespeare's England
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This engaging collection of over 60 primary document selections sheds light on the personalities, issues, events, and ideas that defined and shaped life in England during the years of Shakespeare's life and career. Documents of Shakespeare's England contains more than 60 primary document selections that will help readers understand all aspects of life in Elizabethan and Jacobean England. The book is divided into 12 topical sections, such as Politics and Parliament, London Life, and Queen and Court, which offer five document selections each. Each document is preceded by a detailed introduction…mehr
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This engaging collection of over 60 primary document selections sheds light on the personalities, issues, events, and ideas that defined and shaped life in England during the years of Shakespeare's life and career. Documents of Shakespeare's England contains more than 60 primary document selections that will help readers understand all aspects of life in Elizabethan and Jacobean England. The book is divided into 12 topical sections, such as Politics and Parliament, London Life, and Queen and Court, which offer five document selections each. Each document is preceded by a detailed introduction that puts the selection into historical context and explains why it is important. A general introduction and chronology help readers understand Shakespeare's England in broad terms and see connections, causes, and consequences. Bibliographies of current and useful print and electronic information resources accompany each document, and a general bibliography lists seminal works on Shakespeare's England. This is an engaging and accurate introduction to the England of William Shakespeare told in the words of those who experienced it.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: ABC-CLIO
- Seitenzahl: 328
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Oktober 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 260mm x 183mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 814g
- ISBN-13: 9781440867415
- ISBN-10: 1440867410
- Artikelnr.: 56788010
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: ABC-CLIO
- Seitenzahl: 328
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Oktober 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 260mm x 183mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 814g
- ISBN-13: 9781440867415
- ISBN-10: 1440867410
- Artikelnr.: 56788010
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
John lives with his wife, Mary in Wisconsin. He enjoys spending time with his four adult children, playing golf, listening to sermons and Bible studies on the radio, and talking with others about the peace that can be found in Jesus regardless of the challenges life may bring.
Preface
Acknowledgments
Evaluating and Interpreting Primary Documents
Introduction: Shakespeare's England
Chronology
Chapter 1 Society and Family
1. "It Was Ordained for a Remedy against Sin": The Marriage Ceremony as
Mandated by the Book of Common Prayer (1559)
2. "Give Yourself to Be Merry": Sir Henry Sidney's Advice to His Son,
Philip Sidney (c. 1566)
3. "They Have Invented Such Strange Fashions": Philip Stubbes's Description
of Elizabethan Barbers (1583)
4. "Sorrows Draw Not the Dead, to Life, But the Living to Death": Sir
Walter Raleigh's Letter of Comfort to Sir Robert Cecil upon the Death of
Cecil's Wife (1597)
5. "One Sharp and Discrete Word Is Sufficient": John Dod and Robert Cleaver
on Proper Household Relations between Husbands and Wives, Masters and
Servants (1598)
Chapter 2 Economy and Work
6. "That Certain Abuses Might Be Suppressed": Regulating the Trade of Cloth
in the Town of Beverley (1561)
7. "A Convenient Proportion of Wages": Parliament Enacts a Uniform Labor
Code-the Statute of Artificers (1563)
8. "How Our Maltbugs Lug at This Liquor": William Harrison on Grain Buying
in Country Markets (1577)
9. "They Will Not Buy Any Thing of Our Country-Men": The Economic Impact of
Immigration on the London Economy (1593)
10. "Is Not Bread There?": The Anger over Monopolies (1601)
Chapter 3 Politics and Parliament
11. "A Place of Free Speech": Freedom of Debate in Parliament (1562, 1576)
12. "His Word Is a Law": Sir Thomas Smith Describes the Power and Position
of the English Monarch (c. 1565)
13. "A Coronet on Her Head": John Hooker's Account of the Dissolution of a
Session of Parliament (1571)
14. "The Place of Secretary Is Dreadful": William Cecil, Lord Burghley,
Describes the Duties and Requirements of the Office of Secretary of State
(c. 1571)
15. "He Is the Eye and the Head of the Whole Commonweal": John Hooker's
Description of the Duties of the Mayor and City Recorder of Exeter (1584)
Chapter 4 Queen and Court
16. "Comely Rather Than Handsome": Descriptions of the Young Princess and
the Aging Queen (1557, 1598)
17. "A Fresh Delicate Harmony of Flutes": The Queen on Progress-Robert,
Earl of Leicester, Entertains the Queen at Kenilworth Castle (1575)
18. "In His Clown's Apparel": The Comic Actor Richard Tarlton All about the
Court (1580s)
19. "Being Much Moved to Be So Challenged in Public": Queen Elizabeth
Schools the Malapert Polish Ambassador (1597)
20. "I Have Reigned with Your Loves": The Queen's Valedictory-the "Golden
Speech" (1601)
Chapter 5 Anglicans, Puritans, and Catholics
21. "The Queen's Highness Is the Only Supreme Governor of This Realm":
Framing the Anglican Religious Settlement (1559)
22. "Elizabeth, the Pretended Queen of England": Pope Pius V Excommunicates
and Deposes Queen Elizabeth-and the Consequences for English Catholics
(1570, 1582)
23. "To Wash His Hands in the Protestants' Blood": News of a Catholic Plot
to Assassinate the Queen and Bring in the Spanish (1570)
24. "Brought Many to Great Disobedience": The Bishops Wrestle with Growing
Puritan Activity in the Counties (1573, 1581)
25. "Which We Do Barbarously Call Sunday": Puritans Petition the Queen in
the Commons for a Church Organized Along Presbyterian Lines (1585)
Chapter 6 Literature, Plays, and Poetry
26. "I Aske of God a Vengeance on Thy Bones": Historical Complaint
Literature-The Poetry of A Mirror for Magistrates (1563)
27. "None More Witty Than Euphues": John Lyly Writes Popular Elizabethan
Romance Novels (1579, 1580)
28. "In the Defence of That My Unelected Vocation": Sir Philip Sidney
Defends Poetry and the Theater against Their Critics (c. 1583)
29. "Why Made You Night to Cover Sin?": Thomas Kyd Writes Popular
Elizabethan Tragedy (1592)
30. "I Fill'd the Gaols with Bankrupts in a Year": The Popular and
Influential Plays of Christopher Marlowe (1592, 1594)
Chapter 7 William Shakespeare's Life and Works
31. "I Love What Others Do Abhor": The Sonnets (c. 1576, 1609)
32. "Mine Arm Is Like a Blasted Sapling": William Shakespeare and His
Sources-the Second Edition of Holinshed's Chronicle (1587) and Richard III
(c. 1592-1593)
33. "For the Recreation of Our Loving Subjects": King James I Licenses
William Shakespeare's Theatrical Company (1603)
34. "My Second Best Bed": William Shakespeare's Will (1616)
35. "He Was a Happy Imitator of Nature": The First Folio Edition of
Shakespeare's Works (1623)
Chapter 8 London Life
36. "And Never More Me Name": Poet Isabella Whitney Bids a Mocking Farewell
to London (1573)
37. "My Purse in This Fray Is Taken Out of My Pocket": The Elizabethan
Underworld as Described in Robert Greene's Cony-Catching Pamphlets (1592)
38. "Justice Somewhere Is Corrupted": Thomas Nashe Inveighs against the
Stews and Strumpets of London (1593)
39. "The Said High Street Stretched Straight to Ludgate": John Stow
Describes the Wards of Elizabethan London (1600)
40. "Salute at Parting No Man but by the Name of Sir": Thomas Dekker's
Advice on Walking Home Late through London (1609)
Chapter 9 Scotland and the Scottish Queen
41. "How Can That Doctrine Be of God?": John Knox's Account of His Meeting
with Queen Mary of Scotland (1561)
42. "No Man Said So Much as Amen": A Description of the Marriage of Mary of
Scotland and Henry, Lord Darnley (1565)
43. "He Had in His Body above Sixty Wounds": The Murder of David Rizzo and
Its Immediate Aftermath (1566)
44. "So Soon as the Said Design Shall Be Executed": Queen Mary Endorses
Babington's Plot-and Thereby Seals Her Fate (1586)
45. "Show You Worthy the Place": Queen Elizabeth Advises James VI of
Scotland on How to Be a King (1592)
Chapter 10 Spain and the Armada
46. "Pitiful Miseries and Horrible Calamities": Queen Elizabeth Justifies
Her Military Intervention in the Low Countries (1585)
47. "This Hath Bred a Great Fear in the Spaniard": Sir Francis Drake
Describes His Raid on the Spanish Port of Cadiz (1587)
48. "Furnished with Armor and Weapon Mete for Your Calling": The Council
Prepares for Possible Spanish Invasion (1588)
49. "Your Highness's Enemies Are Many": Sir Francis Drake Describes the
English Fleet's Encounters with the Spanish Armada (1588)
50. "The Fight Was Very Terrible": An Account of the English Raid on Cadiz
(1596)
Chapter 11 Ireland and the English
51. "Such Lamentable Cries and Doleful Complaints": Lord Deputy Sir Henry
Sidney's Shocking Account of Conditions in Parts of Ireland (1567)
52. "All Things Are at a Hard Hand": A Scarcity of Money and Merchandise in
Elizabethan Ireland (1568)
53. "Who Can Keep His Living?": Three Accounts of the Storming of
Clogrennan Castle (1569)
54. "Reducing That Savage Nation to Better Government and Civility":
English Views of the Evils of Irish Government and Society (1595)
55. "That All Irishmen May Freely Travel": The Demands of Hugh O'Neill,
Earl of Tyrone, for Irish Control of a Catholic Ireland (1599)
Chapter 12 America and the English
56. "We Would Deal Friendly with Them": George Best's Description of the
Frobisher Expedition's Encounters with the Inuit (1577)
57. "To Adventure as Becometh Men": An Account of Newfoundland by a Member
of Sir Humphrey Gilbert's Expedition (1583)
58. "Shall from Time to Time Adventure Themselves": Sir Walter Raleigh's
Title to Virginia (1584)
59. "After the Manner of the Golden Age": A Report on Virginia by the
Leaders of Sir Walter Raleigh's First Expedition to America (1584)
60. "Matter for All Sorts and States of Men to Work Upon": Richard
Hakluyt's Reasons for Establishing English Colonies in America (1584)
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
Evaluating and Interpreting Primary Documents
Introduction: Shakespeare's England
Chronology
Chapter 1 Society and Family
1. "It Was Ordained for a Remedy against Sin": The Marriage Ceremony as
Mandated by the Book of Common Prayer (1559)
2. "Give Yourself to Be Merry": Sir Henry Sidney's Advice to His Son,
Philip Sidney (c. 1566)
3. "They Have Invented Such Strange Fashions": Philip Stubbes's Description
of Elizabethan Barbers (1583)
4. "Sorrows Draw Not the Dead, to Life, But the Living to Death": Sir
Walter Raleigh's Letter of Comfort to Sir Robert Cecil upon the Death of
Cecil's Wife (1597)
5. "One Sharp and Discrete Word Is Sufficient": John Dod and Robert Cleaver
on Proper Household Relations between Husbands and Wives, Masters and
Servants (1598)
Chapter 2 Economy and Work
6. "That Certain Abuses Might Be Suppressed": Regulating the Trade of Cloth
in the Town of Beverley (1561)
7. "A Convenient Proportion of Wages": Parliament Enacts a Uniform Labor
Code-the Statute of Artificers (1563)
8. "How Our Maltbugs Lug at This Liquor": William Harrison on Grain Buying
in Country Markets (1577)
9. "They Will Not Buy Any Thing of Our Country-Men": The Economic Impact of
Immigration on the London Economy (1593)
10. "Is Not Bread There?": The Anger over Monopolies (1601)
Chapter 3 Politics and Parliament
11. "A Place of Free Speech": Freedom of Debate in Parliament (1562, 1576)
12. "His Word Is a Law": Sir Thomas Smith Describes the Power and Position
of the English Monarch (c. 1565)
13. "A Coronet on Her Head": John Hooker's Account of the Dissolution of a
Session of Parliament (1571)
14. "The Place of Secretary Is Dreadful": William Cecil, Lord Burghley,
Describes the Duties and Requirements of the Office of Secretary of State
(c. 1571)
15. "He Is the Eye and the Head of the Whole Commonweal": John Hooker's
Description of the Duties of the Mayor and City Recorder of Exeter (1584)
Chapter 4 Queen and Court
16. "Comely Rather Than Handsome": Descriptions of the Young Princess and
the Aging Queen (1557, 1598)
17. "A Fresh Delicate Harmony of Flutes": The Queen on Progress-Robert,
Earl of Leicester, Entertains the Queen at Kenilworth Castle (1575)
18. "In His Clown's Apparel": The Comic Actor Richard Tarlton All about the
Court (1580s)
19. "Being Much Moved to Be So Challenged in Public": Queen Elizabeth
Schools the Malapert Polish Ambassador (1597)
20. "I Have Reigned with Your Loves": The Queen's Valedictory-the "Golden
Speech" (1601)
Chapter 5 Anglicans, Puritans, and Catholics
21. "The Queen's Highness Is the Only Supreme Governor of This Realm":
Framing the Anglican Religious Settlement (1559)
22. "Elizabeth, the Pretended Queen of England": Pope Pius V Excommunicates
and Deposes Queen Elizabeth-and the Consequences for English Catholics
(1570, 1582)
23. "To Wash His Hands in the Protestants' Blood": News of a Catholic Plot
to Assassinate the Queen and Bring in the Spanish (1570)
24. "Brought Many to Great Disobedience": The Bishops Wrestle with Growing
Puritan Activity in the Counties (1573, 1581)
25. "Which We Do Barbarously Call Sunday": Puritans Petition the Queen in
the Commons for a Church Organized Along Presbyterian Lines (1585)
Chapter 6 Literature, Plays, and Poetry
26. "I Aske of God a Vengeance on Thy Bones": Historical Complaint
Literature-The Poetry of A Mirror for Magistrates (1563)
27. "None More Witty Than Euphues": John Lyly Writes Popular Elizabethan
Romance Novels (1579, 1580)
28. "In the Defence of That My Unelected Vocation": Sir Philip Sidney
Defends Poetry and the Theater against Their Critics (c. 1583)
29. "Why Made You Night to Cover Sin?": Thomas Kyd Writes Popular
Elizabethan Tragedy (1592)
30. "I Fill'd the Gaols with Bankrupts in a Year": The Popular and
Influential Plays of Christopher Marlowe (1592, 1594)
Chapter 7 William Shakespeare's Life and Works
31. "I Love What Others Do Abhor": The Sonnets (c. 1576, 1609)
32. "Mine Arm Is Like a Blasted Sapling": William Shakespeare and His
Sources-the Second Edition of Holinshed's Chronicle (1587) and Richard III
(c. 1592-1593)
33. "For the Recreation of Our Loving Subjects": King James I Licenses
William Shakespeare's Theatrical Company (1603)
34. "My Second Best Bed": William Shakespeare's Will (1616)
35. "He Was a Happy Imitator of Nature": The First Folio Edition of
Shakespeare's Works (1623)
Chapter 8 London Life
36. "And Never More Me Name": Poet Isabella Whitney Bids a Mocking Farewell
to London (1573)
37. "My Purse in This Fray Is Taken Out of My Pocket": The Elizabethan
Underworld as Described in Robert Greene's Cony-Catching Pamphlets (1592)
38. "Justice Somewhere Is Corrupted": Thomas Nashe Inveighs against the
Stews and Strumpets of London (1593)
39. "The Said High Street Stretched Straight to Ludgate": John Stow
Describes the Wards of Elizabethan London (1600)
40. "Salute at Parting No Man but by the Name of Sir": Thomas Dekker's
Advice on Walking Home Late through London (1609)
Chapter 9 Scotland and the Scottish Queen
41. "How Can That Doctrine Be of God?": John Knox's Account of His Meeting
with Queen Mary of Scotland (1561)
42. "No Man Said So Much as Amen": A Description of the Marriage of Mary of
Scotland and Henry, Lord Darnley (1565)
43. "He Had in His Body above Sixty Wounds": The Murder of David Rizzo and
Its Immediate Aftermath (1566)
44. "So Soon as the Said Design Shall Be Executed": Queen Mary Endorses
Babington's Plot-and Thereby Seals Her Fate (1586)
45. "Show You Worthy the Place": Queen Elizabeth Advises James VI of
Scotland on How to Be a King (1592)
Chapter 10 Spain and the Armada
46. "Pitiful Miseries and Horrible Calamities": Queen Elizabeth Justifies
Her Military Intervention in the Low Countries (1585)
47. "This Hath Bred a Great Fear in the Spaniard": Sir Francis Drake
Describes His Raid on the Spanish Port of Cadiz (1587)
48. "Furnished with Armor and Weapon Mete for Your Calling": The Council
Prepares for Possible Spanish Invasion (1588)
49. "Your Highness's Enemies Are Many": Sir Francis Drake Describes the
English Fleet's Encounters with the Spanish Armada (1588)
50. "The Fight Was Very Terrible": An Account of the English Raid on Cadiz
(1596)
Chapter 11 Ireland and the English
51. "Such Lamentable Cries and Doleful Complaints": Lord Deputy Sir Henry
Sidney's Shocking Account of Conditions in Parts of Ireland (1567)
52. "All Things Are at a Hard Hand": A Scarcity of Money and Merchandise in
Elizabethan Ireland (1568)
53. "Who Can Keep His Living?": Three Accounts of the Storming of
Clogrennan Castle (1569)
54. "Reducing That Savage Nation to Better Government and Civility":
English Views of the Evils of Irish Government and Society (1595)
55. "That All Irishmen May Freely Travel": The Demands of Hugh O'Neill,
Earl of Tyrone, for Irish Control of a Catholic Ireland (1599)
Chapter 12 America and the English
56. "We Would Deal Friendly with Them": George Best's Description of the
Frobisher Expedition's Encounters with the Inuit (1577)
57. "To Adventure as Becometh Men": An Account of Newfoundland by a Member
of Sir Humphrey Gilbert's Expedition (1583)
58. "Shall from Time to Time Adventure Themselves": Sir Walter Raleigh's
Title to Virginia (1584)
59. "After the Manner of the Golden Age": A Report on Virginia by the
Leaders of Sir Walter Raleigh's First Expedition to America (1584)
60. "Matter for All Sorts and States of Men to Work Upon": Richard
Hakluyt's Reasons for Establishing English Colonies in America (1584)
Bibliography
Index
Preface
Acknowledgments
Evaluating and Interpreting Primary Documents
Introduction: Shakespeare's England
Chronology
Chapter 1 Society and Family
1. "It Was Ordained for a Remedy against Sin": The Marriage Ceremony as
Mandated by the Book of Common Prayer (1559)
2. "Give Yourself to Be Merry": Sir Henry Sidney's Advice to His Son,
Philip Sidney (c. 1566)
3. "They Have Invented Such Strange Fashions": Philip Stubbes's Description
of Elizabethan Barbers (1583)
4. "Sorrows Draw Not the Dead, to Life, But the Living to Death": Sir
Walter Raleigh's Letter of Comfort to Sir Robert Cecil upon the Death of
Cecil's Wife (1597)
5. "One Sharp and Discrete Word Is Sufficient": John Dod and Robert Cleaver
on Proper Household Relations between Husbands and Wives, Masters and
Servants (1598)
Chapter 2 Economy and Work
6. "That Certain Abuses Might Be Suppressed": Regulating the Trade of Cloth
in the Town of Beverley (1561)
7. "A Convenient Proportion of Wages": Parliament Enacts a Uniform Labor
Code-the Statute of Artificers (1563)
8. "How Our Maltbugs Lug at This Liquor": William Harrison on Grain Buying
in Country Markets (1577)
9. "They Will Not Buy Any Thing of Our Country-Men": The Economic Impact of
Immigration on the London Economy (1593)
10. "Is Not Bread There?": The Anger over Monopolies (1601)
Chapter 3 Politics and Parliament
11. "A Place of Free Speech": Freedom of Debate in Parliament (1562, 1576)
12. "His Word Is a Law": Sir Thomas Smith Describes the Power and Position
of the English Monarch (c. 1565)
13. "A Coronet on Her Head": John Hooker's Account of the Dissolution of a
Session of Parliament (1571)
14. "The Place of Secretary Is Dreadful": William Cecil, Lord Burghley,
Describes the Duties and Requirements of the Office of Secretary of State
(c. 1571)
15. "He Is the Eye and the Head of the Whole Commonweal": John Hooker's
Description of the Duties of the Mayor and City Recorder of Exeter (1584)
Chapter 4 Queen and Court
16. "Comely Rather Than Handsome": Descriptions of the Young Princess and
the Aging Queen (1557, 1598)
17. "A Fresh Delicate Harmony of Flutes": The Queen on Progress-Robert,
Earl of Leicester, Entertains the Queen at Kenilworth Castle (1575)
18. "In His Clown's Apparel": The Comic Actor Richard Tarlton All about the
Court (1580s)
19. "Being Much Moved to Be So Challenged in Public": Queen Elizabeth
Schools the Malapert Polish Ambassador (1597)
20. "I Have Reigned with Your Loves": The Queen's Valedictory-the "Golden
Speech" (1601)
Chapter 5 Anglicans, Puritans, and Catholics
21. "The Queen's Highness Is the Only Supreme Governor of This Realm":
Framing the Anglican Religious Settlement (1559)
22. "Elizabeth, the Pretended Queen of England": Pope Pius V Excommunicates
and Deposes Queen Elizabeth-and the Consequences for English Catholics
(1570, 1582)
23. "To Wash His Hands in the Protestants' Blood": News of a Catholic Plot
to Assassinate the Queen and Bring in the Spanish (1570)
24. "Brought Many to Great Disobedience": The Bishops Wrestle with Growing
Puritan Activity in the Counties (1573, 1581)
25. "Which We Do Barbarously Call Sunday": Puritans Petition the Queen in
the Commons for a Church Organized Along Presbyterian Lines (1585)
Chapter 6 Literature, Plays, and Poetry
26. "I Aske of God a Vengeance on Thy Bones": Historical Complaint
Literature-The Poetry of A Mirror for Magistrates (1563)
27. "None More Witty Than Euphues": John Lyly Writes Popular Elizabethan
Romance Novels (1579, 1580)
28. "In the Defence of That My Unelected Vocation": Sir Philip Sidney
Defends Poetry and the Theater against Their Critics (c. 1583)
29. "Why Made You Night to Cover Sin?": Thomas Kyd Writes Popular
Elizabethan Tragedy (1592)
30. "I Fill'd the Gaols with Bankrupts in a Year": The Popular and
Influential Plays of Christopher Marlowe (1592, 1594)
Chapter 7 William Shakespeare's Life and Works
31. "I Love What Others Do Abhor": The Sonnets (c. 1576, 1609)
32. "Mine Arm Is Like a Blasted Sapling": William Shakespeare and His
Sources-the Second Edition of Holinshed's Chronicle (1587) and Richard III
(c. 1592-1593)
33. "For the Recreation of Our Loving Subjects": King James I Licenses
William Shakespeare's Theatrical Company (1603)
34. "My Second Best Bed": William Shakespeare's Will (1616)
35. "He Was a Happy Imitator of Nature": The First Folio Edition of
Shakespeare's Works (1623)
Chapter 8 London Life
36. "And Never More Me Name": Poet Isabella Whitney Bids a Mocking Farewell
to London (1573)
37. "My Purse in This Fray Is Taken Out of My Pocket": The Elizabethan
Underworld as Described in Robert Greene's Cony-Catching Pamphlets (1592)
38. "Justice Somewhere Is Corrupted": Thomas Nashe Inveighs against the
Stews and Strumpets of London (1593)
39. "The Said High Street Stretched Straight to Ludgate": John Stow
Describes the Wards of Elizabethan London (1600)
40. "Salute at Parting No Man but by the Name of Sir": Thomas Dekker's
Advice on Walking Home Late through London (1609)
Chapter 9 Scotland and the Scottish Queen
41. "How Can That Doctrine Be of God?": John Knox's Account of His Meeting
with Queen Mary of Scotland (1561)
42. "No Man Said So Much as Amen": A Description of the Marriage of Mary of
Scotland and Henry, Lord Darnley (1565)
43. "He Had in His Body above Sixty Wounds": The Murder of David Rizzo and
Its Immediate Aftermath (1566)
44. "So Soon as the Said Design Shall Be Executed": Queen Mary Endorses
Babington's Plot-and Thereby Seals Her Fate (1586)
45. "Show You Worthy the Place": Queen Elizabeth Advises James VI of
Scotland on How to Be a King (1592)
Chapter 10 Spain and the Armada
46. "Pitiful Miseries and Horrible Calamities": Queen Elizabeth Justifies
Her Military Intervention in the Low Countries (1585)
47. "This Hath Bred a Great Fear in the Spaniard": Sir Francis Drake
Describes His Raid on the Spanish Port of Cadiz (1587)
48. "Furnished with Armor and Weapon Mete for Your Calling": The Council
Prepares for Possible Spanish Invasion (1588)
49. "Your Highness's Enemies Are Many": Sir Francis Drake Describes the
English Fleet's Encounters with the Spanish Armada (1588)
50. "The Fight Was Very Terrible": An Account of the English Raid on Cadiz
(1596)
Chapter 11 Ireland and the English
51. "Such Lamentable Cries and Doleful Complaints": Lord Deputy Sir Henry
Sidney's Shocking Account of Conditions in Parts of Ireland (1567)
52. "All Things Are at a Hard Hand": A Scarcity of Money and Merchandise in
Elizabethan Ireland (1568)
53. "Who Can Keep His Living?": Three Accounts of the Storming of
Clogrennan Castle (1569)
54. "Reducing That Savage Nation to Better Government and Civility":
English Views of the Evils of Irish Government and Society (1595)
55. "That All Irishmen May Freely Travel": The Demands of Hugh O'Neill,
Earl of Tyrone, for Irish Control of a Catholic Ireland (1599)
Chapter 12 America and the English
56. "We Would Deal Friendly with Them": George Best's Description of the
Frobisher Expedition's Encounters with the Inuit (1577)
57. "To Adventure as Becometh Men": An Account of Newfoundland by a Member
of Sir Humphrey Gilbert's Expedition (1583)
58. "Shall from Time to Time Adventure Themselves": Sir Walter Raleigh's
Title to Virginia (1584)
59. "After the Manner of the Golden Age": A Report on Virginia by the
Leaders of Sir Walter Raleigh's First Expedition to America (1584)
60. "Matter for All Sorts and States of Men to Work Upon": Richard
Hakluyt's Reasons for Establishing English Colonies in America (1584)
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
Evaluating and Interpreting Primary Documents
Introduction: Shakespeare's England
Chronology
Chapter 1 Society and Family
1. "It Was Ordained for a Remedy against Sin": The Marriage Ceremony as
Mandated by the Book of Common Prayer (1559)
2. "Give Yourself to Be Merry": Sir Henry Sidney's Advice to His Son,
Philip Sidney (c. 1566)
3. "They Have Invented Such Strange Fashions": Philip Stubbes's Description
of Elizabethan Barbers (1583)
4. "Sorrows Draw Not the Dead, to Life, But the Living to Death": Sir
Walter Raleigh's Letter of Comfort to Sir Robert Cecil upon the Death of
Cecil's Wife (1597)
5. "One Sharp and Discrete Word Is Sufficient": John Dod and Robert Cleaver
on Proper Household Relations between Husbands and Wives, Masters and
Servants (1598)
Chapter 2 Economy and Work
6. "That Certain Abuses Might Be Suppressed": Regulating the Trade of Cloth
in the Town of Beverley (1561)
7. "A Convenient Proportion of Wages": Parliament Enacts a Uniform Labor
Code-the Statute of Artificers (1563)
8. "How Our Maltbugs Lug at This Liquor": William Harrison on Grain Buying
in Country Markets (1577)
9. "They Will Not Buy Any Thing of Our Country-Men": The Economic Impact of
Immigration on the London Economy (1593)
10. "Is Not Bread There?": The Anger over Monopolies (1601)
Chapter 3 Politics and Parliament
11. "A Place of Free Speech": Freedom of Debate in Parliament (1562, 1576)
12. "His Word Is a Law": Sir Thomas Smith Describes the Power and Position
of the English Monarch (c. 1565)
13. "A Coronet on Her Head": John Hooker's Account of the Dissolution of a
Session of Parliament (1571)
14. "The Place of Secretary Is Dreadful": William Cecil, Lord Burghley,
Describes the Duties and Requirements of the Office of Secretary of State
(c. 1571)
15. "He Is the Eye and the Head of the Whole Commonweal": John Hooker's
Description of the Duties of the Mayor and City Recorder of Exeter (1584)
Chapter 4 Queen and Court
16. "Comely Rather Than Handsome": Descriptions of the Young Princess and
the Aging Queen (1557, 1598)
17. "A Fresh Delicate Harmony of Flutes": The Queen on Progress-Robert,
Earl of Leicester, Entertains the Queen at Kenilworth Castle (1575)
18. "In His Clown's Apparel": The Comic Actor Richard Tarlton All about the
Court (1580s)
19. "Being Much Moved to Be So Challenged in Public": Queen Elizabeth
Schools the Malapert Polish Ambassador (1597)
20. "I Have Reigned with Your Loves": The Queen's Valedictory-the "Golden
Speech" (1601)
Chapter 5 Anglicans, Puritans, and Catholics
21. "The Queen's Highness Is the Only Supreme Governor of This Realm":
Framing the Anglican Religious Settlement (1559)
22. "Elizabeth, the Pretended Queen of England": Pope Pius V Excommunicates
and Deposes Queen Elizabeth-and the Consequences for English Catholics
(1570, 1582)
23. "To Wash His Hands in the Protestants' Blood": News of a Catholic Plot
to Assassinate the Queen and Bring in the Spanish (1570)
24. "Brought Many to Great Disobedience": The Bishops Wrestle with Growing
Puritan Activity in the Counties (1573, 1581)
25. "Which We Do Barbarously Call Sunday": Puritans Petition the Queen in
the Commons for a Church Organized Along Presbyterian Lines (1585)
Chapter 6 Literature, Plays, and Poetry
26. "I Aske of God a Vengeance on Thy Bones": Historical Complaint
Literature-The Poetry of A Mirror for Magistrates (1563)
27. "None More Witty Than Euphues": John Lyly Writes Popular Elizabethan
Romance Novels (1579, 1580)
28. "In the Defence of That My Unelected Vocation": Sir Philip Sidney
Defends Poetry and the Theater against Their Critics (c. 1583)
29. "Why Made You Night to Cover Sin?": Thomas Kyd Writes Popular
Elizabethan Tragedy (1592)
30. "I Fill'd the Gaols with Bankrupts in a Year": The Popular and
Influential Plays of Christopher Marlowe (1592, 1594)
Chapter 7 William Shakespeare's Life and Works
31. "I Love What Others Do Abhor": The Sonnets (c. 1576, 1609)
32. "Mine Arm Is Like a Blasted Sapling": William Shakespeare and His
Sources-the Second Edition of Holinshed's Chronicle (1587) and Richard III
(c. 1592-1593)
33. "For the Recreation of Our Loving Subjects": King James I Licenses
William Shakespeare's Theatrical Company (1603)
34. "My Second Best Bed": William Shakespeare's Will (1616)
35. "He Was a Happy Imitator of Nature": The First Folio Edition of
Shakespeare's Works (1623)
Chapter 8 London Life
36. "And Never More Me Name": Poet Isabella Whitney Bids a Mocking Farewell
to London (1573)
37. "My Purse in This Fray Is Taken Out of My Pocket": The Elizabethan
Underworld as Described in Robert Greene's Cony-Catching Pamphlets (1592)
38. "Justice Somewhere Is Corrupted": Thomas Nashe Inveighs against the
Stews and Strumpets of London (1593)
39. "The Said High Street Stretched Straight to Ludgate": John Stow
Describes the Wards of Elizabethan London (1600)
40. "Salute at Parting No Man but by the Name of Sir": Thomas Dekker's
Advice on Walking Home Late through London (1609)
Chapter 9 Scotland and the Scottish Queen
41. "How Can That Doctrine Be of God?": John Knox's Account of His Meeting
with Queen Mary of Scotland (1561)
42. "No Man Said So Much as Amen": A Description of the Marriage of Mary of
Scotland and Henry, Lord Darnley (1565)
43. "He Had in His Body above Sixty Wounds": The Murder of David Rizzo and
Its Immediate Aftermath (1566)
44. "So Soon as the Said Design Shall Be Executed": Queen Mary Endorses
Babington's Plot-and Thereby Seals Her Fate (1586)
45. "Show You Worthy the Place": Queen Elizabeth Advises James VI of
Scotland on How to Be a King (1592)
Chapter 10 Spain and the Armada
46. "Pitiful Miseries and Horrible Calamities": Queen Elizabeth Justifies
Her Military Intervention in the Low Countries (1585)
47. "This Hath Bred a Great Fear in the Spaniard": Sir Francis Drake
Describes His Raid on the Spanish Port of Cadiz (1587)
48. "Furnished with Armor and Weapon Mete for Your Calling": The Council
Prepares for Possible Spanish Invasion (1588)
49. "Your Highness's Enemies Are Many": Sir Francis Drake Describes the
English Fleet's Encounters with the Spanish Armada (1588)
50. "The Fight Was Very Terrible": An Account of the English Raid on Cadiz
(1596)
Chapter 11 Ireland and the English
51. "Such Lamentable Cries and Doleful Complaints": Lord Deputy Sir Henry
Sidney's Shocking Account of Conditions in Parts of Ireland (1567)
52. "All Things Are at a Hard Hand": A Scarcity of Money and Merchandise in
Elizabethan Ireland (1568)
53. "Who Can Keep His Living?": Three Accounts of the Storming of
Clogrennan Castle (1569)
54. "Reducing That Savage Nation to Better Government and Civility":
English Views of the Evils of Irish Government and Society (1595)
55. "That All Irishmen May Freely Travel": The Demands of Hugh O'Neill,
Earl of Tyrone, for Irish Control of a Catholic Ireland (1599)
Chapter 12 America and the English
56. "We Would Deal Friendly with Them": George Best's Description of the
Frobisher Expedition's Encounters with the Inuit (1577)
57. "To Adventure as Becometh Men": An Account of Newfoundland by a Member
of Sir Humphrey Gilbert's Expedition (1583)
58. "Shall from Time to Time Adventure Themselves": Sir Walter Raleigh's
Title to Virginia (1584)
59. "After the Manner of the Golden Age": A Report on Virginia by the
Leaders of Sir Walter Raleigh's First Expedition to America (1584)
60. "Matter for All Sorts and States of Men to Work Upon": Richard
Hakluyt's Reasons for Establishing English Colonies in America (1584)
Bibliography
Index