Week 2-3 History of the British Monarchy Dr. Granville Pillar

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Norman and Plantagenet Kings The Hundred Years War Same People…Different Topic Because William the Conqueror had been a powerful leader in French.
Advertisements

Introduction to the Victorian Era Preparation for Great Expectations English 1 CAS Mrs. Paolicelli.
History of Great Britain
Early Modern England Title page from Leviathan, by Thomas Hobbes.
History of Great Britain I.. Stone age BCE – first recorded signs of human settlement BCE – The English Channel separates Britain.
England and Europe 1558 Allies and Enemies
Tudor Dynasty Tudor Dynasty began with Henry VII. –Won the War of the Roses. Son, Henry VIII broke with the Catholic Church and started the Anglican Church.
The Renaissance. Renaissance on the Continent n Public clock in Milan (1335) n Petrarch ( ) – Classicism – Humanism and education – Caroline script.
History of Great Britan I. Martina Ondrová, 4A
 History of the Kingdom of England covers the period from the Norman invasion in 1066 and the conquest of the south-eastern part of the island of Great.
British history Brief outline.
Your name Great Britain in the 16 th Century Background and Chapter 1.
Reformation in England The Tudor Dynasty. Wars of Roses,  House of York  White Rose  House of Lancaster  Red Rose  Ended when Henry VII.
The English Renaissance
From Monarchy to Democracy
THE RENAISSANCE “All the world is a stage, And all the men and women merely players” As You Like It, W. Shakespeare.
England. Absolutism in England England A Civil War called the War of Roses The Tudor family under Henry VII won. His second son was Henry VIII His daughter.
The Renaissance The English Renaissance ( ) End of War of Roses / Medieval Period Monarchs and Religion England was a refuge from war.
RENAISSANCE PERIOD THE RENAISSANCE IN ENGLAND The Renaissance actually began in Italy during the 14 th century and extended in England in the.
Western Europe today. Great Britain and Ireland The United Kingdom includes: England Scotland Wales Northern Ireland Each country has its own history.
Limited Monarchy In England The Tudors & Stuarts.
Europe: Royal Rumbles Strong monarchies began to emerge in western Europe during the 1500s. In Spain, England and France strong kings and queens emerged.
Pictures of the British History
Timeline of the Kings and Queens of England The Tudors.
The Late Middle Ages The Emergence of Nation-States.
Chapter 2 History. When did the recorded history of Britain begin? Who successfully invaded Britain? Where did the name “ Britain ” come from?
Chapter 7. Conflict between Catholics and Protestants was at the heart of the French Wars of Religion Both Catholicism and Calvinism had become.
Lecture 4: British History – The Middle Ages, the Tudors, and the Stuarts ( ) Jason Downs British and American Culture.
The History of Great Britain till 1603 Dominika Rajdlová2/3/2016 FJFI ČVUT.
The Tudors of England Lesson #6.
Tudor England Characteristics of Tudor Rule Greatly increased royal power.Greatly increased royal power. Emergence of England as a world.
Jeopardy Parliament & The King. Category 1 Category 2 Category 3 Category 4 Category 5 Category Double Jeopardy.
Religious and Political Changes in Europe question: What did early explorers have in common? objective: describe religious and political changes in Europe.
Presentation on Tudor Monarchs
Age of Absolutism Part A
Anglophone Studies I Week 3.
Teacher: Ms. Vazquez del Valle Celia.
CULTURA Y CIVILIZACION EN PAISES DE HABLA INGLESA
FROM THE TUDOR PERIOD TO THE END OF THE NAPOLEONIC WARS
66 monarchs Kings and Queens of England and Britain
England and Spain Reformation & Rivalry
Reformation in England
THE TUDOR DINASTY.
The Renaissance Introduction to the Literary Period
Sources of the Democratic tradition
A time of “rebirth” Two period: the Elizabethan the Jacobean
The English Monarchy from :
The Tudors Why were they important? Who were they? Henry VIII
The Tudors Why were they important? Who were they? Henry VIII
English History to Henry VIII
Elizabeth: The Golden Age
Kings Queens Events Famous People Words & Terms
Political Heritage Plantagenet royal family civil war: War of the Roses Lancaster family branch York family branch Lancastrian Henry VII Tudor defeated.
Rise of Modern Nations England
BRITISH MONARCHY.
The Medieval Period By: Ms. Stanley.
The Tudors Why were they important? Who were they? Henry VIII
Limited Monarchy in England
Chapter 1: Small Islands – Big Horizons
Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the answers.
You will be given the answer. You must give the correct question.
Divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, survived…an overview
Absolutism: England The Tudors.
The Tudor Dynasty
The English Renaissance
Henry V, Mary I, Elizabeth I
Jillian Sprague and Diamond Brown
Year 7 Summer 1 The Tudors Key terms Armada -A fleet of Spanish ships sent to invade England Catholic -A traditional Christian, before the Reformation.
Presentation transcript:

Week 2-3 History of the British Monarchy Dr. Granville Pillar British Civilisation Week 2-3 History of the British Monarchy Dr. Granville Pillar

The British Monarchy - Overview Kings of Wessex and England (802-1066).  The Scottish Royal Dynasties (842-1625).  The Continental Dynasties (1066-1216).  The Plantagenet Dynasties (1216-1485).  The Tudors (1485-1603). The Stuarts (1603-1714).  The Hanoverians (1714-1837).  Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (1837-1917).  The Windsors (1917- present day).

The British Monarchy Monarchy began in 8th century. Anglo-Saxon and Scandinavian Kings. Kings of Wessex and England ruled from 802-1066, beginning with Alfred the Great. Normans were descendents of Scandinavian Norsemen (Northmen) 4 Norman kings ruled from 1066-1154. 14 Kings and Queens ruled from 1154-1603, beginning with Henry II.

The British Monarchy The 4 Royal Houses: Angevin, Plantagenet, Lancaster and York. Angevins ruled from 1154-1216: Henry II, Richard, John, John lost a lot of the empire and took away the rights of the church. Magna Carta signed in 1215 – reinstated the rights of the church, the barons and the people.

The British Monarchy The Plantagenets ruled from 1216-1485. Three major conflicts: Edward I conquered Wales and attacked Scotland. Edward III began the Hundred Years War between England and France. Richard II began the War of the Roses between Lancastrians and Yorkists.

The British Monarchy From the Plantagenet period emerged, a distinctive English culture. Completed judicial reforms. literature (Geoffrey Chaucer). Gothic architecture (Westminster Abbey). Franciscan and Dominican orders. Universities established (Oxford and Cambridge).

The British Monarchy The Tudors ruled from 1485-1603: Henry VII, Henry VIII, Edward VI, Mary I, Elizabeth I. Conquest of the New World. Conquest of Ireland. Cultural Renaissance (William Shakespeare, Edmund Spencer). Changes in official religion.

The British Monarchy In 1533 Henry VIII removed the Pope’s influence and made himself Head of the Church of England. Bishops made no new laws without the consent of the King. Act passed which stopped the English Church from sending money to Rome. All monasteries in England were closed and their gold and riches were given to the King.

The British Monarchy The Elizabethan Age 1558-1603. Elizabeth enforced her Protestant views, and Catholic priests, Puritans and non-conformists were expelled Catholics supported Philip of Spain to attack England. 1588 the Spanish Armada was defeated by the British fleet under Sir Francis Drake.