Elizabeth I Questionnaire MARIA
Elizabeth I Questionnaire MARIA
Elizabeth I Questionnaire MARIA
Watch the movie Elizabeth the Virgin Queen (1998) and answer the
following questions:
2. Why was Elizabeth sent to prison? Where was she taken to?
Elizabeth has been jailed for conspiring against her sister, a trumped up
charge made by Queen Mary’s advisors because they fear Elizabeth and
her Protestant connections.
She was taken to the Hatfield House, in order to preserve her of many
dangers may take place at that time. Elizabeth was the daughter of the
King Henry VIII, loved by the people.
3. Which were the two main religious positions in dispute during the
time period? The Protestants and Catholics.
Because she need to be heir to the throne and to create alliances with other
country through marriage.
He meant that she was not in the position to decide her independence or
freedom to choose her future husband, considering the fact that Elizabeth
need to create bounds or alliances with potential economical countries
through marriage.
England were in war, the main reason was based on politics power and
religion because both desired to leader the other.
7. Who is Walsingham?
The Pope was not in favour of Elizabeth’s Reign because she defend the
independence of the English Church (created by her father Henry VIII)
10.Can you guess who is Monseñor Alvaro allied to?
The Pope did not accept the Elizabeth’s Reign as well as he persuade to
anyone who kill her by telling that would be welcome to Heaven of God.
Walsingham said that the solution to the treason was the death. He
captured Ballard and Arundel and founded a letter proposing the
marriage between Norfolk and Queen Mary. He uses one of his spies to
pass the letter to Norfolk, who signs it, thus providing Walsingham the
evidence he needs to arrest Norfolk and Sussex.
It lasted forty years and some historians said that was forty-four years.
15.Why was her Reign called the Golden Age?
Because it was a time of great exploration and the start of the British
colonies. The following years of political unlest the length of time Queen
Elizabeth I ruled meant there was relative stability. Adventurers and
traders brought a wealth of new items and treasures in the country and
trade boomed.