Title: Elizabethan%20Age
1Elizabethan Age
2London in the E.A.
- Largest city in Europe
- Center of trade and social life because of the
Thames - So many migrants, jobs were scarce
3Negative Aspects of London
4High Drinking Rate
- Beer was cheap, so people drank a lot of it to
escape their problems - Many deaths by drunkenness
5Sickness and Disease
- 3 Main Diseases
- Bubonic Plague
- Small pox
- Tuberculosis
6Lack of Personal and Public Hygiene
- Neither rich nor poor bathed very often
- Common to have bad breath, rotting teeth,
constant stomach disorders, and scabs or sores
7Pollution
- City ditches were used as toilets
- Butchers threw dead carcasses in the street
- Garbage was thrown in river
- Mass graves for the poor
8Lack of Medical Knowledge
- Believed in the four humours, the four chief
fluids of the human body black bile, yellow
bile, phlegm, blood - They made no connection between illness and the
horrible living conditions
9Some Major Differences Between the Elizabethan
Age and Now
10Schools
- Were expensive, so most students were upper class
boys. - Only girls were from the very high aristocracy
- School Day 6 a.m. to 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. to 6
p.m. Six days a week!
11Schools (Cont.)
- Taught Latin grammar and classical literature
12Clothing
- Clothing Acts laws that said who could wear
what - People had to dress their social class
13Women
- No vote, few legal rights, and limited
educational and job opportunities - Girls who could afford education were given a
domestic education instead of an academic
onespinning, cooking, preserving fruit, weaving,
and anything that could make the home life more
pleasant
14Women (Cont.)
- Married women lost all control of their property,
even clothing, to their husbands - When a husband died, the most the woman could
inherit was 1/3 of his property
15Death
- Average life expectancy 40 years
- 1/5 of children died before the age of 10too
many hazards in their life
16Marriage
- Age of marriage males 28-29
- Females 25-26
- Reasons for the wait
- Wanted smaller families
- Wanted to make sure they were financially ready
for a family - Average marriage only lasted about 20 years
17Superstitions
- Elizabethans were very superstitious many had
charms and such in their houses - They relied heavily on astrology and the stars
18Elizabethan Ghosts
- Were gruesomeusually looked as they did when
they died - Visible only to person they are haunting
- Came back for a specific mission proper burial,
revenge, or a warning
19Entertainment
- Would be considered brutal by todays standards
- Bear baiting
- Cockfighting
- Public executions
20Elizabethan Theater
21The Theater
- First public theater
- Opened in 1576
- Opened by James Burbage
- Provided an alternate form of entertainment
- Established a regular audience
- Gave rise to better props
- Opened the market for actors and playwrights
(therefore creating much needed jobs)
22Caused controversy with
- Religious groups (morally)
- City officials (danger of mob)
- Business owners (competition)
23Acting Group in The Theater
- Lord Chamberlains Men, later The Kings Men
- Shakespeare was a member and became the principal
playwright
24External structure of Elizabethan theaters
- Circular
- Open-air
- Awning over gallery seating
- Larger theaters seated approx. 2,000 3,000
spectators
25Internal structure of Elizabethan theaters
- Stage protruded out into the audience
- The large dressing area behind the stage was
called the tiring house
26Internal structure of Elizabethan theaters
- The wealthy patrons sat on benches in the gallery
- The common people stood around the stage in the
pit they were called groundlings
27Internal structure of Elizabethan theaters
- The area above the stage housed machines that
could lower people onto the stage called
heaven - A trap door in the stage allowed actors to come
up from below called hell
28Internal structure of Elizabethan theaters
gallery
heaven
Tiring house
The pit groundlings
stage
29The Globe
30The Globe
- The theaters were closed in the 1590s because of
a plague outbreak. In 1598, the ground landlord
of The Theater wouldnt renew the lease because
he disapproved of theatrical productions. - He planned to pull down the Theatre and sell the
building materials.
31The Globe
- The Chamberlains Men found a clause in their
former lease giving them the rights to the
Theater (the building itself) and the actors
dismantled the building themselves, transporting
the materials to the other side of the Thames
River. - The new playhouse was called The Globe and became
the most famous of London theaters!
32Characteristics of Drama in the Elizabethan Age
- Sets were not elaborate.
- Clothing was fancy Elizabethan period dress
- All male actors
- Did use some special effectssounds, banners,
musicians
33Characteristics of Drama in the Elizabethan Age
- Plays were typically performed in the early
afternoon (around 2pm) - Flags were raised at the theater on the day of
the play - Flyers were distributed to advertise plays
34The End