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Elizabethan England had four main classes: the Nobility, the Gentry, the Yeomanry, and the Poor. A person’s class determined how they could dress, where they could live, and the kinds of jobs people and their children could get.
What are the main characteristics of the Elizabethan stage?
The main features of an Elizabethan theatre The theatre was open and plays had to be performed in daylight. A flag would be flown from the top of the theatre to show a play was going to be performed. The cheapest place was in front of the stage where ordinary people stood. They were known as ‘groundlings’.
What are some of the emotions integrated into Shakespeare’s plays?
Love, hate, jealousy, mercy, pride, vengeance: Shakespeare never skimps on the big emotions, the big experiences of the human condition. But amid his big themes he also captures so damned well the little stuff that makes us so human, too.
What are 2 religious categories the existed in England during the Elizabethan era?
Some Elizabethans were strong supporters of the Protestant reformation, some were staunchly Catholic, some were ambivalent, and some still practiced a stricter form of Christianity, Puritanism.
How was life difficult for all classes in Elizabethan England?
Members of the lower classes in England were mainly uneducated, so they did not usually keep journals or written records describing their own lives. Historians agree, though, that daily life for the majority of Elizabethans had little to do with courtly life, and much to do with working hard to earn a meager living.
What are the major themes of Elizabethan Theatre?
Anti-Semitism. Hatred of Jews prevailed in Elizabethan society, and this is reflected in plays of the period.
What was the significance of clothing during the Elizabethan era?
Clothing was a sign of status, it not only dictated wealth but also social status in the Elizabethan Class system. Those that disobeyed the Sumptuary Laws faced the possibility of fines, loss of property, title, and even life.
Why is Shakespeare the master of emotions?
Audiences and readers of Shakespeare have long concurred that Shakespeare was a master of emotion- a writer who could understand and articulate human emotion in unusually modern terms, prompting -even now – intense emotional responses.