The Importance Of The English Renaissance

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The English renaissance is generally marked between the late 14-century and early 17th century. This was after the Italian Renaissance
It is also referred to as Elizabethan theater, which was based on Queen Elizabeth 1st. She was the most prominent political figure during her reign.
Before the English renaissance most of the play that were performed were religion based especially leaning towards the catholic side of religion. Queen Elizabeth being an influential political leader decided that she would break from Catholicism and start strengthening the Anglican church in England. This is because Puritanism was on the rise. Puritanism was a minority force of churchmen and other members such as members of parliament felt that the Anglican Church …show more content…

The plan is polygonal to give an overall rounded effect. Most of these theatres are built of timber, lath and plaster with thatched roofs. This structure made them vulnerable to fire and were replaced with strong structures that wouldn’t catch fire easily. An example of tragedy would be when the Globe theatre burned down in June 1613. It was later rebuilt using a tile roof while when the Fortune theatre burnt down in December 1621, they were able to rebuilt it using bricks which messed with the structure of it being a square the way it used to. The plays by Marlowe and Shakespeare were performed on a regular basis at the public theatres while the newest works of the newest playwrights were mainly performed in the private theatres.
The performances in the English Renaissance theatre were functioning on a repertory system. This is when productions run for months or years on end. An example could be Thomas Middleton’s A Game at Chess ran for nine straight performances in August 1624 and it would have continued if only the authorities did not close the performance. It was closed due to the political content of the play. Other examples could

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