"'Early Modern Britain'" is a term used to define the period in the
history of
Great Britain roughly corresponding to the
16th,
17th, and
18th centuries. Major historical events in Early Modern British history include the
English Renaissance, the
English Reformation and
Scottish Reformation, the
English Civil War, the Restoration of
Charles II, the
Glorious Revolution, and the
Enlightenment.
English Renaissance
The term "
English Renaissance" is used by many historians to refer to a cultural movement in England in the 1500s and 1600s that was heavily influenced by the
Italian Renaissance. This movement is characterized by the flowering of English music (particularly the English adoption and development of the
madrigal), notable achievements in drama (by
William Shakespeare,
Christopher Marlowe, and
Ben Jonson), and the development of English epic poetry (most famously
Edmund Spenser's ''
The Faerie Queene'' and
John Milton's ''
Paradise Lost'').
The idea of the Renaissance has come under increased criticism by many
cultural historians, and some have contended that the "English Renaissance" has no real tie with the artistic achievements and aims of the northern Italian artists (
Leonardo,
Michelangelo,
Donatello) who are closely identified with the
Renaissance.
Other cultural historians have countered that, regardless of whether the name "renaissance" is apt, there was undeniably an artistic flowering in England under the
Tudor monarchs, culminating in Shakespeare and his contemporaries.
The rise of the Tudors
Some scholars date the beginning of Early Modern Britain to the end of the
Wars of the Roses and the crowning of
Henry Tudor in
1485 after his victory at the
battle of Bosworth Field. Henry VII's largely peaceful reign ended decades of civil war and brought the peace and stability to England that art and commerce need to thrive. A major war on English soil would not occur again until the English Civil War of the seventeenth century.
During this period Henry VII and his son
Henry VIII greatly increased the power of the English monarch. A similar pattern was unfolding on the continent as new technologies, such as
gunpowder, and social and ideological changes undermined the power of the feudal nobility and enhanced that of the sovereign. Henry VIII also
made use of the
Protestant Reformation to seize the power of the
Roman Catholic Church,
confiscating the property of the monasteries and declaring himself the
head of the new
Anglican Church. Under the Tudors the English state was centralized and rationalized as a bureaucracy built up and the government became run and managed by educated functionaries. The most notable new institution was the
Star Chamber.
The new power of the monarch was given a basis by the notion of the
divine right of kings to rule over their subjects.
James I was a major proponent of this idea and wrote extensively on it.
The same forces that had reduced the power of the traditional aristocracy also served to increase the power of the commercial classes. The rise of trade and the central importance of money to the operation of the government gave this new class great power, but power that was not reflected in the government structure. This would lead to a long contest during the seventeenth century between the forces of the monarch and parliament.
Exploration and the beginnings of empire
In
1497 Henry VII hired Italian navigator
Giovanni Caboto to cross the
Atlantic on behalf of the English crown. Cabot became the first European, of the era, to discover what is today Canada and he claimed it for the English Crown. Soon after, colonies would be founded in North America and trading posts and enclaves would be established in
India and elsewhere around the world. Eventually English, and later British, overseas holdings would grow and the
British Empire would span the globe.
See also
★
Early Modern English
★
Elizabethan era