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Even though there was
an unmarried woman on the throne in Elizabethan England, the roles of women
in society were very limited. The Elizabethans had very clear expectations
of men and women, and in general men were expected to be the breadwinners
and women to be housewives and mothers. On average, a woman gave birth
to a child every two years, but as a lot of babies and children died from
sickness, families were not always large. Childbearing was considered a
great honor to women, as children were seen as blessings from God, and
Tudor women took great pride in being mothers.
Elizabethan society was patriarchal, meaning
that men were considered to be the leaders and women their inferiors. Women
were regarded as "the weaker sex", not just in terms of physical strength,
but emotionally too. It was believed that women always needed someone
to look after them. If they were married, their husband was expected to
look after them. If they were single, then their father, brother or another
male relative was expected to take care of them. |
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Many women in this period
were highly educated, like the Queen herself, Mildred Cecil (wife of William
Cecil) and Mary Herbert, Countess of Pembroke. Women were not allowed to
go to school or to university, but they could be educated at home by private
tutors. Elizabeth was tutored by the famous Elizabethan scholar Roger Ascham.
Women were not allowed to enter the professions
i.e law, medicine, politics, but they could work in domestic service as
cooks, maids etc, and a female painter, Levina Teerlinc, was employed by
Henry VIII and later by Mary and Elizabeth respectively. Women were also
allowed to write works of literature, providing the subject was suitable
for women: mainly translations or religious works. Women were not allowed
to act on the public stage or write for the public stage. Acting was considered
dishonorable for women and women did not appear on the stage in England
until the seventeenth century. In Shakespeare's plays, the roles of women
were often played by young boys. |
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Women, regardless of
social position, were not allowed to vote (however, only men of a certain
social position were allowed to vote). Neither could women inherit their
father's titles. All titles would pass from father to son or brother to
brother, depending on the circumstances. The only exception was, of course,
the crown. The crown could pass to a daughter, and that daughter would
be invested with all the power and Majesty of any king. This allowed Mary,
and then Elizabeth, to reign. In some cases women could not inherit estates,
but women could be heiresses to property, and some women, especially if
they were the only child of a great noble man, could be very affluent heiresses
indeed. Robert Dudley's first wife, Amy Robsart, was Sir John Robsart's
only child, and inherited two estates he owned in Norfolk. It was not always
clear what happened to these estates when the woman married i.e. whether
the estates became the property of her husband or not.
The laws of inheritance meant that fathers
were anxious to have a son, but that does not mean that daughters were
unloved and unwanted. The attitude of Henry VIII to his daughters was unusual,
and was probably the result of his obsession with providing the country
with a male heir and subsequent ruler. Parents did love their daughters
and saw them as precious gifts from God. Of all the children Thomas More
had, his daughter Margaret was his favorite, and William Cecil was a devoted
father to all his children, male and female. Queen Elizabeth would write
letters of condolence on the death of daughters as well as on the death
of sons. |
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A man was considered
to be the head of a marriage, and he had the legal right to chastise his
wife. However, it is important to understand what this "headship" meant.
It did not mean, as if often supposed, that the husband was able to command
his wife to do anything he pleased, in other words, be a petty tyrant.
He was expected to take care of her, make sure she had everything she needed,
and most importantly to love her and be a good father to any children they
had. If a husband felt the need to chastise his wife, then he was not allowed
to be cruel or inflict bodily harm. If he did abuse his wife, then he could
be prosecuted or prevented from living with her. There was no divorce (as
we know it) in Elizabethan times. Marriage generally lasted as long as
the couple both lived. If a couple did want to separate, then they needed
to obtain an annulment, which, if granted, meant that their marriage had
never been lawful. Despite having been married six times, Henry VIII only
regarded Jane Seymour and Katherine Parr as his legal wives.
It is probably fair to say that, despite
the limitations, women had more freedom in the Elizabethan period than
they had had previously and would have again for some time. The Renaissance
brought with it a new way of thinking. It was thought men and women could
do anything and be anything they wanted to be, that their capacity for
knowledge was limitless. Thus, noble women, as well as men, were given
an impressive education in the classics, mathematics, and all other academic
subjects of the day. Elizabeth being on the throne also encouraged
noble men to educate their daughters, as they did not want them to look
dim in the presence of their very intelligent and highly educated queen. |
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Women who perhaps suffered
most in this period were, ironically, those like the Queen who did not
wish to marry. Tudor society did not have many avenues open to single women
and, following the Reformation, those avenues were even less. Before, women
were able to become nuns and look forward to a rewarding life in convents,
perhaps be a Mother Superior one day. But with the Reformation, the
convents were closed. Wealthy single women (heiresses of property) could
look forward to being mistress of their estates and wield the power in
the community this would bring, but for poor women, the only long-term
"career" really open to them was domestic service. It was not surprising,
therefore, that most women married. Marriage was seen as the desirable
state for both men and women, and single women were sometimes looked upon
with suspicion. It was mainly single women who were accused of being
witches by their neighbors. |
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