17th century ( 1625 – 1700) the cavaliers & puritans

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17th Century (1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

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Page 1: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

17th Century(1625 – 1700)

TheCavaliers

&Puritans

Page 2: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

Turmoil Religious & Political

Queen Elizabeth dies 1603King James 1603-1625

King Charles 1625-1649Oliver Cromwell 1642 - 1660King Charles II 1660 - 1685“GLORIOUS REVOLUTION”

Page 3: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

The ControversyRoyal family are Anglican (Catholic sympathizers)

WHILEWHILECommon people are

Protestant sympathizers

Page 4: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

Divine Right of Kings

King is Head of Church & State

Page 5: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

King JamesNot a picture of health…

-- crippling arthritis-- weak limbs-- colic (digestion problems)-- gout-- difficulty walking -- tongue problems

After numerous attempts on his life, he required constant care.

Invented British flag -- combined England's red cross of St. George with Scotland's white cross of St. Andrew.

Page 6: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

Religious Non-Conformity

Puritans/SeparatistsCongregationists/Presbyterians

Church government stylescongregation vs. bishop

liturgical vs. non-liturgical

Page 7: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

King James & the Non-conformists

“I shall make them conform themselves

or I will harry them out of the land, or else…do

worse.”

Page 8: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

Angers Parliament Angers Puritans Private arrests, trials Catholicize worship (High Church) Last straw - Presbyterian Scots & the new liturgy!

King Charles

Page 9: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

CIVIL WAR Roundheads = Puritans Cavaliers = Royal Loyalists Council of State - backed by revolutionary officers Cromwell assumes control as “Lord Protector of the Commonwealth”

The Bloody Revolution!King Charles beheaded in 1649!

Page 10: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

Cromwell’s RulePuritan strictness

Military powerSuppression of

theatre& other frivolous

activitiesTyrant/dictator

Page 11: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

The Restoration Cromwell’s death dooms Puritan rule Parliament asks King Charles II back from exile in Holland People revolted vs. Puritan strictness

Page 12: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

Hatred of Cromwell

Page 13: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

Charles II Catholic sympathizer Repressive religious measures Allied to Catholic France Discontent grows vs. monarchy

Page 14: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

James II Catholic sympathizer appoints Catholics to influential govt & military posts Vatican reps in court religious persecution of Scottish Protestants

Page 15: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

Glorious Revolution(Bloodless Revolution)

William of Orange (Protestant) Mary (James II’s daughter) Parliament asks them to rule in place of James II New limited monarchy

Page 16: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

London grows to 600,000!

Page 17: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

Historic Events

Great Plague in London

1665-------------68,000

die!

Page 18: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

Historic Events

Great Fire of London - 1666(Christopher Wren - rebuilder)

Page 19: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

Cavalier Poets-- Lovelace, Suckling, Herrick --

Anglican supporters of the King topics of wine, women, war & love simple & easy to understand avoided religious topics witty & satirical

“Tribe of Ben”

Page 20: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

Metaphysical Poets-- Donne, Herbert, later Herrick --

Protestant Not happy with the King religious & philosophical topics challenging, demanding, symbolic metaphysical conceits – unusual metaphors

Page 21: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

John Milton Paradise Lost (over 10,000 lines) Puritan look at fall into sin “justify the ways of God to man” great English classic

17th Century Poetry

Page 22: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

17th Century Poetry John Dryden Poet laureate of Charles II Neoclassic style (odes & satires) literary criticism essayist - “father of modern prose” translator debater

Page 23: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

17th Century Drama

He was not of an age, but for all time. -- To the Memory of Shakespeare

Ben Jonson Comedies - Satiric Comedy - Tragicomedy - Comedy of Manners Puritans close theater Actresses acceptable by

end of century

Page 24: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

17th Century Prose Scientific writing Hobbes & Locke – Philosophical writing Izaak Walton – The Compleat Angler John Dryden – Literary criticism Samuel Pepys – The Diary (in code) John Bunyan – The Pilgrim’s Progress King James Bible

Page 25: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

John BunyanOur Father which in heaven art,Thy name be always hallowed;Thy kingdom come, thy will be done;Thy heavenly path be followedBy us on earth as 'tis with thee,We humbly pray;And let our bread us given be,From day to day.Forgive our debts as we forgiveThose that to us indebted are:Into temptation lead us not,But save us from the wicked snare.The kingdom's thine, the power too,We thee adore;The glory also shall be thineFor evermore.

Page 26: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress

Written in prison Main character is Christian Allegory of Christian Life “Last great Christian classic”

Page 27: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

Samuel Pepys –Diary Writer

June 15th

The Duke of Yorke not yet come to town. The town grows very sickly, and people to be afeared of it - there dying this last wek of the plague 112, from 43 the week before - whereof, one in Fanchurch-street and one in Broadstreete by the Treasurer's office.

Page 28: 17th Century ( 1625 – 1700) The Cavaliers & Puritans

Watch for . . . Spelling becoming set (1st dictionaries) Satire - moral writing to expose evil Heroic couplet in poetry Rise of comedies Shakespeare considered “rough,

uncultured” - not often performed