Gloriana's Home Page | Meet the Webmaster | Elizabeth I - A Brief Introduction | Elizabeth I's Birth and Early Childhood
Elizabeth I's Education and Adolescence | Under the Rule of Edward and Mary | Mini-biography of Elizabeth
Elizabeth I's Domestic and Foreign Policy | Elizabeth I's Forty-five Year Reign
Elizabeth I's Councilors, Favorites, & Bureaucrats | Other Men in Elizabeth I's Life | Queen Elizabeth I's Pastime
The Elizabethan Church and the Catholics | The Elizabeth Religious Settlement | Queen Elizabeth I Power and Government
Everyday  Life in Elizabeth I's England - Page 1 Everyday  Life in Elizabeth I's England - Page 2
The Elizabethan Art & Architecture Page | The Death of Queen Elizabeth I

Did You Know? Sweet marjoram was the major ingredient in Queen Elizabeth I's favorite scent.


Miscellaneous Elizabethan Period Music
Click-on arrow to play music
 



Welcome to Queen Elizabeth I
Web Site.!

Hello and again welcome to the Queen Elizabeth I web site. As you can see I have changed this site a little, I have gave it a new look, also, I have added new information as well, by updating some of the existing pages and adding new pages. And YES, this time, I did use a spell checker for all the pages; well there may still be some misspelled words on the web site, so if you see any let me know. I didn't realize my spelling had gotten that bad until several of you told me about them; I guess that's what old age will get you. Thank you for pointing the misspellings out to me. Thank you all too for being so patient while I was changing the look of this website. I hope you like all the changes, let me know what you think of the new look and the contents of Elizabeth I's web site. E-mail and Guestbook links are at the bottom of each page.

Thank you, Charles H. Dudley


Elizabeth I Gloriana

Elizabeth Tudor is considered by many to be the greatest monarch in English history. When she became queen in 1558, she was twenty-five years old, a survivor of scandal and danger, and considered illegitimate by most Europeans. She inherited a bankrupt nation, torn by religious discord, a weakened pawn between the great powers of France and Spain. She was only the third queen to rule England in her own right; the other two examples were her cousin Lady Jane Grey and half-sister Mary I, both was disastrous. Even her supporters believed her position dangerous and uncertain. Her only hope, they counseled, was to marry quickly and lean upon her husband for support. But Elizabeth had other ideas. She ruled alone for nearly half a century, lending her name to a glorious epoch in world history. She dazzled even her greatest enemies. Her sense of duty was admirable, though it came at great personal cost. She was committed above all else to preserving English peace and stability; her genuine love for her subjects was legendary. Only a few years after her death in 1603, they openly lamented her passing. In her greatest speech to Parliament, she told them, 'I count the glory of my crown that I have reigned with your love.' Five centuries later, the worldwide love affair with Elizabeth Tudor continues on.
© C. Dudley - 2002


Read all about Elizabeth's life, her journey to the throne and beyond, on Elizabeth I's web site. Elizabeth I's web site will cover her childhood, her near death experiences, how she became queen, and how she persevere' in her struggles as queen, being she was a Protestant woman and queen of a country with a male dominated populous which was still mostly Catholic. She led a very interesting and sometimes dangerous life, and was one of England's and even the world's greatest Monarchs. I think you will find her and her life's story very interesting.




  




A Note to All Students :
Citing this website for your school projects.

A lot of you have written to me asking for specific information so that you can cite this website for your projects, essays, etc, so I have listed the information below:

Title: Robert and Elizabeth
Url: http://robert-elizabeth.20m.com
Webmaster: Charles H. Dudley
Date written and published on Web: September 5, 2010
Publisher: This site was self-published by C. H. Dudley.
Last Updated: September 5th, 2010
Email Address: robertandelizabethregina@gmail.com

You are welcome to copy and use the material and/or images on this web site as you wish. While I'm always adding new information to this website, if you need more information than what I have listed here, please let me know, Although there is an E-mail Link at the bottom of each page, I only check that email address on a bi-monthly bases, if you need to hear from me sooner you may also contact me at my personal email address. It is chdudley12@Gmail.com, I check this email account on a daily bases, you may use either e-mail and I will get back to you as soon as possible.

All the information I have placed on this web site has been to the best of my ability verified to be true and correct.

Webmaster: C. H. Dudley

   my Oh my, homework!!!

  



Elizabeth I's Website Updates
Last Updated; 09-02-2010

Latest Pages Updates

1. Mini-biography of Elizabeth
Updated; July 19, 2005

2. Elizabeth I's Councilors, Favorites, & Bureaucrats
Updated; July 19, 2005

3. The Elizabeth Religious Settlement
Updated; July 19, 2005

4. Queen Elizabeth I Power and Government
Updated; July 19, 2005 5. Elizabeth's' Birth and Early Childhood
Updated; July 21, 2005

6. Queen Elizabeth I Pastime
Updated; July 21, 2005

7. Queen Elizabeth I Home Page
Updated; July 21, 2005

8. The Elizabethan Church and the Catholics
Updated; July 21, 2005

9. Elizabeth I's Education and Adolescence
Updated; September 2nd, 2010

New Page Titles Added

1. Elizabeth I - A Brief Introduction
Page Added; July 11, 2005

2. Everyday Life in Elizabeth I's England - Page 1
Page Added; July 11, 2005

3. The Death of Queen Elizabeth I
Page Added; July 20, 2005

4. Everyday Life in Elizabeth I's England - Page 2
Page Added; July 23, 2005

5. The Elizabethan Art & Architecture Page - Page 2
Page Added; July 25, 2005

As of July 25, 2005 I have completed adding new pages and updating pages on Queen Elizabeth I web site, In the near future I will again be adding more information to this web site. I hope you enjoy what I have placed on here and that it has helped you to know and understand Queen Elizabeth I and her times.

6. Updated and placed some Elizabethan period music on the web site, added a video, did some cosmetic work, repaired some broken links, and added some information about Elizabeth and Roberts's relationship. I hope you enjoy what I have here on this website and will tell others about it as well.
September 2nd, 2010.



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The History Channel.com network is a network of some of the greatest history web sites on the internet and we are very proud to be chosen by the History Channel as one of those great sites, and to be associated with the History Channel.

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I hope you will visit other web sites associated with the History Channel, Bravenet web services, 20m.com, and Scrub the Web, and take advantage of some of the fine products and offers they have for you and your family.



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From the "Spirit of Elizabeth I" to you, her guest ;


"The Volta"

The dance Queen Elizabeth love to dance to, The Volta, was written by Michael Praetorius. He lived from 1571 to 1621. I have placed on here a more authentic rendition of The Volta than that of the movie version. I have placed on here as well a video clip off of You Tube from the movie Elizabeth, where Elizabeth and Robert Dudley danced that version of The Volta, please enjoy both!


The Volta
Click-on arrow to play, The Volta!

Robert and Elizabeth



Robert and Elizabeth were about the same age and were very close childhood friends and companions, and in my own personal opinion, soul mates. They shared their most sacred secrets with each other as well as confiding to each other their fears and concerns of their future, for both were always in danger of losing their lives during their childhood and early adulthood through several power struggles for the throne of England.
Another thing Elizabeth would confide to Robert when they were still children was that she would never marry. She was so traumatized by her mother's disastrous marriage to her father Henry the Eight, and her mother's tragic death at the hands of her father, that it made her afraid of marriage and gave her a very strong dislike for marriage, either for love or for political reasons.
Although she loved her father very much and wanted and needed his love and approval, she feared her father of what he might do to her and she never forgave him for her mother's death, and this kept them from ever being close to each other, and thus kept those things away from her that she needed most in her life.
After Elizabeth became queen, Robert became her "Favorite", and the two probably would have married, if it were not for the mysterious circumstances surrounding the death of Robert's first wife, Amy Robshart and the suspicion that Robert killed her, of course Robert not being home at the time of his wife's death didn't keep the rumor mills from spreading this belief around Elizabeth's court. Later Robert was deemed innocent of the death of his wife when a court of inquiry ruled Amy's death was accidental. But the damage to Robert's reputation was done. Their marriage would cause a great scandal and riff in Elizabeth's court, and prevented her from reigning effectively and cause her to have even more enemies which Elizabeth could ill afford at the time, being she had so many people already against her being queen. Plus her many peers and councilors were very jealous of Robert and his close relationship with Elizabeth and her great trust in his council, which made Robert very disliked in Elizabeth's court. Robert was probably the most hated person of his time, and if Elizabeth and Robert had married this would have caused such a split in Elizabeth court she would have surely been forcibly ousted as queen.
Although it was depicted and strongly suggested in the movie 'Elizabeth', that Robert Dudley betrayed Elizabeth and England. This depiction of Robert siding with the Spanish Ambassador in a plot to undermine and destroy Elizabeth's ability to rule unless she married King Phillip of Spain was totally untrue. Robert was a loyal subject to both his queen and his country and loyally served both all of his life and even up to the time of his death, dying just shortly after he had served as one of Elizabeth's generals during the Spanish Armada scare. Robert stood by Elizabeth's' side as they waited together for the much feared landing of the Spanish Armada on England's shores.
Even when they had strong disagreements between each other, and after Elizabeth would angrily have Robert thrown out of her court, they would still remained close friends and some say lovers throughout their lives, which I strongly believe to be true. By all the information and accounts of their lives, some which is actual history and some which is legend, indicate this to be true, and when Robert died in 1588, Elizabeth locked herself in her apartment not seeing nor speaking to anyone for four days, at the time it was thought Elizabeth herself had died. She mourned his death and missed his council and him being beside her every day for the rest of her life. This loss she felt drove her to try and find Robert in his son, Lord Essex, which ended in tragedy. She had over indulged Essex, because she seen Robert in him, and this led Essex into believing he could get by with whatever he wanted too. He tried to take over as ruler of England and dispose of Elizabeth and her government. But this failed and she had to order him to be executed as a traitor to the crown. This caused her even more pain, from which she never fully recovered.
Shortly after Roberts' death when she sat for her famous 'Armada Portrait', the artist painting the portrait caught the distance look in Elizabeth's eyes. In the Marine Corps we called it 'the thousand yard stare', you can tell by her eyes that she was starring way beyond the person that was painting the portrait, and into a distant place far beyond this world, and for the portrait she was wearing black as if in mourning and wore the pearl necklace Robert had given her, draped around her neck and over her heart. Some of you may say that I'm reading too much into this, well maybe I am, I may be too much of a romantic, but I don't believe I am. Look at all her other portraits and she is always looking at the person painting her. I would think that she would have been wearing something a little more festive, since this was a very important portrait to celebrate the destruction of the Spanish Armada, which started England on the road to becoming a great world power. The defeat of Spain established the glory of the English navy and inspired merchants and explorers toward colonization of a wider world.
She certainly loved Robert and his death left a void in her life that never could be filled and I for one, am very certain that they are together now and will be forever, because a love like theirs, even death cannot destroy it, and the love they shared for each other will live on into eternity.
©C. Dudley - 2010


  


Sir Robert Dudley ;
Queen Elizabeth I's 'Favorite'

Robert Dudley was sometimes called the "Gypsy" because of his dark features, striking good looks and his charm.


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Another Web Site
of the Tudor Rose Family Series .
A Series of Web Sites Featuring
a Prominent Figure of the Tudor Family.
Published by Charles H. Dudley

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