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The Tudor myth is a particular tradition in English history, historiography, and literature that presents the period of the 15th century, including the Wars of the Roses, as a dark age of anarchy and bloodshed, and sees the Tudor period of the 16th century as a golden age of peace, law, order, and prosperity.
Elizabeth I was the longest serving Tudor monarch at 44 years, and her reign—known as the Elizabethan Era—provided a period of stability after the short, troubled reigns of her siblings. When Elizabeth I died childless, her cousin of the Scottish House of Stuart succeeded her, in the Union of the Crowns of 24 March 1603.
Tudor period (England, 1485–1603) Elizabethan era (England, 1558–1603) ... Logarithmic timeline shows all history on one page in ten lines. Orders of magnitude (time)
This is a timeline of ... starting a year-long period of disorder and ... the future king of England (r. 1485-1509), is born to parents Edmund Tudor and Margaret ...
Tudor was the son of Welsh courtier Owain Tudur (anglicised to Owen Tudor) and Catherine of Valois, the widow of the Lancastrian King Henry V. Edmund Tudor and his siblings were either illegitimate, or the product of a secret marriage, and owed their fortunes to the goodwill of their legitimate half-brother King Henry VI. When the House of ...
This is a List of Tudor rebellions, ... (Chapter 1, Section "Tudor rebellions - a timeline") O'Day, Rosemary (2010). The Routledge Companion to the Tudor Age ...
Mr Welby is expected to instead spend the festive period privately with family, in contrast to traditionally giving the December 25 sermon at Canterbury Cathedral. – December 5
The Elizabethan era is the epoch in the Tudor period of the history of England during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I (1558–1603). Historians often depict it as the golden age in English history.