I am the only candidate by far qualified for the role of political office.
Everyone running against me is not fit for the role of office and is not focused on making England the most powerful nation in the world. “Bloody” Mary Tudor burned 300 Protestants as heretics. Would you really want a murder to rule the nation? She is a corrupt leader and all she cares about is abolishing Protestantism. I specifically made the Church of England to ensure that the religion in our nation is better, instead of this foolishness Mary Tudor is doing. Onto the next one.
Would we really trust a Queen who did not want kids, so our country could crumble after her death? Elizabeth I did not want kids, and she new after her death, there would be no one to rule
Considering the fact that a female successor to the throne of England was ascending, there was a tremendous amount of political influence on her reign. The Act of Supremacy (Doc. 3), declared by King Henry VII, assured that Elizabeth would be the rightful heir to the throne of England; this parliamentary act stated that Elizabeth is the most superior
During the 1500s, the citizens of England were overcome with multiple transitions of religion due to their monarch. The first notable instance of religious alteration was when Henry the VIII took the throne. During his reign, he ruled the Act of Supremacy, which separated England from the Catholic Church, and so Henry VIII established the Church of England, of which he was the leader of. This individual action indirectly prompted many other spiritual changes that would take place in England during the years to come, led by his successors. Even if his ruling may have ultimately been positive, it is utterly clear that at the time, Henry VIII's reformation was motivated purely by his selfish desires for a male heir. This was very dissimilar to Martin Luther's reformation, which was led by Luther's faith and loyalty to god. Though the two men both transformed the perception of religion in Europe drastically, the advancements were made for vastly different reasons. (#8)
Bridget Bishop was put on trial in 1692, on accusation of being a witch. Several members of Bishop’s community came to the trial to testify against her. According to Bishop’s community, there was a large amount of evidence that Bishop was indeed a Witch. It was testified that if Bishop laid her eyes on someone, they would be struck down. If Bishop made certain actions with her body, someone would fall in pain. Deliverance Hobbs testified that Bishop had attended a meeting for witches in Salem. Samuel Shattuck testified that, “in the year 1680, this Bridget bishop, often came to his house upon such frivolous and foolish errands, that they suspected she came indeed with a purpose of mischief” (75). John Bly and William Bly had testified,
At age 15 he entered Trinity College, Cambridge. At age 17 he married the first of his four wives—Mary Forth, daughter of an Essex squire—and the next year the first of his 16 children was born. Like many members of his class, Winthrop studied law, served as justice of the peace, and obtained a government office; from 1627 to 1629 he was an attorney at the Court
History Homework – Mary 1) How did Mary treat Cranmer? Very harshly, she made him watch his friends die. And then she made him stay in nasty conditions in a prison until he signed to change his religion. But this was a trick
Puritan literature focused heavily on the portrayal of God and the role that He played in their life. Mary Rowlandson’s work, “The Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson,” did just this and depicted the theme of God’s all-embracing power throughout the narration. The story is meant to represent and detail the time that the author spent during her time of being a prisoner of the Native Americans and her belief that God could save her. One line in particular at the end of the piece illustrated her ideals of God, in which she claimed, “When the Lord had brought His people to this, that they saw no help in anything but Himself; then He takes the quarrel into His own hand; and though they had made a pit, in their own imaginations, as deep as hell for the Christians that summer, yet the Lord hurled themselves into it” (Rowlandson, 20). Mary Rowlandson used this sentence as a summary to show her belief in the way that God
Mary Rowlandson was born in a Puritan society. Her way of was that of an orthodox Puritan which was to be very religious and see all situations are made possible by God. She begins her writing by retelling a brutal description of the attack on Lancaster by the Natives. Rowlandson spends enough time interacting with the Natives to realize these people live normal, secular lives. She had the opportunity work for a profit which was not accepted when she lived as devout Puritan women in Puritan colony. Mary Rowlandson knows that she must expose the good nature of the Natives and she must rationalize her “boldness” through quoting the Bible.
The SS United States needs to be saved! Many people wonder: How can we save the SS United States? Why should we save her? How is she important? Etc.
On 19th August 1561, Mary landed at Leith and immediately took the advice of the moderates James Stuart (her half-brother, later earl of Moray) and William Maitland of Lethington. She recognised the Reformed (Presbyterian) church and allowed it a modest endowment but not full establishment. The Protestant reformers, including John Knox, were horrified because she had Mass in her own chapel, and the Roman Catholics were worried about her lack of zeal for their cause. For the next few years Mary tried to placate the Protestants and befriend Elizabeth while at the same time negotiating a Catholic marriage with Don Carlos, the son of Philip II of Spain. When refusals came on both the English succession and the Spanish marriage Mary accepted a marriage of love rather than a purely political match. She
Mary Warren is seen throughout the play as being the lovable servant that is loyal to the Proctors and appears to pose no threat whatsoever. However, Mary holds a dark secret that the entire audience finds out in the middle of the play, she is a cold-hearted liar. Mary proves to be the second biggest liar in the entire play right behind Abigail as she will pick those who oppose her and will accuse them of witchcraft so that they may be silenced before they can continue with the truth. Mary proves this little claim true when she has both Elizabeth and John Proctor thrown in jail as they have both learned the truth and are making an attempt to stop everything that is happening. Mary Warren is probably the biggest liar in the story right behind Abigail Williams as she will turn against the family that gave her a place to sleep and a home to live in, in order to be saved by the truth that is leaking out.
Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women worldwide, and can even be known to show up in men. Mary-Claire King devoted her studies to this horrible disease that takes the lives of over 40,000 women a year (BCRF). Since King had a strong background in mathematics and evolutionary biology she was able to take a new approach to learning more about this disease. She has been researching this disease for more than 40 years, but started her research from the beginning by analyzing the first gene of breast cancer. King discovered the ability to use gene mapping to trace the BRCA1 which shows a link with breast cancer. Although King was not the first to genetically clone this gene, she is shown to have various contributions to the first cloning.
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu Reflecting Female Agency in the Eighteenth Century Lady Mary Wortley Montagu writes the poem “Epistle from Mrs. [Y]onge to Her Husband” after a trial between the couple became public. William Yonge took Mary Yonge to trial for having an affair after their separation despite the fact that Mr. Yonge had had many affairs during his marriage to Mrs. Yonge. Writing from the perspective of the wife, Montagu realizes her own female agency, which I understand to be the ability of a woman to act in accordance with her will despite the limitations they may face in relation to another person, a group, or an institution. Montagu argues for the equal treatment of women by showing how male privilege is based in culture and how
The following eight years of Elizabeth's life saw a fast progression of stepmothers. There was Jane Seymour who died while giving birth to the King's long awaited son, Edward; Anne of Cleves who was separated; Catherine Howard who was decapitated;and lastly Catherine Parr. For eras, history specialists have wrangled about whether the consistent spouse changing of her dad was the reason of Elizabeth's clear refusal to wed. It is unquestionably possible that the terrible fates of Anne Boleyn and Catherine Howard frightened her from the idea of marriage, however there may have been different explanations behind the Queen's single state, for example, an fear of labor, which killed many women at this in this era. Regardless of the fact that the
Mary Queen of Scots born 1542 to the beautiful Queen Mary of Guise. Better known as Mary Stuart before her crowning and the granddaughter of Margaret Tudor and the last living descendent of the Tudor-Stuart alliance forged by King Henry VII of England. Besides being set queen on the day of birth, from that point on the queen lived in a fairly happy childhood (Fraser 20). The queen had a very normal childhood but she was unaware of the challenges that laid ahead of her. Everyone knew that Mary was going to be a very successful leader once she arrived in France in 1548 being given the title as “the most perfect child” by Henri II her soon to be father-in-law (Wilkinson). The queen had a very impactful lifestyle using her notable beauty and royal
Mary Stuart is a play based off of the reign of Queen Elizabeth and her actions towards Mary Queen of Scots. Mary was attempting to overthrow Queen Elizabeth. Elizabeth was reluctant to have Mary executed because she knew that there were still supporters of Mary who may rebel. Eventually, the Queen has Mary executed to ensure her security but in the end she ended up alone after banishing many of her closest members of her inner circle.