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Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

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Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1. It’s. Time!. It’s time to don your doublet!. Tighten your trussing!. Get on your galligaskins!. Females, fit on your farthingales!. Smooth your stomachers!. Remember your ruffs!. Slip on your shoes!. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Welcome to Renaissanc e England. AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1
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Page 1: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

Welcome to Renaissance England.AH-HS-1.3.1AH-HS-2.3.1AH-HS-3.3.1

Page 2: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

It’sTime!

Page 3: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

It’s time to don your doublet!

Page 4: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

Tighten your trussing!

Page 5: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

Get on your galligaskins!

Page 6: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

Females, fit on your farthingales!

Page 7: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

Smooth your stomachers!

Page 8: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

Remember your ruffs!

Page 9: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

Slip on your shoes!

And grab your gloves!

Page 10: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

Ladies?

Gentlemen?

Page 11: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

Is everybody ready?

We’re going to the theater!

Page 12: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1
Page 13: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

The Globe!

Shakespeare’s theater is located just outside of London, England.

Page 14: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

A white flag is flying. There’s a play today!

It’s afternoon, time for the play to start.

The groundlings have paid their penny and are standing to watch the play.

The young men are dressing up to take the female roles.

The stage is a lower class profession, and no women will appear there.

Poetry is a higher class of art than play writing is.

Page 15: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

The wealthy are in the upper decks.

The play is about to begin!

We’re in for a real treat!

It’s one of Shakespeare’s tragedies!

It’s good the plague is over and the theaters are open again.

Page 16: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

William Shakespeare

Page 17: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

What do we know about Shakespeare?

He was born in 1564.

His hometown is Stratford-on-Avon.

His father was a middle class butcher, mayor, & glovemaker.

He married Anne Hathaway when he was 18 years old.

She was 26!They had three children, including a set of twins.

He moved to London and became an actor, playwright, and theater owner.

His acting company was called “The Lord Chamberlain’s Men.”

Later it became “The King’s Men.”

He wrote 37 very successful plays.

Even Queen Elizabeth enjoyed his plays!

His vocabulary was huge: 17,000 to 34,000 words!

He purchased a coat of arms to make his family upper class.

When he retired he went back to Stratford-on-Avon and bought the best house in town.

He has a monument in Westminster Abbey though he’s buried in Stratford-on-Avon.

He died in 1616.

Page 18: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

What do we know about Shakespeare?

He has had an amazing influence on our English language.

Page 19: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

Have you heard these phrases?

I couldn’t sleep a wink. He was dead as a doornail. She’s a tower of strength. They hoodwinked us. I’m green-eyed with jealousy. We’d better lie low for awhile. Keep a civil tongue in your head.

Page 20: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

They are just some of the many expressions coined by that master of language, William Shakespeare.

Page 21: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

Now, let the show begin!

Page 22: Welcome to Renaissance England . AH-HS-1.3.1 AH-HS-2.3.1 AH-HS-3.3.1

Sources Used Fashion pictures from High Fashion

in Shakespeare’s Time by Andrew Brownfoot, Five Castles Press Ltd., 1992

Shakespeare’s Book of Insults, Insights, & Infinite Jests, by John W. Seder, Templegate Publishers, 1984

The Story of English by Robert McCrum, et. al., Penguin Books, 1987


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