Uploaded by Nasima Ali

Shakespearean England: Women and Marriage

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Classification: Internal
9YEn2
Gender in Shakespearean England
Shakespeare 1564-1616
Elizabethan Reign 1558 -1603
William Shakespeare lived during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, at a time when people were
becoming more aware of their identities and English literature helped with this. People became
more aware of relationships, and Shakespeare’s romances helped people understand more
about the possibilities of love. Despite, women remained of a lower status than men, and
daughters were expected to obey the wishes of their fathers (or male relatives) in all matters.
Women were taught from birth that they were inferior to men. Elizabethan England was a
fiercely patriarchal society with laws that heavily restricted what women could and could not
do. Women were not allowed to attend school or university, which meant they couldn’t work
in professions like law or medicine. Most of the guilds, which trained skilled workers like
goldsmiths and carpenters, did not officially admit women. Even the disreputable profession
of acting was off limits to women. The only trades legally available to women were those that
could be mastered and practiced in the home, such as hat making and brewing. Women were
also barred from voting, and though they could inherit property from their father or their
husband, they could not themselves purchase property. In addition to these legal restrictions,
women were also bound by strict social expectations that did not apply equally to men.
Sermons and books written during the Elizabethan era encouraged women to be silent and
obedient to male authority, whether that of their father or their husband.
Marriage in Elizabethan England replicated society’s patriarchal structure. Legally a girl could
marry as young as 12 with her parents’ consent, though young women typically married in
their late teens or early twenties. When a woman’s father deemed her ready to marry, he had
a large degree of control of who she married. Among the aristocracy, where marriages were
often more about politics than love, women often had no say at all in who they married. In fact,
men had little say too. They often agreed to the proposed marriage in order to continue
receiving monthly allowances from their fathers. Upon entering marriage, a woman ceased to
be her father’s responsibility, and her husband became her legal master. Early marriage was
more common among the nobility and gentry than further down the social scale In the upper
classes, marriage was seen as a means of gaining property, friends, and allies; therefore,
marriages among wealthy landowners were more likely arranged than those among people
from lower classes.
Despite the intensely patriarchal nature of the society Shakespeare grew up in, for the majority
of his life a woman occupied the throne—and an unmarried woman at that. Throughout Queen
Elizabeth I’s reign, debates raged about whether a woman could rule as effectively as a man.
Elizabeth constantly struggled to prove herself in the face of male doubt. When speaking to
her troops ahead of a Spanish invasion, she famously reassured them: “I have the body of a
weak and feeble woman, but I have the heart and stomach of a king.” Yet Elizabeth enjoyed
a long and politically stable reign, demonstrating the effectiveness of female rule. It is possible
that Elizabeth’s success as a ruler inspired other women to demand more freedom, particularly
within their marriages. The period between 1595 and 1620 saw a sharp increase in the number
of disputes and separations between aristocratic wives and their husbands. By the same
token, however, the rise in women’s dissatisfaction with the constraints of marriage also gave
rise to the trope of the “shrew”—that is, an aggressively assertive woman who speaks her
mind. The trope of the shrew in turn reinvigorated the idea that husbands need to discipline
their wives, again renewing patriarchal norms.
Classification: Internal
9YEn2
Comprehension Questions
1. In your own words, give three details about how Elizabethan beliefs were
changing during this era.
2. How were women perceived in relation to their male counterparts?
3. What does the word patriarchal mean?
4. Describe FOUR features of the patriarchal society, which existed in Elizabethan
England.
5. What were the characteristics of an ideal Elizabethan woman?
6. How were marriages arranged?
7. What criticisms did Queen Elizabeth face during her reign and how did she
react?
8. How might Queen Elizabeth I have inspired women across England?
Summary
Re-read paragraphs 1 and 2. Write a summary about women and marriage in Elizabethan
England.
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