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2018 | 4(268) | 5-33

Article title

Spektakl suwerenności: uroczystości koronacyjne królowej Elżbiety I

Selected contents from this journal

Title variants

EN
A Spectacle of Sovereignty: The Coronation Celebrations of Queen Elizabeth I

Languages of publication

Abstracts

EN
The coronation ceremonies of Queen Elizabeth I in 1559, as all ceremonies regarding transfer of royal power, are an interesting example of what Victor Turner called “social drama.” Elizabeth was highly aware of the inextricable bond between statecraft and stagecraft, as can be evinced by the words she famously uttered: “we princes, I tell you, are set on stages in sight and view of all the world duly observed.” The entry progress through the city of London and the coronation were the first public occasions for the queen to present her public persona with theatrical means, through the use of decorations, attributes, gestures, and costumes. The intention behind the ceremonial entry was both to laud the ascending queen and to indicate her government’s policies in the wake of a political crisis following the death of Queen Mary. Allegorical spectacles accompanying the entry comprised a unified programme presenting Elizabeth as the opposite of her predecessor. The purpose of the coronation ceremonies, on the other hand, was quite the opposite: each of its features and rituals was meant to convey and emphasise the continuity and enduring nature of monarchy. The ruler ascending the throne took on a new identity and a new body. In line with the Tudor doctrine of “the king’s two bodies,” described by Ernst Kantorowicz, at coronation the monarch relinquished their individual identity to become a super-individual King who was immortal. Thus, the festivities and ceremonies inaugurating Elizabeth’s rule had a twofold nature, and the two main elements were complementary to each other: they presented the queen as a “new hope” of the Protestant England and as a rightful heir to the throne not just worthy of her predecessors but rather identical with them.

Year

Issue

Pages

5-33

Physical description

Contributors

  • Instytut Sztuki Polskiej Akademii Nauk

References

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  • M. Axton, The Queen’s Two Bodies: Drama and the Elizabethan Succession, London 1977.
  • C. G. Bayne, The Coronation of Queen Elizabeth, „The English Historical Review” 1907, vol. 22, s. 650–673; „English Historical Review” 1909, vol. 24, s. 322–323; „The English Historical Review” 1910, vol. 25, s. 550–553.
  • D. M. Berengton, Elizabeth’s Coronation Entry (1559): New Manuscript Evidence, „English Literary Renaissance” 1978 nr 1, s. 3–8.
  • M. Bloch, Królowie cudotwórcy. Studium na temat nadprzyrodzonego charakteru przypisywanego władzy królewskiej zwłaszcza we Francji i w Anglii, przekł. Jan M. Kłoczowski, Warszawa 1998.
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  • W. Haugaard, The Coronation of Elizabeth I, „Journal of Ecclesiastical History” 1968, vol. 19, s. 161–170.
  • A. Hunt, The Drama of Coronation. Medieval Ceremony in Early Modern England, Cambridge 2008.
  • E. Kantorowicz, Dwa ciała króla. Studium ze średniowiecznej teologii politycznej, przekł. M. Michalski, A. Krawiec, Warszawa 2007.
  • J. King, Tudor Royal Iconography: Literature and Art in an Age of Religious Crisis, Princeton 1989.
  • G. Lockhart Ross, Il Schifanoya’s Account of the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth, „English Historical Review” 1908, vol. 23, s. 533–354.
  • A. McLaren, Political Culture in the Reign of Elizabeth I: Queen and Commonwealth. 1558–1585, Cambridge 1999.
  • L. Montrose, The Subject of Elizabeth: Authority, Gender, and Representation, Chicago 2006.
  • A. L. Rowse, An Elizabethan Garland, London 1953.
  • Tudor Queenship : the Reigns of Mary and Elizabeth, ed. by A.Whitelock, A. Hunt, Basingstoke 2010.
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Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-e54488ea-3a86-40b4-b509-1697ccfcf8b7
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