Elizabethan era

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A Victorian Yellow Luncheon Party Elizabethan Era, Luncheon, Past, Advice, Victorian, Sticker, Entertaining, Shower, History
A Victorian Yellow Luncheon Party
Victorian Era Advertising Trade Cards Victorian Era, The Seventh Seal, Calling Cards, Typographic, Carrie, Postcards, Aka
Victorian Era Advertising Trade Cards
Victorian Calling Cards Edwardian, Valentine Picture, Victorian Valentines, Card Illustration
Victorian Calling Cards
A School Teacher's First Chapter School Teacher, Chapter, Male Sketch, Art, Art Background, Kunst, Performing Arts, Art Education Resources
A School Teacher's First Chapter
Victorian Beauty Tips for Hair Beauty Tips For Hair, Beauty Hacks, Stubborn Belly Fat, Dreadlocks, Abs, Skin Care, Hair Styles
Victorian Beauty Tips for Hair
Victorian Era Recipes Victorian Fashion, Victorian Recipes, Vintage Recipes, Vintage Food, Blueberry Picking, Blueberry Season
Recipes for Blueberry Season
Victorian Era Recipes
Keeping Things Hot With Victorian Stoves Meatloaf Recipes, Attic, Chevrolet Logo, Sweet Home, Old Things, America, Stoves
Keeping Things Hot With Victorian Stoves
The Language of Victorian Fans: Victorian Flirting Victorian Women, Fan Language, Antique Fans, 19th Century Fashion, Hand Held Fan, Hand Art, Bustier
The Language of Victorian Fans: Victorian Flirting
Proper Victorian Era Courtship Practices Dating Advice, Relationship Advice, Girly Stuff, Girly Things, Greeting Card Craft, Act Like A Lady, Vintage Pictures
Proper Victorian Era Courtship Practices
The Newes July 6th 1665.    This is fantastic. It's a newspaper from 1665 published 'concerning the infection of the plague of 1665'. it discusses such things as 'to every infected house be appointed 2 watchmen, one for day and one for night, and that these watchmen must let no one in or out' and all bedding of the sick and infected be well aired with fire and be done by appointment of the examiner'    'That the burial of the dead before sun rising or after setting and that no neighbours or frie Bubonic Plague, Rare London, Black Death, Watchmen, July 6th, Kung Fu, Newspapers, Prison
The Newes July 6th 1665. This is fantastic. It's a newspaper from 1665 published 'concerning the infection of the plague of 1665'. it discusses such things as 'to every infected house be appointed 2 watchmen, one for day and one for night, and that these watchmen must let no one in or out' and all bedding of the sick and infected be well aired with fire and be done by appointment of the examiner' 'That the burial of the dead before sun rising or after setting and that no neighbours or frie
Gin...a London staple, or at least it was in the 1700's! This is the oldest bottle I've found to date Gin Bottles, Vodka Bottle, Macallan Whiskey Bottle, Brit, England, London, Antique
Gin...a London staple, or at least it was in the 1700's! This is the oldest bottle I've found to date
This is an amazing document. Written by the 'Ordinary' of Newgate and detailing the behaviour, confessions and dying words of the MALEFACTORS executed at Tyburn on 6th october 1733. 9 Men and 1 woman were tried and found guilty of capital offences, a number of which were for theft and one in particular, Anne Soames who stole '4 gold rings, 4 handekerchiefs, 4 pairs of ruffles and a pair of stays'! This makes for very interesting although macabre reading and these booklets were created Theft, Macabre, Guilty, Confessions, The Ordinary, Booklet
This is an amazing document. Written by the 'Ordinary' of Newgate and detailing the behaviour, confessions and dying words of the MALEFACTORS executed at Tyburn on 6th october 1733. 9 Men and 1 woman were tried and found guilty of capital offences, a number of which were for theft and one in particular, Anne Soames who stole '4 gold rings, 4 handekerchiefs, 4 pairs of ruffles and a pair of stays'! This makes for very interesting although macabre reading and these booklets were created
London Peculiars Museum of the Strange and Rare Florence Nightingale, Memento Mori, Bbc News, Great Plague Of London, Medical Astrology, Worksheets, Stricken
London Peculiars Museum of the Strange and Rare
Elizabethan silver threepence 1564 British History, Antiques, Silver, Antiquities, English, British
Elizabethan silver threepence 1564
Beggars and alms-seekers. Social Policy, Beggar, Seeker, Humanoid Sketch, Proverbs, Version, Quotes
Beggars and alms-seekers.
Beggars and alms-seekers.
Rogues and vagabonds are often stocked and whipped; scolds are ducked upon cucking-stools in the water. Such felons as stand mute, and speak not at their arraignment, are pressed to death by huge weights laid upon a board, that lieth over their breast, and a sharp stone under their backs; and these commonly held their peace, thereby to save their goods unto their wives and children, which, if they were condemned, should be confiscated to the prince Felon, Gcse, Punishment, Rogues, Stools, Weights, Crime, Death
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Rogues and vagabonds are often stocked and whipped; scolds are ducked upon cucking-stools in the water. Such felons as stand mute, and speak not at their arraignment, are pressed to death by huge weights laid upon a board, that lieth over their breast, and a sharp stone under their backs; and these commonly held their peace, thereby to save their goods unto their wives and children, which, if they were condemned, should be confiscated to the prince
Witches are hanged, or sometimes burned; but thieves are hanged Illinois, Nihon, Genocide, Drawing Reference, Burns, Catholic, Moose Art, Tapestry
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Witches are hanged, or sometimes burned; but thieves are hanged
Sometimes, if the trespass be not the more heinous, they are suffered to hang till they be quite dead. And whensoever any of the nobility are convicted of high treason by their peers, that is to say, equals (for an inquest of yeomen passeth not upon them, but only of the lords of parliament), this manner of their death is converted into the loss of their heads only, notwithstanding that the sentence do run after the former order Owe Money, Yeoman, Beheading, Witch, Draw, Hanging
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Sometimes, if the trespass be not the more heinous, they are suffered to hang till they be quite dead. And whensoever any of the nobility are convicted of high treason by their peers, that is to say, equals (for an inquest of yeomen passeth not upon them, but only of the lords of parliament), this manner of their death is converted into the loss of their heads only, notwithstanding that the sentence do run after the former order
The greatest and most grievous punishment used in England for such as offend against the State is drawing from the prison to the place of execution upon an hurdle or sled, where they are hanged till they be half dead, and then taken down, and quartered alive; after that, their members and bowels are cut from their bodies, and thrown into a fire, provided near hand and within their own sight, even for the same purpose. Plots, Bard, Shakespeare, Drawings, Bowels
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The greatest and most grievous punishment used in England for such as offend against the State is drawing from the prison to the place of execution upon an hurdle or sled, where they are hanged till they be half dead, and then taken down, and quartered alive; after that, their members and bowels are cut from their bodies, and thrown into a fire, provided near hand and within their own sight, even for the same purpose.
These fragments come from William Harrison's A Description of Elizabethan England (1577), and form an intriguing survey of Elizabethan crime and punishment. The images are taken from a 17th Century collection of prints Church History, Tudor History, History Books, Pilgrimage Of Grace, London History, Literature Art, Anne Boleyn, Old London
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These fragments come from William Harrison's A Description of Elizabethan England (1577), and form an intriguing survey of Elizabethan crime and punishment. The images are taken from a 17th Century collection of prints
Elizabethan Coach The Tudor Family, Horse Drawn Wagon, Medieval England, Old Wagons, Chuck Wagon, Tring
Elizabethan Coach
Elizabethan Coach
Elizabethan literature  by John Mackinnon Robertson. Open Library, Robertson, Literature, Books, Literatura, Libros, Book, Book Illustrations
Elizabethan literature by John Mackinnon Robertson | Open Library
Elizabethan literature by John Mackinnon Robertson.
Elizabethan Calendar    The rhythm of the Elizabethan's life was the rhythm of the seasons. The turning of the seasons governed how he worked and how and when he played.    ImageThe Elizabethan did not concern himself much with the exact date. He looked upon the year as a series of seasons, and his signposts were the feast days. If he talked about something that happened on July 27th, he would say it occurred "two days past Lammastide". Tudor Facts, German Men, Working Man, What Is Life About, Garb, 16th Century, Woodcut, Renaissance
Elizabethan Calendar | Mass Historia
Elizabethan Calendar The rhythm of the Elizabethan's life was the rhythm of the seasons. The turning of the seasons governed how he worked and how and when he played. ImageThe Elizabethan did not concern himself much with the exact date. He looked upon the year as a series of seasons, and his signposts were the feast days. If he talked about something that happened on July 27th, he would say it occurred "two days past Lammastide".
Elizabethans believed that there were seven planets--the moon, Mercury, Venus, Sol(the sun), Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn--and that they rotated around the earth in concentric circles. They believed that the earth was the center of the universe, fixed firmly in place. The "planets" affected the affairs of the earth, and astrologers felt that they could predict future events by knowing the conjunction of the stars. Models Of The Universe, Saturn Planet, Alchemic Symbols, Tudor Era, History Of England, Chinese Astrology, Astrology Numerology, Water Dragon
Belief and Customs
Elizabethans believed that there were seven planets--the moon, Mercury, Venus, Sol(the sun), Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn--and that they rotated around the earth in concentric circles. They believed that the earth was the center of the universe, fixed firmly in place. The "planets" affected the affairs of the earth, and astrologers felt that they could predict future events by knowing the conjunction of the stars.
Funerals were very elaborate if one was a member of nobility. The covered coffin was carried to the grave by black clad pallbears. The long procession of mourners followed wearing hooded cloaks. The coat of arms was painted on flags, arranged by one of the family heralds. The body was buried inside the church. After the funeral, mourners feasted, and money was collected and given to the poor. Hooded Cloak, Cloaks, Nobility, Book Pages, Etiquette, Coat Of Arms, Grave, Old And New
Belief and Customs
Funerals were very elaborate if one was a member of nobility. The covered coffin was carried to the grave by black clad pallbears. The long procession of mourners followed wearing hooded cloaks. The coat of arms was painted on flags, arranged by one of the family heralds. The body was buried inside the church. After the funeral, mourners feasted, and money was collected and given to the poor.
Marriage customs of the Elizabethan Era are not much different from the traditional marriages of today. Like some religions, after the formal betrothal the banns were published (the announcement of the couple's intent to marry.) The minister publicly announced in church asking the gatherers if they might have any objection, and if so, to state so before the formal ceremony. If the couple wanted to hurry up the process, a special license from the bishop would be required.    Boys were legal to ma William Byrd, Gunpowder Plot, Tudor Dynasty, English Poets, Traditional Marriage, A Discovery Of Witches, All Souls, Minstrel
Belief and Customs
Marriage customs of the Elizabethan Era are not much different from the traditional marriages of today. Like some religions, after the formal betrothal the banns were published (the announcement of the couple's intent to marry.) The minister publicly announced in church asking the gatherers if they might have any objection, and if so, to state so before the formal ceremony. If the couple wanted to hurry up the process, a special license from the bishop would be required. Boys were legal to ma
The south end of The London Bridge displayed the decapitated heads of those who had committed treason South End, Witch Trials, Elizabeth I, London Bridge, Jacobean, Sexism, Famous People
Crime and Punishment
The south end of The London Bridge displayed the decapitated heads of those who had committed treason
An Elizabethan who committed treason would ultimately be "quartered", or cut into four sections for public display European History, Medieval Period, Medieval Art, Medieval Times, Tudor Style, Tudor Monarchs
Crime and Punishment
An Elizabethan who committed treason would ultimately be "quartered", or cut into four sections for public display