The Jacobean Age Bullets
The Jacobean Age Bullets
The Jacobean Age Bullets
(1603-1660)
1: The great Queen (Elizabeth) died in 1603, after a glorious reign. She was
succeeded by James I, distantly related to her. The reign of James I ( in Latin called
Jacobus), following the Elizabethan Age, is popularly known as the Jacobean Age.
2: Jacobean period kept up the high literary tradition of its immediate
predecessor(replaced by something else). It was also the period of Shakespeare
later and last plays as also the plays of a good many of his big
contemporaries(existing, occurring, or living at the same time; belonging to the
same time) and prominent(particularly noticeable) successors(a person or thing that
succeeds or follows), like Ben Jonson, George Chapman, Beaumont and Fletcher,
Middleton, Haywood, Webster, Tourneur, Massinger and Shirley.
3: This age presents a galaxy of great poets like Milton, Donne, Drummond, Drayton
and so on. The prose master, like Bacon, Burton, Donne (with his sermons) as also
the Authorized Version of the Holy Bible, published at the personal initiative of King
James I, also belong to this age.
4: The period of James I is actually meant by the term Jacobean. But factually, in
the first place, two ages-Elizabethan and Jacobean- are found to overlap and mingle
up in the matter of literature. In the second place, the literature of the Jacobean
period ran to the phases that followed- Charles Is rule and the Civil War, followed
by the establishment of the Puritan Parliamentary authority till the restoration of
monarchy in 1660.
5: The ascension(The act or process of ascending) of James I to the English throne
in 1603 marked an era of social and philosophical transition(change) that was
reflected in the increasingly dark and ambiguous(open to or having several possible
meanings or interpretations) drama of the period.
6: Christian humanist conception of the universe prevailed(exist everywhere or
generally) during the Elizabethan age, the scientific movement of the seventeenth
century cast doubt upon earlier views of the cosmos(the world or universe regarded
as an orderly, harmonious system) as a highly moral environment governed by God.
7: The transition between the Elizabethan and Jacobean ages was reflected in
drama in varying degrees. With the exception of such late tragedies as Antony and
1: Jacobean literature was yet fresh and lively with Elizabethan inspirations. In the
realm of drama, Shakespeare had a number of worthy contemporaries and
successors, pursing artistically their craft. Of course, there was a decline in dramatic
sphere.
2: The University Wits and the Elizabethan Lyricists were no more but they were
replaced, not very unworthily perhaps, by the poets, like Donne and Drummond,
and the prose masters, like Bacon and the makers of the Authorized Version of the
Holy Bible.
3: Literature was marked, though a potential change was evident, coming, perhaps
slowly, but definitely firmly. A new literary world for England was about to dawn.
4: The Civil War and the rigours of the Puritans rule seemed to cut off English
literature from its great tradition- from the traditional vitality and variety of English
literature. But it was a gloom before a sparkle to flash with the restoration of
monarchy.