True
True
The Renaissance was a cultural movement that spanned the period roughly from the 14th to the 17th century. The Elizabethan era was in the 16th century.Therefore the answer to this question is NO - but the Elizabethan era was in the Renaissance era and some would regard the Elizabethan era as the height of the Renaissance era.
The Elizabethan era was the Elizabethan era. It was the time when England became Protestant and the Renaissance became established in England. The Romantic era extended into the Victorian Era. They were two different Queens and two different eras.
The Elizabethan Era and the English Renaissance
The Elizabethan era had its own type of renaissance where there was a lot of new poetry and music. It was a time of peace, and the only enemy that England had at the time was Spain.
The Renaissance in England spanned several reigns, but Elizabeth I was one of the prominent monarchs during that era. The two terms are not, however, strictly equivalent.
In Europe of Shakespeare's day, the most respected people culturally were probably the Italians who were ahead of the rest of the continent in embracing Renaissance ideas.
The Elizabethan Era occurred from 1558 to 1603. This was considered a golden age of sorts, as the Elizabethan Era hosted a blossoming of interest in the arts, such as poetry and literature.
Shakespeare lived and wrote in the Elizabethan Era, the English Renaissance.
That was when the new learning blossomed, and the Queen happened to be a very well-educated woman.
superstition
During the Medieval era, feudalism was very much a part of life in England and the rest of Europe. During the Elizabethan Era, there was no feudalism, and a wage economy was in operation. The Elizabethan Period was the period of renaissance in England with a great flowering of the arts including writing, art, and architecture. It was also an age of exploration and expanding the country. During the Medieval times, the Church had tremendous power, and most people still considered the world to be flat.