Queen Elizabeth wasn't the figurehead of today and made all the major decisions in England. She decided everything from religion, when to go to war, if someone was to be executed and everyone had to obey her or be charged with treason.
So was Queen Elizabeth decisive or indecisive? During the reign of Queen Elizabeth she came across many problems that she needed to solve for example Mary, Queen of Scots( if she needed to kill her or not). There a lot of decisions she made and I think she was mainly very decisive apart from being rushed into a decision once or twice. She obviously put a lot of thought into the poor law because the poor were treated with respect and they lived better lives and her decisions with religion were very wise combining the two religions (Protestant and Catholic) pleasing all the country because it was balanced.
Queen Elizabeth may have been rushed into killing Mary, Queen of Scots but she regretted the decision meaning she thought it through after they made her sign the death warrant. So I think overall queen Elizabeth was very decisive with her big decisions and solved them very wisely.
yes, at that period of time, England Flourished and was peaceful. She had lots of power because she didn't marry
she overcame the queen by winning her spot as Queen Elizabeth the 1.
Queen Elizabeth 1's life was so full of incident and drama.
Elizabeth Tudor was the full name of Queen Elizabeth the 1st
Queen Elizabeth's occupation was to rule all of England.
The Queen Elizabeth I has two roles. The two roles were the head of the nation and the head of state.
vey important
she was one of the queen's of england and her name was elizibeth
go search!
elizabeth the 1
she overcame the queen by winning her spot as Queen Elizabeth the 1.
Queen Elizabeth 1
Queen Elizabeth 1's life was so full of incident and drama.
elizabeth 1
Queen Elizabeth 1
Queen Elizabeth 1 didn't take over Edward 1 it was Queen Mary Tudor was next in line.
Elizabeth Tudor was the full name of Queen Elizabeth the 1st
She was the queen of BRITAIN, not England.