Queens, Feuds and Faith
During the reign of Elizabeth I, Protestants and Catholics use art, language and new technology to wage a battle for power in the British Isles, creating surprising and often radical works.
In the 16th century, the British Isles experienced a religious revolution, as the kingdoms of England and then Scotland turned Protestant. Artists and experts today reveal how, during the reign of Elizabeth I, Protestants and Catholics used art, language and new technology to wage a battle for power in the Isles, creating surprising and often radical works.
Author Stephanie Merritt reassesses John Foxe’s grisly Book of Martyrs as a work of history and nationalist propaganda, with passages performed by actress Morfydd Clark, and we meet the indefatigable William Morgan, who undertook the ten-year task of translating and publishing the Bible in Welsh in 1588.
We discover how England’s emblem was the queen herself, with textiles artist James Merry exploring the mysterious Bacton Altar Cloth, now believed to be a fragment of one of Elizabeth’s power dresses seen in one of her many portraits. Elizabeth’s court swirls with religious intrigue, and the Ora Singers perform the daring, subversive Mass for Four Voices, a Catholic work created by William Byrd, a composer of the Royal Chapel and favourite of Elizabeth.
The queen also had a dangerous rival in Mary Queen of Scots. Jewellery designer Shaun Leane examines how Mary promoted her brand through jewels and fine Scottish gold work, while artist Alice Kettle assesses Mary’s embroideries and the coded messages in them that would contribute to her downfall. As Elizabeth expands exploration and empire in the 1590s, theatre, an explosive entertainment for the people, fed off the stories of distant lands coming back to the Isles. Artist Phoebe Boswell analyses Shakespeare’s attitude to race in his play Othello, supported by performances from actor Martins Imhangbe.
Last on
More episodes
Previous
Clip
-
Mary Queen of Scots' intricate gold locket
Duration: 01:42
Music Played
-
Jon Hopkins
Open Eye Signal
-
Bălănescu Quartet
Want Me
-
Sugababes
Overload
-
Brian Eno
Lux 3
-
Poppy Ackroyd
Light
-
Murcof
Mes
-
Mouth Music
Martin Martin Hits The Beach
-
Nils Frahm
Unter
-
David Holmes
The Ballad Of Sarah And Jack
-
Air
Decollage
-
Mogwai
It Would Have Happened Anyway
-
Murcof
Mir
-
Agnes Obel
Red Virgin Soil
-
Ghostpoet
12 Deaf (feat. Dave Okumu)
-
Cabaret Voltaire
Double Vision
-
Treorchy Male Choir
Diolch I Ti Yr Hollalluog Dduw
-
Four Tet
10 Midi
-
Wolf Alice
Silk
-
Monika Martin
Es Gibt Wieder Einen Morgen
-
Cliff Richard
Field of Love
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Narrator | David Threlfall |
Director | Russell Barnes |
Producer | Isabel Sutton |
Series Producer | Melanie Fall |
Executive Producer | Russell Barnes |
Executive Producer | Denys Blakeway |
Production Company | ClearStory Ltd |
Broadcasts
- Thu 21 Apr 2022 21:00
- Tue 3 May 2022 00:50
- Mon 6 Nov 2023 21:00
- Tue 7 Nov 2023 02:35
Saxons to Stormzy: Eight creative moments that defined their era
Be inspired by some of the incredible individuals who disrupted history with their creativity with The Open University
Nine inspiring creative women that history overlooked