Examples of Tudors in the following topics:
-
- The Tudor architectural style was the final development of medieval architecture during the Tudor period (1485–1603).
- The Tudor architectural style was the final development of medieval architecture during the Tudor period (1485–1603), and even beyond, for conservative college patrons.
- The designation "Tudor style" is an awkward one,with its implied suggestions of continuity through the period of the Tudor dynasty and the misleading impression that there was a style break at the accession of Stuart James I in 1603.
- It also has visible timber framing, typical of vernacular Tudor architecture.
- Describe the key elements of the Tudor architectural style, including the Tudor arch, oriel windows, and the chimney stack.
-
- The Tudor period was, for England, one of isolation from European trends.
- The artists of the Tudor court were the painters and limners engaged by the English monarchs' Tudor dynasty and their courtiers between 1485 and 1603 (from the reign of Henry VII to the death of Elizabeth I).
- The Tudor period was, for England, one of unusual isolation from European trends.
- In the Tudor period, foreign artists were recruited and often welcomed lavishly by the English court, as they were in other artistically marginal parts of Europe like Spain or Naples.
- This portrait of Elizabeth I as the "Queen of Love and Beauty" epitomizes the elaborate iconography associated with later Tudor court portraiture.
-
- By the Tudor age, the defenses themselves had been superseded by gunpowder.
-
- She never married or had children and thus was the last monarch of the Tudors dynasty.
- She was the first Tudor to recognize that a monarch ruled by popular consent.
-
- She had not produced a male heir who survived into adulthood, and Henry wanted a son to secure the Tudor dynasty.
- Professor Wrightson examines the various stages of the reformation in England, beginning with the legislative, as opposed to doctrinal, reformation begun by Henry VIII in a quest to settle the Tudor succession.
-
- The Tudor regime, even the Protestant monarchs (Edward VI of England and Elizabeth I of England), persecuted Anabaptists as they were deemed too radical and therefore a danger to religious stability.