16th and 17th century audiences watched
at open air theatres in the day
The stage had no scenery, few props, and
women were played by young boys
The poor (groundlings) stood closest to the
stage - wealthier people paid higher prices for
seated galleries
Queen
Elizabeth
Reigned from
1533-1603
England prospered and was very
important in Europe - but not all citizens
supported her
She did not marry (defying
gender roles/expectations of
patriarchal society of the time) -
this may have been due to her
infertility/prevention of political
instability and power loss
through her husband
Setting of the
Play
14th Century Verona,
Italy
Successful and
cultured city
However - suffered from widespread
violence/deadly battles over issues
including the rivalry between Emperor
supporters and Pope supporters
Montecchi and Capuleti families
were real - fighting for power in
Verona
Society was significantly divided in Verona
- power fights, struggles, challenges,
insults and duels lead to violence and
fighting - defence of honour is more
important than life itself in the play
The Bubonic
Plague
Plague killed 1/3 of Italian population in 14th
Century
Killed 17,000 people in London due to an outbreak (1592
- The Black Death)
The most famous way to avoid the plague was to walk
around with flowers in or around noses - people
would be able to "ward off the stench and perhaps
the evil that afflicted them"
Astrology
In 14th Century Italy and Elizabethan
England - stars were linked to fate
and fortune, believed to
predict/influence human events
Boethius - a 6th Century philosopher -
very popular at the time
Believed that fortune
(good and bad) along
with God control his
destiny
Fortune is random - bad fortune
is more important, can teach
humans about evil
Gender
14th Century Italy and Elizabethan
England were patriarchal societies
Women were denied all
political rights - legally
subject to their husbands
Disobedience was seen as a crime
against religion
Women who did not marry were forced
to live under control of a male relative,
she would become a nun
Aristocratic families married
their young daughters to well off
men - girls were eligible at 14
years old
Girls expected to become wives and
mothers
The Catholic Church
Catholics secretly plotted to overthrow Queen
Elizabeth, she had a Protestant rule
Catholics involved were executed and enforced a harsh reign
on Catholics later as her power increased
Patriarchal
Society
Patriarchal society - one which is
ruled/dominated by men
Fathers are of prime
importance
Particularly present in Capulet's character
He gives orders to Lady Capulet and Juliet
He is much older than Lady Capulet,, she
was married to him as a young girl, and he
becomes a father-figure to Lady Capulet as
well
Males have complete control over their
wife and daughters, would hold all the
wealth and land
Influences
The Tragicall Historye of Romeus
and juliet - Arthur Brook (1562
poem)
Similar plot
Key Differences
Events take place over 9 months
Tale does not open with conflict
Juliet is 16
Mercurio, Nurse and other minor
characters are less well developed
Ovid's Pyramus and Thisbe (Metamorphoses)
2 lovers in Babylon live in connected houses
They are forbidden to wed because of parent's rivalry
They whisper their love through a crack in the wall
Pyramus believes Thisbe to have been eaten by a lion and kills himself
Thisbe does the same after finding his dead body
Pyramus' blood turned mulberry fruits from
white colour to red - the gods forever change
their colour to honour the lovers