Use "elizabeth i" in a sentence

1. 9 Queen Elizabeth I: Give me Hope.

2. The coinage was reformed under Elizabeth I .

3. Elizabeth I Acceded to the throne in 1558

4. 8 Queen Mary was succeeded by Elizabeth I.

5. Elizabeth I came to the throne in 15

6. 5 Elizabeth: I was the great white whale.

7. 6 Elizabeth: I would say about 185 pounds.

8. 2 The coinage was reformed under Elizabeth I .

9. The drama in England flourished under Elizabeth I.

10. 12 In 1603 Elizabeth I – the Virgin Queen – died.

11. 3 The drama in England flourished under Elizabeth I.

12. 7 Elizabeth I was the last of the Tudors.

13. 1 Elizabeth I came to the throne in 15

14. 4 Elizabeth: I think some people are never mature enough.

15. 14 Shakespeare lived in the glorious days of Queen Elizabeth I.

16. Elizabeth: I am my fathers daughter. Im not afeard of anything.

17. 19 The funeral of Queen Elizabeth I took place at Westminster Abbey.

18. 18 The reign of Elizabeth I was an important period of England.

19. 15 Tudor monarchs ruled from Henry VII to Elizabeth I (from 1485 to 160.

20. 27 Francis Drake completes a circumnavigation of the world and is knighted by Elizabeth I.

21. 30 All my possessions for a moment of time. - -- Queen Elizabeth I ? ? s last words.

22. 20 The town's only claim to fame is that Queen Elizabeth I once visited it.

23. 1586 - Mary I of Scotland goes on trial for conspiracy against Elizabeth I of England.

24. 22 1586 - Mary I of Scotland goes on trial for conspiracy against Elizabeth I of England.

25. Under Queen Elizabeth I female guests might be sent to neighbors who could afford rooms with Chimneys

26. 17 Queen Elizabeth I built a navy strong enough to fight off the Spanish armada in 15

27. Queen Elizabeth I built a navy strong enough to fight off the Spanish armada in 15

28. 10 Polo : From William the Conqueror to Elizabeth I, Britain royal families all had blood ties.

29. During the time of Queen Elizabeth I bright red lips and a stark white face became fashionable.

30. QUEEN ELIZABETH I of England ordered that the royal table be supplied with a condiment made of it.

31. The “Political Thought” of the “Monarchical Republic of Elizabeth I,” Discovered and Anatomized - Volume 54 Issue 2 - Peter Lake

32. 21 Sir Walter Raleigh , English navigator, courtier, and once favourite of Elizabeth I, was beheaded at Whitehall for treason.

33. 16 Queen Elizabeth I: Spain intends to place Mary Stuart on our country's throne, and I am to be assassinated?

34. Mary's grandson claimed the Ormonde title in 1596 on the basis she was the elder daughter, which Elizabeth I accepted.

35. 1558 - Elizabethan era begins: Queen Mary I of England dies and is succeeded by her half-sister Elizabeth I of England.

36. Becoming Elizabeth promises to show how Queen Elizabeth I ascended the throne, after King Henry VIII's tumultuous reign came to an end

37. 29 1558 - Elizabethan era begins: Queen Mary I of England dies and is succeeded by her half-sister Elizabeth I of England.

38. Sir Humphrey Gilbert, provided with letters patent from Queen Elizabeth I, landed in St John's in August 1583, and formally took possession of the island.

39. March 24 Is Chock full Of History And National Days - Oceanside-Camp Pendleton, CA - From Queen Elizabeth I dying in 1603 to Pink Floyd's Dark Side of …

40. The name of Bray is irretrievably linked with that of Simon Aleyn, its turncoat vicar during the reigns of Henry VIII, Edward VI, Mary and Elizabeth I

41. After 19 years of imprisonment, Mary, Queen of Scots is Beheaded at Fotheringhay Castle in England for her complicity in a plot to murder Queen Elizabeth I

42. 24 In 15 Sir Walter Raleigh dispatched an expedition to the East Coast of North America as Queen Elizabeth I had given him permission to colonise Virginia.

43. 16 The play embodies and presents an Elizabethan homily about order and obedience, the puritans' discontent with the Elizabethan church, and two opposing images of Queen Elizabeth I.

44. The reigns of Mary I and Elizabeth I covered the later part of Tudor Dynasty, i. e. from 1553 to 160 This is a transitional era in English history.

45. 23 France's Louis XI hid his toilet behind curtains and used herbs to keep his bathroom scented; England's Elizabeth I covered her commode in crimson velvet bound with lace.

46. 3r, 16th century: perhaps John Bewaters of Whittlesey St Mary, Cambridgeshire (for whom see Calendars of the Proceedings in Chancery, in the Reign of Queen Elizabeth I (1827), p

47. 26 The play embodies and presents an Elizabethan homily about order and obedience, the puritans' discontent with the Elizabethan church,[www.Sentencedict.com] and two opposing images of Queen Elizabeth I.

48. 25 The list caused some controversy because of my inclusion of Queen Mary and Queen Isabella, but that was balanced by the inclusion of Elizabeth I on the second list.

49. 11 The reigns of Mary I and Elizabeth I covered the later part of Tudor Dynasty, i. e. from 1553 to 160 This is a transitional era in English history.

50. 28 Royal backing of the English Reformation was left to his heirs, the devout Edward VI and the renowned Elizabeth I , whilst daughter Mary I temporarily reinstated papal authority over England.

51. He was the seventh son of Edward Darell of Pagham in Sussex who was Clerk of the Acatery (keeper of provisions) to Queen Elizabeth I, and his wife Mary, daughter of Marmaduke

52. 13 Queen Elizabeth II knighted him with the very sword that Queen Elizabeth I had used almost 400 years earlier to knight Sir Francis Drake after he had sailed round the world for the first time.

53. ‘Elizabeth I called the attempted invasion of England a ‘tyrannical, proud and Brainsick attempt’.’ ‘Thus, within the masque text, blackness is equated with beauty, love, and wisdom, but the prejudice stirred up by some ‘poor Brainsick men’ has convinced the Daughters …

54. The Church of England has always taken pride in its "Comprehensiveness" - a British tolerance for theological diversity dating to Queen Elizabeth I, who combined element of Catholicism and Protestant ism to form a "bridge" between the two traditions.

55. Barhops: Thick noodle: UDON “No Reservations” host Anthony: BOURDAIN: One of four women with an EGOT: WHOOPIAUBERG: Early rotary-winged aircraft: AUTOGIRO “Winning __ everything” ISNT: Butt heads: TUSSLE “Elizabeth I” Emmy winner: JEREMYFES “… going, going, __!” GONE: Speedy shark: MAKO: Give in to gravity: SAG

56. Autocratic (adj.) "holding unlimited and independent powers of government," 1815 (in reference to Napoleon), from French autocratique, from autocrate, from Latinized form of Greek autokrates (see autocrat).Earlier Autocratoric (1670s) was directly from Greek autokratorikos "of or for an autocrat, despotically." Autocratical is attested from 1767 (in reference to Elizabeth I).

57. Autocratic (adj.) "holding unlimited and independent powers of government," 1815 (in reference to Napoleon), from French Autocratique, from autocrate, from Latinized form of Greek autokrates (see autocrat).Earlier autocratoric (1670s) was directly from Greek autokratorikos "of or for an autocrat, despotically." Autocratical is attested from 1767 (in reference to Elizabeth I).

58. Astraea a Roman goddess associated with justice, said to have been the last deity to leave the earth, who having lived among humankind during the Golden Age and in retreat in the mountains during the Silver Age, finally left the world for heaven during the evils of the Bronze Age.Her name, which means ‘starry maiden’, was later used as an epithet of Elizabeth I.