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Wordlist

Target the Tudors

This information was last updated in 2004. The Tudors have not changed, but our understanding of them might!

  • Family life

    Family Life

    Henry Redman

  • Education

    Education

    William Camden

  • Work

    Work

    Jasper Andries

  • City life

    City Life

    Dame Alice Owen

  • Religion

    Religion

    Sir Stephen Pecoke

  • Court life

    Court Life

    Sir Ralph Felmingham

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Family Life
Education
Work
City Life
Religion
Court Life

Wordlist

A

  • Almshouses

    Houses provided for poor people, usually by a rich person or a charity

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  • Anne Boleyn

    Henry VIII's second wife and mother of Elizabeth I

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  • Apprentice

    Someone who is learning a trade or craft

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  • Aragon

    A region in North East Spain. See Catherine of Aragon

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  • Archer

    Someone who shoots with a bow and arrow

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  • Arithmetic

    Numeracy, counting, and working with numbers to calculate

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  • Armourers

    Craftsmen who make or repair armour

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B

  • Baron

    A noble title

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  • Bull/bear baiting

    A cruel sport in which dogs were set on a bull or bear

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C

  • Catherine of Aragon

    Henry VIII's first wife and mother of Mary I. See Aragon

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  • Catherine Parr

    Henry VIII's sixth wife who survived him

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  • Catholic

    (See Roman Catholic)

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  • Chamberlain

    The person in charge of a large household

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  • City of London

    The area inside the City walls governed by the Corporation of London, now known as 'The Square Mile'

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  • Communion

    In the Christian religion, the act of sharing bread and wine during the religious service

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  • Congregation

    All the people attending a Christian or Jewish religious service

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  • Convent

    A house, usually for nuns, (women who have dedicated their life to god)

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  • Coronation

    The ceremony during which a king or queen is crowned

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  • Court

    The place where the monarch is living, also the group of people serving him or her

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  • Courtiers

    Men who serve the monarch

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D

  • Delft

    A town in the Netherlands famous for its pottery

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  • Delftware

    A type of pottery that uses a special glaze, introduced to Britain from Delft and the surrounding area

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F

  • Freeman

    Citizen of London who has served an apprenticeship and joined a livery company. After a time they were granted the freedom of their company. This allowed them to live, work and trade inside the city walls and participate in town life.

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G

  • Gibbet

    A frame in which the bodies of executed criminals were displayed

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  • Goldsmith

    Craftsman who make objects out of gold, member of the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths

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  • Gunpowder Plot

    A Catholic plot to blow up King James I and his followers

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H

  • Hebrew

    An ancient language, used in Jewish religious services and in modern Israel

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I

  • Immigrant

    Person who has left their original country and come to live here

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J

  • Jane Seymour

    Henry VIII's third wife and mother of Edward VI

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K

  • Kiln

    A large oven used for baking pottery

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L

  • Last Supper

    The last meal eaten by Jesus and his followers together

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  • Latin

    An ancient language used by the Romans and, in the past, in Christian religious services

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  • Laundress

    A woman who washes clothes to earn a living

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  • Livery company

    Organisation formed by people who all had the same trade or craft

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  • Lord's Prayer

    A Christian prayer, taught by Jesus to his followers:

    Our Father which art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive them that trespass against us. And lead us not into temptation. But deliver us from evil. Amen.

    Booty, John E. ed. Book of Common Prayer, 1559, modern spelling edition, 1976

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M

  • Mace

    A ceremonial staff in the shape of a war-club

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  • Mass

    The Roman Catholic religious service

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  • Mercer

    Person who trades in textiles, often making large profits by selling English wool abroad and importing silk and other expensive cloths, member of The Mercers Company

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  • Monarch

    The king or queen

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  • Monastery

    A house, usually for monks (men who have dedicated their life to the service of god)

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N

  • Netherlands

    A country in Europe that, in Tudor times, included Holland, Belgium and Flanders

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P

  • Parish

    In Tudor times, the district allotted by the church authorities to a particular priest

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  • Pewter

    A metal made from tin, copper and sometimes lead

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  • Plague

    In Tudor times, a deadly disease spread by the fleas on rats

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  • Plaque

    A tablet with writing on, often fixed to a wall

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  • Pomegranate

    A type of fruit grown in hot countries. It has a hard skin filled with lots of tiny black pips in blobs of red jelly.

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  • Pottery

    Objects made from baked clay

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  • Protestant

    A branch of the Christian religion, founded during the Reformation. Today there are many different Protestant religions including the Church of England.

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R

  • Reformation

    A Christian movement to reform the Roman Catholic Church that led to the founding of the Protestant religion

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  • Religious house

    A house lived in by people who have devoted themselves to a religious life, including monasteries and convents.

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  • Religious persecution

    Punishing someone because of their religious beliefs

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  • Roman Catholic

    A branch of the Christian religion headed by the Pope in Rome. Before the Reformation all Christians in western Europe were Roman Catholics.

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  • Rote

    A method of learning something by repeating it over and over again, often without really understanding it

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S

  • Schoolmaster

    Old fashioned word for a male teacher

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  • Sergeant-at-Arms

    An officer responsible for making arrests

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  • Sheath

    A protective case for a sword or dagger, usually made of leather

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  • State barge

    A fine, elegant boat used by important people in the government or royal family on special occasions

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  • Stone mason

    A person who prepares and lays the stone needed to construct a building

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T

  • Timber-framed

    A building with a wooden frame, usually of oak

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  • Traitor

    Someone who has betrayed the monarch or her or his country

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  • Treason

    The act of betraying your monarch or country

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  • Tudor

    The family name of Welsh nobleman Owen Tudor, who married Henry V's widow Catherine of Valois. Their grandson became King Henry VII. He and his descendants, Henry VIII, Edward VI, Mary I and Elizabeth I were all Tudor monarchs. The word is also used to describe the time when the Tudor family reigned, from 1485-1603.

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  • Turrets

    Small towers

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W

  • Weaned

    When a baby has stopped drinking its mother's milk and started eating solid food

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  • Weaver

    Someone who weaves thread to make cloth

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  • Wet nurse

    A woman who feeds and cares for another woman's baby

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  • Widow

    A woman whose husband has died

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  • Widowed

    A man or woman whose wife or husband has died

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  • Workhouse

    A house where the poor have to work in return for food and shelter

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