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People: Álvaro de Mendaña de Neira

Elizabeth's immediate and lasting aim is to …

Years: 1559 - 1559
January

Elizabeth's immediate and lasting aim is to reunite England—now at its lowest ebb since Tudor rule began in 1485—reestablish the Anglican church, fend off foreign threats, and bring her people as much peace and prosperity as possible.

On the morning of her accession, Elizabeth, herself a moderate Protestant, names as her secretary of state Sir William Cecil, who shares many of her views.

With his help, Elizabeth concludes the famous Elizabethan Settlement for the Church of England.

The Settlement excludes papal authority and reinstitutes the Book of Common Prayer, an English-language liturgy, but does not recognize the demands of the more extreme Puritans, who wish to purify their national church by eliminating every shred of Catholic influence.

John Dee, the alchemist, astrologer, and mathematician, is asked to name a propitious day for Elizabeth's official coronation.

Francis Walsingham returns from the Continent and immediately secures a prominent position among Elizabeth’s advisors, as well as a seat in Parliament.

Elizabeth names as master of the horse her court favorite, Robert Dudley, pardoned for his involvement in his father's plan to secure the succession to the throne of Lady Jane Grey in 1553.

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