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LATEST EPISODE

The series has now ended but you can still enjoy a wealth of information on the site, from the interactive timeline to historical narratives and profiles.

LATEST EPISODES

Elizabeth and a New Economy, Episode 11 - 10/10/05

Overview

Elizabeth I, by the Earl of Warwick, c.1570 (Getty Images/Hulton|Archive)

Elizabeth I, c.1570
(Getty Images)
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We have reached the end of the 16th century. 1603 saw the start of the Stuart dynasty. Ralegh and Dee suggested that Elizabeth might have an empire, but no one wrote anything that suggests to us that there was a plan to build a global constellation of colonies, which we would recognise as the British Empire. Ralegh had suggested in 1582 that colonies in America would make good bases to explore for a northwest passage to China but he had failed to set up a lasting colony in Virginia.

Sir Humphrey Gilbert had established St John's Newfoundland, but perished at sea in his forties. Investors had explored the idea of settlements along the west coast of Africa, but black slaves remained the most profitable cargo from that continent.

There were now two interesting areas of trade: pepper and sugar. Here were the granules from which the empire would be built. There was a huge domestic need for spices, as the establishment of the Guild of Pepperers showed. Also much of the imports were lucrative re-exports.

The second craving of the English was sugar. Look at the later portraits of Elizabeth I and note the black teeth. In his description of Elizabeth, the German traveller Paul Hentzner in about 1598 wrote that "…her lips narrow and her teeth black…a defect the English seem subject to from their too great use of sugar …"

A letter from John Whithal in Brazil to Richard Staper in London caused enormous financial interest in the City. In it, Whithal said that he and his Brazilian father-in-law intended to "…make a good quantity of sugar every year, which sugar we intend to ship for London …" By 1603, it was increasingly clear that British exploration would for the foreseeable future, be financed for the search of peppers and sugar.

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Historical Figure

Sir Humphrey Gilbert, c.1577 (Getty Images/Hulton|Archive)

Sir Humphrey Gilbert
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Sir Humphrey Gilbert, 1539-1583

Gilbert was part of the complex family of West Country soldiers and sailors that included his kinsman Ralegh. For four years (1566-70) Gilbert fought a furiously cruel campaign in Ireland and was made governor of Munster. He began his exploration of the Atlantic and America in 1578 but apart from landing in Newfoundland he left no record of any colonial note and disappeared at sea on his way home from St. John's.

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Did You Know...

Humphrey Gilbert was Walter Ralegh's half-brother and they notoriously served together in Ireland before becoming better known as explorers.

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