
The portraiture of Queen
Elizabeth I
Elizabeth I (7 September 153324 March 1603) was List of English monarchs, Queen of England and List of Irish monarchs, Ireland from 17 November 1558 until her death in 1603. She was the last and longest reigning monarch of the House of Tudo ...
(1533–1603) spans the evolution of English royal
portrait
A portrait is a painting, photograph, sculpture, or other artistic representation of a person, in which the face is always predominant. In arts, a portrait may be represented as half body and even full body. If the subject in full body better r ...
s in the
early modern period
The early modern period is a Periodization, historical period that is defined either as part of or as immediately preceding the modern period, with divisions based primarily on the history of Europe and the broader concept of modernity. There i ...
(1400/1500-1800), from the earliest representations of simple likenesses to the later complex imagery used to convey the power and aspirations of the state, as well as of the monarch at its head.
Even the earliest portraits of Elizabeth I contain
symbol
A symbol is a mark, Sign (semiotics), sign, or word that indicates, signifies, or is understood as representing an idea, physical object, object, or wikt:relationship, relationship. Symbols allow people to go beyond what is known or seen by cr ...
ic objects such as
rose
A rose is either a woody perennial plant, perennial flowering plant of the genus ''Rosa'' (), in the family Rosaceae (), or the flower it bears. There are over three hundred Rose species, species and Garden roses, tens of thousands of cultivar ...
s and prayer books that would have carried meaning to viewers of her day. Later portraits of Elizabeth layer the
iconography of
empire
An empire is a political unit made up of several territories, military outpost (military), outposts, and peoples, "usually created by conquest, and divided between a hegemony, dominant center and subordinate peripheries". The center of the ...
—
globe
A globe is a spherical Earth, spherical Model#Physical model, model of Earth, of some other astronomical object, celestial body, or of the celestial sphere. Globes serve purposes similar to maps, but, unlike maps, they do not distort the surface ...
s,
crowns,
sword
A sword is an edged and bladed weapons, edged, bladed weapon intended for manual cutting or thrusting. Its blade, longer than a knife or dagger, is attached to a hilt and can be straight or curved. A thrusting sword tends to have a straighter ...
s and
columns—and representations of
virginity
Virginity is a social construct that denotes the state of a person who has never engaged in sexual intercourse. As it is not an objective term with an operational definition, social definitions of what constitutes virginity, or the lack thereo ...
and purity, such as
moon
The Moon is Earth's only natural satellite. It Orbit of the Moon, orbits around Earth at Lunar distance, an average distance of (; about 30 times Earth diameter, Earth's diameter). The Moon rotation, rotates, with a rotation period (lunar ...
s and
pearls, with
classical allusions, to present a complex "story" that conveyed to
Elizabethan era viewers the majesty and significance of the 'Virgin Queen'.
Overview
Portraiture in Tudor England
Two portraiture traditions had arisen in the
Tudor court since the days of Elizabeth's father,
Henry VIII. The
portrait miniature
A portrait miniature is a miniature portrait painting from Renaissance art, usually executed in gouache, Watercolor painting, watercolor, or Vitreous enamel, enamel. Portrait miniatures developed out of the techniques of the miniatures in illumin ...
developed from the
illuminated manuscript
An illuminated manuscript is a formally prepared manuscript, document where the text is decorated with flourishes such as marginalia, borders and Miniature (illuminated manuscript), miniature illustrations. Often used in the Roman Catholic Churc ...
tradition. These small personal images were almost invariably painted from life over the space of a few days in
watercolours on
vellum
Vellum is prepared animal skin or membrane, typically used as writing material. It is often distinguished from parchment, either by being made from calfskin (rather than the skin of other animals), or simply by being of a higher quality. Vellu ...
, stiffened by being glued to a
playing card.
Panel paintings in
oils on prepared wood surfaces were based on preparatory drawings and were usually executed at life size, as were oil paintings on canvas.
Unlike her contemporaries in
France
France, officially the French Republic, is a country located primarily in Western Europe. Overseas France, Its overseas regions and territories include French Guiana in South America, Saint Pierre and Miquelon in the Atlantic Ocean#North Atlan ...
, Elizabeth never granted rights to produce her portrait to a single artist, although
Nicholas Hilliard was appointed her official
limner, or miniaturist and goldsmith.
George Gower, a fashionable court portraitist created
Serjeant Painter in 1581, was responsible for approving all portraits of the Queen created by other artists from 1581 until his death in 1596.
[Strong 1987, pp. 14–15]
Elizabeth sat for a number of artists over the years, including Hilliard,
Cornelis Ketel,
Federico Zuccari,
Isaac Oliver, and most likely to Gower and
Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger.
Portraits were commissioned by the government as gifts to foreign monarchs and to show to prospective suitors. Courtiers commissioned heavily symbolic paintings to demonstrate their devotion to the Queen, and the fashionable
long galleries of later Elizabethan
country house
image:Blenheim - Blenheim Palace - 20210417125239.jpg, 300px, Blenheim Palace - Oxfordshire
An English country house is a large house or mansion in the English countryside. Such houses were often owned by individuals who also owned a Townhou ...
s were filled with sets of portraits. The studios of Tudor artists produced images of Elizabeth working from approved "face patterns", or approved drawings of the Queen, to meet this growing demand for her image, an important symbol of loyalty and reverence for the crown in times of turbulence.
European context
By far the most impressive models of portraiture available to English portraitists were the many portraits by
Hans Holbein the Younger, the outstanding Northern portraitist of the first half of the 16th century, who had made two lengthy visits to
England
England is a Countries of the United Kingdom, country that is part of the United Kingdom. It is located on the island of Great Britain, of which it covers about 62%, and List of islands of England, more than 100 smaller adjacent islands. It ...
, and had been
Henry VIII's court artist. Holbein had accustomed the English court to the full-length life-size portrait, although none of his originals now survive. His great
dynastic mural at
Whitehall Palace, destroyed in 1698, and perhaps other original large portraits, would have been familiar to Elizabethan artists.
Both Holbein and his great Italian contemporary
Titian
Tiziano Vecellio (; 27 August 1576), Latinized as Titianus, hence known in English as Titian ( ), was an Italian Renaissance painter, the most important artist of Renaissance Venetian painting. He was born in Pieve di Cadore, near Belluno.
Ti ...
had combined great psychological penetration with a sufficiently majestic impression to satisfy their royal patrons. By his second visit, Holbein had already begun to move away from a strictly realist depiction; in his ''
Jane Seymour'', "the figure is no longer seen as displacing with its bulk a recognizable section of space: it approaches rather to a flat pattern, made alive by a bounding and vital outline". This tendency was to be taken much further by the later portraits of Elizabeth, where "Likeness of feature and an interest in form and volume have gradually been abandoned in favour of an effect of splendid majesty obtained by decorative pattern, and the forms have been flattened accordingly".

Titian continued to paint royal portraits, especially of
Philip II of Spain
Philip II (21 May 152713 September 1598), sometimes known in Spain as Philip the Prudent (), was King of Spain from 1556, King of Portugal from 1580, and King of Naples and List of Sicilian monarchs, Sicily from 1554 until his death in 1598. He ...
, until the 1570s, but in sharply reduced numbers after about 1555, and he refused to travel from Venice to do them. The full-length portrait of Philip (1550–51) now in the
Prado was sent to Elizabeth's elder sister and predecessor
Mary I in advance of their marriage.
Towards the mid-16th century, the most influential Continental courts came to prefer less revealing and intimate works, and at the mid-century the two most prominent and influential royal portraitists in paint, other than Titian, were the Netherlandish
Anthonis Mor and
Agnolo Bronzino
Agnolo di Cosimo (; 17 November 150323 November 1572), usually known as Bronzino ( ) or Agnolo Bronzino, was an Italians, Italian Mannerism, Mannerist painter from Florence. His sobriquet, ''Bronzino'', may refer to his relatively dark skin or r ...
in
Florence
Florence ( ; ) is the capital city of the Italy, Italian region of Tuscany. It is also the most populated city in Tuscany, with 362,353 inhabitants, and 989,460 in Metropolitan City of Florence, its metropolitan province as of 2025.
Florence ...
, besides whom the Habsburg court sculptor and medallist
Leone Leoni was similarly skilled. Mor, who had risen rapidly to prominence in 1540s, worked across Europe for the
Habsburgs in a tighter and more rigid version of Titian's compositional manner, drawing also on the North Italian style of
Moretto da Brescia. Mor had actually visited London in 1554, and painted three versions of his well-known portrait of Queen Mary; he also painted English courtiers who visited Antwerp.
Mor's Spanish pupil
Alonso Sánchez Coello continued in a stiffer version of his master's style, replacing him as Spanish court painter in 1561.
Sofonisba Anguissola
Sofonisba Anguissola ( – 16 November 1625), also known as Sophonisba Angussola or Sophonisba Anguisciola, was an Italian Renaissance painter born in Cremona to a relatively poor noble family. She received a well-rounded education that ...
had painted in an intimately informal style, but after her recruitment to the Spanish court as the Queen's painter in 1560 was able to adapt her style to the much more formal demands of state portraiture. Moretto's pupil
Giovanni Battista Moroni was Mor's contemporary and formed his mature style in the 1550s, but few of his spirited portraits were of royalty, or yet to be seen outside Italy.
Bronzino
Agnolo di Cosimo (; 17 November 150323 November 1572), usually known as Bronzino ( ) or Agnolo Bronzino, was an Italians, Italian Mannerism, Mannerist painter from Florence. His sobriquet, ''Bronzino'', may refer to his relatively dark skin or r ...
developed a style of coldly distant magnificence, based on the
Mannerist portraits of
Pontormo, working almost entirely for
Cosimo I, the first
Medici grand duke. Bronzino's works, including his striking portraits of Cosimo's Duchess,
Eleanor of Toledo, were distributed in many versions across Europe, continuing to be made for two decades from the same studio pattern; a new portrait painted in her last years, about 1560, exists in only a few repetitions. At the least many of the foreign painters in London are likely to have seen versions of the earlier type, and there may well have been one in the
Royal Collection.
French portraiture remained dominated by small but finely drawn bust-length or half-length works, including many drawings, often with colour, by
François Clouet following, with a host of imitators, his father
Jean, or even smaller oils by the Netherlandish
Corneille de Lyon and his followers, typically no taller than a paperback book. A few full-length portraits of royalty were produced, dependent on German or Italian models.
Creating the royal image
William Gaunt contrasts the simplicity of the 1546 portrait of ''Lady Elizabeth Tudor'' with later images of her as queen. He wrote, "The painter...is unknown, but in a competently Flemish style he depicts the daughter of
Anne Boleyn
Anne Boleyn (; 1501 or 1507 – 19 May 1536) was List of English royal consorts, Queen of England from 1533 to 1536, as the Wives of Henry VIII, second wife of King Henry VIII. The circumstances of her marriage and execution, by beheading ...
as quiet and studious-looking, ornament in her attire as secondary to the plainness of line that emphasizes her youth. Great is the contrast with the awesome fantasy of the later portraits: the pallid, mask-like features, the extravagance of headdress and ruff, the padded ornateness that seemed to exclude all humanity."
The lack of emphasis given to depicting depth and volume in her later portraits may have been influenced by the Queen's own views. In the ''Art of Limming'', Hilliard cautioned against all but the minimal use of
chiaroscuro modelling seen in his works, reflecting the views of his patron: "seeing that best to show oneself needeth no shadow of place but rather the open light...Her Majesty..chose her place to sit for that purpose in the open alley of a goodly garden, where no tree was near, nor any shadow at all..."
From the 1570s, the government sought to manipulate the image of the Queen as an object of devotion and veneration. Sir
Roy Strong writes: "The cult of Gloriana was skilfully created to buttress public order and, even more, deliberately to replace the pre-
Reformation
The Reformation, also known as the Protestant Reformation or the European Reformation, was a time of major Theology, theological movement in Western Christianity in 16th-century Europe that posed a religious and political challenge to the p ...
externals of religion, the cult of the
Virgin and
saint
In Christianity, Christian belief, a saint is a person who is recognized as having an exceptional degree of sanctification in Christianity, holiness, imitation of God, likeness, or closeness to God in Christianity, God. However, the use of the ...
s with their attendant images, processions, ceremonies and secular rejoicing." The pageantry of the
Accession Day tilts, the poetry of the court, and the most iconic of Elizabeth's portraits all reflected this effort. The management of the Queen's image reached its heights in the last decade of her reign, when realistic images of the aging Queen were replaced with an eternally youthful vision, defying the reality of the passage of time.
Early portraits
The young queen
Portraits of the young Queen, many of them likely painted to be shown to prospective suitors and foreign heads of state, show a naturality and restraint similar to that of the portrait of the young Lady Elizabeth.

The full-length ''Hampden'' image of Elizabeth in a red satin gown, originally attributed to
Steven van der Meulen and reattributed to
George Gower in 2020,
has been identified by Sir
Roy Strong as an important early portrait, "undertaken at a time when her image was being tightly controlled", and produced "in response to a crisis over the production of the royal image, one which was reflected in the words of a draft proclamation dated 1563".
[Portrait of a royal quest for a husband]
". ''The Independent'', (London), Nov 1, 2007. Retrieved on 24 October 2008. The draft proclamation (never published) was a response to the circulation of poorly made portraits in which Elizabeth was shown "in blacke with a
hoode and cornet", a style she no longer wore. Symbolism in these pictures is in keeping with earlier Tudor portraiture; in some, Elizabeth holds a book (possibly a prayer book) suggesting studiousness or piety. In other paintings, she holds or wears a red rose, symbol of the
Tudor Dynasty's descent from the
House of Lancaster, or white roses, symbols of the
House of York and of maidenly chastity. In the Hampden portrait, Elizabeth wears a red rose on her shoulder and holds a
gillyflower in her hand. Of this image, Strong says "Here Elizabeth is caught in that short-lived period before what was a recognisable human became transmuted into a goddess".
One artist active in Elizabeth's early court was the
Flemish miniaturist
Levina Teerlinc, who had served as a painter and
gentlewoman
A gentlewoman (from the Latin ''gentilis'', belonging to a ''gens'', and English 'woman') in the original and strict sense is a woman of good family, analogous to the Latin ''generosus'' and ''generosa''. The closely related English word "gentr ...
to
Mary I and stayed on as a Gentlewoman of the Privy Chamber to Elizabeth. Teerlinc is best known for her pivotal position in the rise of the portrait miniature. There is documentation that she created numerous portraits of Elizabeth I, both individual portraits and portraits of the sovereign with important court figures, but only a few of these have survived and been identified.
Elizabeth and the goddesses

Two surviving
allegorical paintings show the early use of classical mythology to illustrate the beauty and sovereignty of the young queen. In ''Elizabeth I and the Three Goddesses'' (1569), attributed to
Hans Eworth, the story of the
Judgement of Paris is turned on its head. Elizabeth, rather than Paris, is now sent to choose among
Juno,
Venus
Venus is the second planet from the Sun. It is often called Earth's "twin" or "sister" planet for having almost the same size and mass, and the closest orbit to Earth's. While both are rocky planets, Venus has an atmosphere much thicker ...
, and
Pallas-Minerva, all of whom are outshone by the Queen with her crown and royal
orb. As
Susan Doran writes, "Implicit to the theme of the painting ... is the idea that Elizabeth's retention of royal power benefits her realm. Whereas Paris's judgement in the original myth resulted in the long
Trojan Wars 'to the utter ruin of the Trojans', hers will conversely bring peace and order to the state" after the turbulent reign of Elizabeth's sister
Mary I.
The latter theme lies behind the 1572 ''The Family of Henry VIII: An Allegory of the Tudor Succession'' (attributed to
Lucas de Heere). In this image,
Catholic
The Catholic Church (), also known as the Roman Catholic Church, is the List of Christian denominations by number of members, largest Christian church, with 1.27 to 1.41 billion baptized Catholics Catholic Church by country, worldwid ...
Mary and her husband
Philip II of Spain
Philip II (21 May 152713 September 1598), sometimes known in Spain as Philip the Prudent (), was King of Spain from 1556, King of Portugal from 1580, and King of Naples and List of Sicilian monarchs, Sicily from 1554 until his death in 1598. He ...
are accompanied by
Mars
Mars is the fourth planet from the Sun. It is also known as the "Red Planet", because of its orange-red appearance. Mars is a desert-like rocky planet with a tenuous carbon dioxide () atmosphere. At the average surface level the atmosph ...
, the god of War, on the left, while Protestant Elizabeth on the right ushers in the goddesses
Peace
Peace is a state of harmony in the absence of hostility and violence, and everything that discusses achieving human welfare through justice and peaceful conditions. In a societal sense, peace is commonly used to mean a lack of conflict (suc ...
and
Plenty. An inscription states that this painting was a gift from the Queen to
Francis Walsingham as a "Mark of her people's and her own content", and this may indicate that the painting commemorates the signing of the
Treaty of Blois (1572), which established an alliance between England and France against Spanish aggression in the
Netherlands
, Terminology of the Low Countries, informally Holland, is a country in Northwestern Europe, with Caribbean Netherlands, overseas territories in the Caribbean. It is the largest of the four constituent countries of the Kingdom of the Nether ...
during Walsingham's tour of duty as ambassador to the French court. Strong identifies both paintings as celebrations of Elizabeth's just rule by Flemish exiles, to whom England was a refuge from the religious persecution of Protestants in the Spanish Netherlands.
[Strong 1987, p. 42]
Hilliard and the queen

Nicholas Hilliard was an apprentice to the Queen's jeweller Robert Brandon,
a goldsmith and city chamberlain of London, and Strong suggests that Hilliard may also have been trained in the art of limning by
Levina Teerlinc.
Hilliard emerged from his apprenticeship at a time when a new royal portrait painter was "desperately needed."
[Strong 1987, p. 79–83]
Hilliard's first known miniature of the Queen is dated 1572. It is not known when he was formally appointed limner (miniaturist) and goldsmith to Elizabeth, though he was granted the reversion of a lease by the Queen in 1573 for his "good, true and loyal service." Two panel portraits long attributed to him, the ''Phoenix'' and
''Pelican'' portraits, are dated . These paintings are named after the jewels the queen wears, her personal badges of the
pelican in her piety and the
phoenix.
National Portrait Gallery researchers announced in September 2010 that the two portraits were painted on wood from the same two trees; they also found that a tracing of the Phoenix portrait matches the Pelican portrait in reverse, deducing that both pictures of Elizabeth in her forties were painted around the same time.
However, Hilliard's panel portraits seem to have been found wanting at the time, and in 1576 the recently married Hilliard left for France to improve his skills. Returning to England, he continued to work as a goldsmith, and produced some spectacular "picture boxes" or jewelled lockets for miniatures: the ''Armada Jewel'', given by Elizabeth to Sir
Thomas Heneage and the ''
Drake Pendant'' given to Sir
Francis Drake are the best known examples. As part of the cult of the Virgin Queen, courtiers were expected to wear the Queen's likeness, at least at Court.
Hilliard's appointment as miniaturist to the Crown included the old sense of a painter of
illuminated manuscript
An illuminated manuscript is a formally prepared manuscript, document where the text is decorated with flourishes such as marginalia, borders and Miniature (illuminated manuscript), miniature illustrations. Often used in the Roman Catholic Churc ...
s and he was commissioned to decorate important documents, such as the founding
charter
A charter is the grant of authority or rights, stating that the granter formally recognizes the prerogative of the recipient to exercise the rights specified. It is implicit that the granter retains superiority (or sovereignty), and that the ...
of
Emmanuel College, Cambridge (1584), which has an enthroned Elizabeth under a
canopy of estate within an elaborate framework of Flemish-style Renaissance strapwork and
grotesque ornament. He also seems to have designed
woodcut title-page frames and borders for books, some of which bear his initials.
The Darnley Portrait

The problem of an official portrait of Elizabeth was solved with the ''Darnley Portrait''. Likely painted from life around 1575–6, this portrait is the source of a face pattern which would be used and reused for authorized portraits of Elizabeth into the 1590s, preserving the impression of ageless beauty. Strong suggests that the artist is
Federico Zuccari or Zuccaro, an "eminent" Italian artist, though not a specialist portraitist, who is known to have visited the court briefly with a letter of introduction to Elizabeth's
favourite Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester, dated 5 March 1575.
[Strong 1987, p.85] Zuccari's preparatory drawings for full-length portraits of both Leicester and Elizabeth survive, although it is unlikely the full-length of Elizabeth was ever painted.
Curators at the National Portrait Gallery believe that the attribution of the Darnley portrait to Zuccari is "not sustainable", and attribute the work to an unknown "continental" (possibly Dutch) artist.
[Cooper and Bolland (2014), p. 147]
The ''Darnley Portrait'' features a crown and
sceptre on a table beside the queen, and was the first appearance of these symbols of sovereignty separately used as
props (rather than worn and carried) in Tudor portraiture, a theme that would be expanded in later portraits.
Recent conservation work has revealed that Elizabeth's now-iconic pale complexion in this portrait is the result of deterioration of
red lake pigments, which has also altered the coloring of her dress.
[Cooper and Bolland (2014), pp. 162-167]
The Virgin Empress of the Seas
Return of the Golden Age

The
excommunication
Excommunication is an institutional act of religious censure used to deprive, suspend, or limit membership in a religious community or to restrict certain rights within it, in particular those of being in Koinonia, communion with other members o ...
of Elizabeth by
Pope Pius V in 1570 led to increased tension with Philip II of Spain, who championed the Catholic
Mary, Queen of Scots
Mary, Queen of Scots (8 December 1542 – 8 February 1587), also known as Mary Stuart or Mary I of Scotland, was List of Scottish monarchs, Queen of Scotland from 14 December 1542 until her forced abdication in 1567.
The only surviving legit ...
, as the legitimate heir of his late wife Mary I. This tension played out over the next decades in the seas of the
New World
The term "New World" is used to describe the majority of lands of Earth's Western Hemisphere, particularly the Americas, and sometimes Oceania."America." ''The Oxford Companion to the English Language'' (). McArthur, Tom, ed., 1992. New York: ...
as well as in Europe, and culminated in the invasion attempt of the
Spanish Armada
The Spanish Armada (often known as Invincible Armada, or the Enterprise of England, ) was a Spanish fleet that sailed from Lisbon in late May 1588, commanded by Alonso de Guzmán, Duke of Medina Sidonia, an aristocrat without previous naval ...
.
It is against this backdrop that the first of a long series of portraits appears, depicting Elizabeth with heavy symbolic overlays of the possession of an empire based on
mastery of the seas.
[Strong 1987, pp. 91–93] Combined with a second layer of symbolism representing Elizabeth as the Virgin Queen, these new paintings signify the manipulation of Elizabeth's image as the destined
Protestant
Protestantism is a branch of Christianity that emphasizes Justification (theology), justification of sinners Sola fide, through faith alone, the teaching that Salvation in Christianity, salvation comes by unmerited Grace in Christianity, divin ...
protector of her people.
Strong points out that there is no trace of this iconography in portraits of Elizabeth prior to 1579, and identifies its source as the conscious image-making of
John Dee, whose 1577 ''General and Rare Memorials Pertayning to the Perfect Arte of Navigation'' encouraged the establishment of
English colonies in the New World supported by a
strong navy, asserting Elizabeth's claims to an empire via her supposed descent from
Brutus of Troy and
King Arthur
According to legends, King Arthur (; ; ; ) was a king of Great Britain, Britain. He is a folk hero and a central figure in the medieval literary tradition known as the Matter of Britain.
In Wales, Welsh sources, Arthur is portrayed as a le ...
.
Dee's inspiration lies in
Geoffrey of Monmouth's ''
History of the Kings of Britain'', which was accepted as true history by Elizabethan poets, and formed the basis of the symbolic history of England. In this 12th-century
pseudohistory, Britain was founded by and named after Brutus, the descendant of
Aeneas, who founded Rome. The Tudors, of
Welsh descent, were heirs of the most ancient Britons and thus of Aeneas and Brutus. By uniting the Houses of York and Lancaster following the strife of the
Wars of the Roses
The Wars of the Roses, known at the time and in following centuries as the Civil Wars, were a series of armed confrontations, machinations, battles and campaigns fought over control of the English throne from 1455 to 1487. The conflict was fo ...
, the Tudors ushered in a united realm where -
Latin
Latin ( or ) is a classical language belonging to the Italic languages, Italic branch of the Indo-European languages. Latin was originally spoken by the Latins (Italic tribe), Latins in Latium (now known as Lazio), the lower Tiber area aroun ...
for "peace", and the Roman goddess of peace - reigned. The Spenserian scholar Edwin Greenlaw states, "The descent of the Britons from the Trojans, the linking of Arthur, Henry VIII, and Elizabeth as Britain's greatest monarchs, and the return under Elizabeth of the
Golden Age are all commonplaces of Elizabethan thought." This understanding of history and Elizabeth's place in it forms the background to the symbolic portraits of the latter half of her reign.
The Virgin Queen

A series of ''Sieve Portraits'' copied the ''Darnley'' face pattern, and added an allegorical overlay that depicted Elizabeth as
Tuccia, a
Vestal Virgin who proved her chastity by carrying a sieve full of water from the
Tiber River to the
Temple of Vesta without spilling a drop. The first ''Sieve Portrait'' was painted by
George Gower in 1579, but the most influential image is the 1583 version by
Quentin Metsys the Younger.

In the Metsys version, Elizabeth is surrounded by symbols of empire, including a column and a globe, iconography that would appear again and again in her portraiture of the 1580s and 1590s, most notably in the ''Armada Portrait'' of . The medallions on the pillar to the left of the queen illustrate the story of
Dido and Aeneas, ancestor of Brutus, suggesting that like Aeneas, Elizabeth's destiny was to reject marriage and found an empire. This painting's patron was likely Sir
Christopher Hatton, as his
heraldic badge
A heraldic badge, emblem, impresa, device, or personal device worn as a badge indicates allegiance to, or the property of, an individual, family or corporate body. Medieval forms are usually called a livery badge, and also a cognizance. They are ...
of the white hind appears on the sleeve of one of the courtiers in the background, and the work may have expressed opposition to the proposed marriage of Elizabeth to
François, Duke of Anjou.
[Yates, p. 115]
The virgin Tuccia was familiar to Elizabethan readers from
Petrarch
Francis Petrarch (; 20 July 1304 – 19 July 1374; ; modern ), born Francesco di Petracco, was a scholar from Arezzo and poet of the early Italian Renaissance, as well as one of the earliest Renaissance humanism, humanists.
Petrarch's redis ...
's "The Triumph of Chastity". Another symbol from this work is the spotless
ermine, wearing a collar of gold studded with topazes. This symbol of purity appears in the ''Ermine Portrait'' of 1585, attributed to the
herald William Segar. The Queen bears the olive branch of (Peace), and the sword of justice rests on the table at her side. In combination, these symbols represent not only the personal purity of Elizabeth but the "righteousness and justice of her government."
Visions of empire
The ''
Armada Portrait'' is an
allegorical panel painting depicting the queen surrounded by symbols of empire against a backdrop representing the defeat of the
Spanish Armada
The Spanish Armada (often known as Invincible Armada, or the Enterprise of England, ) was a Spanish fleet that sailed from Lisbon in late May 1588, commanded by Alonso de Guzmán, Duke of Medina Sidonia, an aristocrat without previous naval ...
in 1588.
There are three surviving versions of the portrait, in addition to several derivative paintings. The version at
Woburn Abbey, the seat of the
Dukes of Bedford, was long accepted as the work of George Gower, who had been appointed
Serjeant Painter in 1581.
[Strong 1987, ''Gloriana'', p. 130–133] A version in the
National Portrait Gallery, London
The National Portrait Gallery (NPG) is an art gallery in London that houses a collection of portraits of historically important and famous British people. When it opened in 1856, it was arguably the first national public gallery in the world th ...
, which had been cut down at both sides leaving just a portrait of the Queen, was also formerly attributed to Gower. A third version, owned by the Tyrwhitt-Drake family, may have been commissioned by Sir
Francis Drake. Scholars agree that this version is by a different hand, noting distinctive techniques and approaches to the modelling of the queen's features.
[Hearn 1995 p. 88] Curators now believe that the three extant versions are all the output of different workshops under the direction of unknown English artists.
[Cooper and Bolland (2014), pp. 151-154]
The combination of a life-sized portrait of the Queen with a horizontal format is "quite unprecedented in her portraiture",
although allegorical portraits in a horizontal format, such as ''Elizabeth I and the Three Goddesses'' and the ''Family of Henry VIII: An Allegory of the Tudor Succession'' pre-date the ''Armada Portrait''.

The queen's hand rests on a globe below the crown of England, "her fingers covering the Americas, indicating England's
ommand of the seasand
reams of establishing coloniesin the New World".
[Andrew Belsey and Catherine Belsey, "Icons of Divinity: Portraits of Elizabeth I" in Gent and Llewellyen, ''Renaissance Bodies'', pp. 11–35] The Queen is flanked by two columns behind, probably a reference to the famous
impresa of the
Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V, Philip II of Spain's father, which represented the
pillars of Hercules
The Pillars of Hercules are the promontory, promontories that flank the entrance to the Strait of Gibraltar. The northern Pillar, Calpe Mons, is the Rock of Gibraltar. A corresponding North African peak not being predominant, the identity of ...
, gateway to the Atlantic Ocean and the New World.
In the background view on the left, English
fireship
A fire ship or fireship is a large wooden vessel set on fire to be used against enemy ships during a ramming attack or similar maneuver. Fireships were used to great effect against wooden ships throughout naval military history up until the adv ...
s threaten the Spanish fleet, and on the right the ships are driven onto a rocky coast amid stormy seas by the "
Protestant Wind". On a secondary level, these images show Elizabeth turning her back on storm and darkness while sunlight shines where she gazes.
An engraving by
Crispijn van de Passe published in 1596, but showing costume of the 1580s, carries similar iconography. Elizabeth stands between two columns bearing her arms and the Tudor
heraldic badge
A heraldic badge, emblem, impresa, device, or personal device worn as a badge indicates allegiance to, or the property of, an individual, family or corporate body. Medieval forms are usually called a livery badge, and also a cognizance. They are ...
of a
portcullis. The columns are surmounted by her emblems of a pelican in her piety and a phoenix, and ships fill the sea behind her.
The cult of Elizabeth
The various threads of mythology and symbolism that created the iconography of Elizabeth I combined into a tapestry of immense complexity in the years following the defeat of the Spanish Armada. In poetry, portraiture and pageantry, the queen was celebrated as
Astraea, the just virgin, and simultaneously as
Venus
Venus is the second planet from the Sun. It is often called Earth's "twin" or "sister" planet for having almost the same size and mass, and the closest orbit to Earth's. While both are rocky planets, Venus has an atmosphere much thicker ...
, the goddess of love. Another exaltation of the queen's virgin purity identified her with the moon goddess, who held dominion over the waters. Sir
Walter Raleigh had begun to use
Diana, and later
Cynthia, as aliases for the Queen in his poetry around 1580, and images of Elizabeth with jewels in the shape of crescent moons or the huntress's arrows begin to appear in portraiture around 1586 and multiply through the remainder of the reign. Courtiers wore the image of the Queen to signify their devotion, and had their portraits painted wearing her colours of black and white.
The ''Ditchley Portrait'' seems to have always been at the Oxfordshire home of Elizabeth's retired Champion, Sir
Henry Lee of Ditchley, and likely was painted for (or commemorates) her two-day visit to
Ditchley Park in 1592. The painting is attributed to
Marcus Gheerearts the Younger, and was almost certainly based on a sitting arranged by Lee, who was the painter's patron. In this image, the Queen stands on a map of England, her feet on
Oxfordshire
Oxfordshire ( ; abbreviated ''Oxon'') is a ceremonial county in South East England. The county is bordered by Northamptonshire and Warwickshire to the north, Buckinghamshire to the east, Berkshire to the south, and Wiltshire and Glouceste ...
. The painting has been trimmed and the background poorly repainted, so that the inscription and sonnet are incomplete. Storms rage behind her while the sun shines before her, and she wears a jewel in the form of a celestial or
armillary sphere close to her left ear. Many versions of this painting were made, likely in Gheeraerts' workshop, with the allegorical items removed and Elizabeth's features "softened" from the stark realism of her face in the original. One of these was sent as a
diplomatic gift to
Ferdinando I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany, and is now in the
Palazzo Pitti.
[Strong 1987, pp. 135–37.]
The last sitting and the Mask of Youth

Around 1592, the Queen also sat for
Isaac Oliver, a pupil of Hilliard, who produced an unfinished portrait miniature used as a pattern for
engraving
Engraving is the practice of incising a design on a hard, usually flat surface by cutting grooves into it with a Burin (engraving), burin. The result may be a decorated object in itself, as when silver, gold, steel, or Glass engraving, glass ar ...
s of the Queen. Only a single finished miniature from this pattern survives, with the Queen's features softened, and Strong concludes that this realistic image from life of the aging Elizabeth was not deemed a success.
Prior to the 1590s, woodcuts and engravings of the queen were created as book illustrations, but in this decade individual prints of the Queen first appear, based on the Oliver face pattern. In 1596, the
Privy Council ordered that unseemly portraits of the Queen which had caused her "great offence" should be sought out and burnt, and Strong suggest that these prints, of which comparatively few survive, may be the offending images. Strong writes "It must have been exposure to the searching realism of both Gheeraerts and Oliver that provoked the decision to suppress all likenesses of the Queen that depicted her as being in any way old and hence subject to mortality."
[Strong 1987, p. 147]
In any event, no surviving portraits dated between 1596 and Elizabeth's death in 1603 show the aging Queen as she truly was. Faithful resemblance to the original is only to be found in the accounts of contemporaries, as in the report written in 1597 by André Hurault de Maisse, Ambassador Extraordinary from
Henry IV of France, after an audience with the 64-year-old queen, during which he noted, "her teeth are very yellow and unequal ... and on the left side less than on the right. Many of them are missing, so that one cannot understand her easily when she speaks quickly." Yet he added, "her figure is fair and tall and graceful in whatever she does; so far as may be she keeps her dignity, yet humbly and graciously withal." All subsequent images rely on a face pattern devised by Nicholas Hilliard sometime in the 1590s called by art historians the "Mask of Youth", portraying Elizabeth as ever-young.
Some 16 miniatures by Hilliard and his studio are known based on this face pattern, with different combinations of costume and jewels likely painted from life, and it was also adopted by (or enforced on) other artists associated with the Court.
The coronation portraits

Two portraits of Elizabeth in her
coronation robes survive, both dated to 1600 or shortly thereafter. One is a panel portrait in oils, and the other is a miniature by Nicholas Hilliard. The warrant to the Queen's tailor for remodelling Mary I's cloth of gold coronation robes for Elizabeth survives, and costume historian
Janet Arnold's study points out that the paintings accurately reflect the written records, although the jewels differ in the two paintings,
suggesting two different sources, one possibly a miniature by Levina Teerlinc. It is not known why, and for whom, these portraits were created, at, or just after, the end of her reign.
The Rainbow Portrait

Attributed to
Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger, perhaps the most heavily symbolic portrait of the Queen is the ''Rainbow Portrait'', so-called because the queen grasps a rainbow, at
Hatfield House. It was painted around 1600–1602, when the Queen was in her sixties. In this painting, an ageless Elizabeth appears dressed as if for a
masque, in a linen bodice
embroidered with spring flowers and a mantle draped over one shoulder, her hair loose beneath a fantastical headdress.
[Strong 1987, pp. 157–160] She wears symbols out of the popular
emblem books, including the cloak with eyes and ears, the serpent of wisdom, and the celestial
armillary sphere – an Irish mantle, and carries a rainbow with the motto ("no rainbow without the sun"). Strong suggests that the complex "programme" for this image may be the work of the poet
John Davies, whose ''Hymns to Astraea''
honouring the queen use much of the same imagery, and suggests it was commissioned by
Robert Cecil as part of the decor for Elizabeth's visit in 1602, when a "shrine to Astraea" featured in the entertainments of what would prove to be the "last great festival of the reign".
[Strong 1977, pp. 46–47]
Books and coins

Prior to the wide dissemination of prints of the Queen in the 1590s, the common people of Elizabeth's England would be most familiar with her image on the
coin
A coin is a small object, usually round and flat, used primarily as a medium of exchange or legal tender. They are standardized in weight, and produced in large quantities at a mint in order to facilitate trade. They are most often issued by ...
age. In December 1560, a systematic recoinage of the debased money then in circulation was begun. The main early effort was the issuance of
sterling silver shilling
The shilling is a historical coin, and the name of a unit of modern currency, currencies formerly used in the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, other British Commonwealth countries and Ireland, where they were generally equivalent to 1 ...
s and
groats, but new coins were issued in both silver and gold. This restoration of the currency was one of the three principal achievements noted on Elizabeth's tomb, illustrating the value of stable currency to her contemporaries. Later coinage represented the queen in iconic fashion, with the traditional accompaniments of
Tudor heraldic badges including the
Tudor rose and
portcullis.
Books provided another widely available source of images of Elizabeth. Her portrait appeared on the title page of the ''
Bishops' Bible'', the standard Bible of the
Church of England
The Church of England (C of E) is the State religion#State churches, established List of Christian denominations, Christian church in England and the Crown Dependencies. It is the mother church of the Anglicanism, Anglican Christian tradition, ...
, issued in 1568 and revised in 1572. In various editions, Elizabeth is depicted with her orb and sceptre accompanied by female
personification
Personification is the representation of a thing or abstraction as a person, often as an embodiment or incarnation. In the arts, many things are commonly personified, including: places, especially cities, National personification, countries, an ...
s.
"Reading" the portraits

The many portraits of Elizabeth I constitute a tradition of image highly steeped in classical mythology and the
Renaissance
The Renaissance ( , ) is a Periodization, period of history and a European cultural movement covering the 15th and 16th centuries. It marked the transition from the Middle Ages to modernity and was characterized by an effort to revive and sur ...
understanding of English history and destiny, filtered by
allusions to
Petrarch
Francis Petrarch (; 20 July 1304 – 19 July 1374; ; modern ), born Francesco di Petracco, was a scholar from Arezzo and poet of the early Italian Renaissance, as well as one of the earliest Renaissance humanism, humanists.
Petrarch's redis ...
's
sonnet
A sonnet is a fixed poetic form with a structure traditionally consisting of fourteen lines adhering to a set Rhyme scheme, rhyming scheme. The term derives from the Italian word ''sonetto'' (, from the Latin word ''sonus'', ). Originating in ...
s and, late in her reign, to
Edmund Spenser
Edmund Spenser (; – 13 January 1599 Old Style and New Style dates, O.S.) was an English poet best known for ''The Faerie Queene'', an epic poem and fantastical allegory celebrating the House of Tudor, Tudor dynasty and Elizabeth I. He is re ...
's ''
Faerie Queene
''The Faerie Queene'' is an English Epic poetry, epic poem by Edmund Spenser. Books IIII were first published in 1590, then republished in 1596 together with books IVVI. ''The Faerie Queene'' is notable for its form: at over 36,000 lines and ov ...
''. This mythology and symbology, though directly understood by Elizabethan contemporaries for its political and symbolic meaning, makes it difficult to 'read' the portraits in the present day as contemporaries would have seen them at the time of their creation. Though knowledge of the symbology of Elizabethan portraits has not been lost, Dame
Frances Yates points out that the most complexly symbolic portraits may all commemorate specific events, or have been designed as part of elaborately themed entertainments, knowledge left unrecorded within the paintings themselves.
The most familiar images of Elizabeth—the ''Armada'', ''Ditchley'', and ''Rainbow'' portraits—are all associated with unique events in this way. To the extent that the contexts of other portraits have been lost to scholars, so too the keys to understanding these remarkable images as the Elizabethans understood them may be lost in time; even those portraits that are not overtly allegorical may have been full of meaning to a discerning eye. Elizabethan courtiers familiar with the
language of flowers and the Italian emblem books could have read stories in the flowers the queen carried, the embroidery on her clothes, and the design of her jewels.
According to Strong:
Fear of the wrong use and perception of the visual image dominates the Elizabethan age. The old pre-Reformation idea of images, religious ones, was that they partook of the essence of what they depicted. Any advance in technique which could reinforce that experience was embraced. That was now reversed, indeed it may account for the Elizabethans failing to take cognisance of the optical advances which created the art of the Italian Renaissance. They certainly knew about these things but, and this is central to the understanding of the Elizabethans, chose not to employ them. Instead the visual arts retreated in favour of presenting a series of signs or symbols through which the viewer was meant to pass to an understanding of the idea behind the work. In this manner the visual arts were verbalised, turned into a form of book, a 'text' which called for reading by the onlooker. There are no better examples of this than the quite extraordinary portraits of the queen herself, which increasingly, as the reign progressed, took on the form of collections of abstract pattern and symbols disposed in an unnaturalistic manner for the viewer to unravel, and by doing so enter into an inner vision of the idea of monarchy.
Gallery
Queen and court
Image:Family of Henry VIII c 1545.jpg, Unknown artist, ''The Family of Henry VIII'', with Elizabeth on the right,
Image:Elzbieta przyjmuj ca ambasadoró.jpg, ''Elizabeth and the Ambassadors'', attributed to Levina Teerlinc,
Image:Elizabethan Maundy Teerlinc.jpg, ''An Elizabethan Maundy'', miniature by Teerlinc,
Image:Family of Henry VIII, an Allegory of the Tudor Succession.png, ''The Family of Henry VIII, an Allegory of the Tudor Succession'', 1572, attributed to Lucas de Heere
File:Procession Portrait of Elizabeth I.jpg, The ''Procession Portrait'', , attributed to Robert Peake the Elder
Portrait miniatures
Image:Levina Teerlinc Elizabeth I c 1565.jpg, Teerlinc,
Image:Nicholas Hilliard Elizabeth I Playing the Lute c. 1580.jpg, Hilliard,
Image:Nicholas Hilliard 017.jpg, Hilliard,
Image:Nicholas Hilliard 018.jpg, Hilliard,
Image:Nicholas Hilliard Elizabeth I c 1595-1600.jpg, Hilliard, 1595–1600
Portraits
Image:Elizabeth I c 1559.jpg, Unknown artist,
Image:Elizabeth I English School c 1560.jpg,
Image:Elizabeth I 1560-65.jpg, Unknown artist, 1560–65
File:Elisabet, 1533-1603, drottning av England - Nationalmuseum - 15882.tif, The ''Gripsholm Portrait'', 1563
File:Nicholas Hilliard (called) - Portrait of Queen Elizabeth I - Google Art Project.jpg, The '' Pelican Portrait'', , probably by Nicholas Hilliard
Image:Elizabeth I Unknown Artist 1570s.jpg, Unknown artist, 1570s
Image:Nicholas Hilliard Elizabeth I.jpg, Nicholas Hilliard,
Image:Nicholas_Hilliard_022.jpg, The ''Schloss Ambras Portrait'', unknown artist, 1575–80
Image:Elizabeth I of England Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder.jpg, The ''Welbeck'' or ''Wanstead Portrait'', 1580–85, Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder. Elizabeth holds the olive branch of peace.
Image:Elizabeth I attrib john bettes c1585 90.jpg, One of five known portraits attributed to John Bettes the Younger or his studio,
Image:George Gower Elizabeth I Drewe Portrait.jpg, The ''Drewe Portrait'', 1580s, George Gower
Image:Elizabeth I in Parliament Robes.jpg, ''In Parliament Robes'', 1585–90, attributed to Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger
Image:George Gower Elizabeth I Armada Variant.jpg, Variant of the ''Armada Portrait'',
Image:Elizabeth I Jesus College Oxford 1590.jpg, Another portrait at Jesus College, Oxford unknown artist,
Image:Elizabeth I English School c 1595.jpg, Portrait by an unknown artist,
Image:Elizabeth I of England Hardwick 1592.jpg, The ''Hardwick Hall Portrait'', the Mask of Youth, Hilliard workshop,
Portrait medallions and cameos
File:WLANL - zullie - Portret Medaillon van Elizabeth I van Engeland.jpg, Portrait medallion, , diplomatic gift to Adriaen de Manmaker, appointed Treasurer General of the province of Zeeland on 20 October 1573.[. The Zeeuws Museum dates the medallion to 1572–73.]
Image:Sir Christopher Hatton from NPG (2).jpg, Sir Christopher Hatton wearing a cameo of the Queen, 1589, unknown artist (?after Ketel)
Image:Gheeraerts Francis Drake 1591.jpg, Sir Francis Drake wearing the ''Drake Pendant'', a cameo of the Queen. Gheeraerts the Younger, 1591
Drawings
Image:Elizabeth I Zuccaro.jpg, Preliminary chalk sketch for a portrait of Elizabeth I, Zuccari,
Image:Elizabeth Great Seal Ireland.jpg, Design for the obverse of a Great Seal for Ireland (never made), pen and ink wash over pencil, Hilliard,
Image:Isaac Oliver Queen Elizabeth I.jpg, Pen and ink drawing on vellum by Isaac Oliver,
Prints and coins
Image:Elizabeth I Saxton Atlas 1579.jpg, Coloured frontispiece to Christopher Saxton's Atlas of England and Wales, 1579
Image:Elizabeth I Coram Rege Roll.jpg, Coloured engraving, ''Coram Rege'' roll, 1581
Image:Elisabeth I England MATEO.jpg, Engraving based on the Oliver pattern of
Image:William Rogers Elizabeth I Rosa Electa.jpg, Elizabeth as ''Rosa Electa'', Rogers, 1590–95
Image:Elizabeth I by William Rogers ca 1580.JPG, Engraving by William Rogers from the drawing by Oliver
Image:Crispin van de Passe after Oliver Queen Elizabeth I.jpg, Engraving by Crispijn de Passe from the drawing by Oliver, with later inscription
File:Elisabeth Irish groat 1561 602448.jpg, Irish groat of 1561. Coins were of course the main way the mass of her people received images of Elizabeth.
File:1560-61HalfPoundBM.jpg, Gold half-pound of 1560–61
Illuminated manuscripts
Image:Illuminated membrane, with portrait of Elizabeth, 1572.jpg, Illuminated initial membrane, Court of King's Bench: ''Coram Rege'' Roll, Easter Term, 1572
Image:Illuminated membrane, with portrait of Elizabeth, 1584.jpg, ''Coram Rege'' Roll, Easter Term, 1584
Image:Elizabeth I Ashbourne Charter.jpg, Charter of Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School, Ashbourne, Hilliard, 1585
Image:Illuminated initial membrane, with portrait of Elizabeth, 1589.jpg, ''Coram Rege'' Roll, Easter Term, 1589
See also
*
1550–1600 in fashion
*
Artists of the Tudor Court
*
Cultural depictions of Elizabeth I of England
Notes
References
Sources
*
Arnold, Janet: "The 'Coronation' Portrait of Queen Elizabeth I", ''The Burlington Magazine'', CXX, 1978, pp. 727–41.
*Arnold, Janet: ''Queen Elizabeth's Wardrobe Unlock'd'', W S Maney and Son Ltd, Leeds 1988.
*
Blunt, Anthony, ''Art and Architecture in France, 1500–1700'', 2nd edn 1957, Penguin
*
Cooper, Tarnya;
Bolland, Charlotte (2014). The Real Tudors : kings and queens rediscovered. London: National Portrait Gallery. .
*
Freedberg, Sydney J., ''Painting in Italy, 1500–1600'', 3rd edn. 1993, Yale,
*Gaunt, William: ''Court Painting in England from Tudor to Victorian Times.'' London: Constable, 1980. .
*Gent, Lucy, and Nigel Llewellyn, eds: ''Renaissance Bodies: The Human Figure in English Culture c. 1540–1660''Reaktion Books, 1990,
*Hearn, Karen, ed. ''Dynasties: Painting in Tudor and Jacobean England 1530–1630''. New York: Rizzoli, 1995. (Hearn 1995)
*Hearn, Karen: ''Marcus Gheeraerts II Elizabeth Artist'', London: Tate Publishing 2002, (Hearn 2002)
*Kinney, Arthur F.: ''Nicholas Hilliard's "Art of Limning"'', Northeastern University Press, 1983,
*
Levey, Michael, ''Painting at Court'', Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London, 1971
*
Penny, Nicholas, National Gallery Catalogues (new series): ''The Sixteenth Century Italian Paintings'', Volume 1, 2004, National Gallery Publications Ltd,
*''Museo del Prado, Catálogo de las pinturas'', 1996, Ministerio de Educación y Cultura, Madrid, (Prado)
*Reynolds, Graham: ''Nicholas Hilliard & Isaac Oliver'', Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1971
*
Strong, Roy: ''The English Icon: Elizabethan and Jacobean Portraiture'', 1969, Routledge & Kegan Paul, London (Strong 1969)
*Strong, Roy: ''Nicholas Hilliard'', 1975, Michael Joseph Ltd, London, (Strong 1975)
*Strong, Roy: ''The Cult of Elizabeth'', 1977, Thames and Hudson, London, (Strong 1977)
*Strong, Roy: ''Artists of the Tudor Court: The Portrait Miniature Rediscovered 1520–1620'', Victoria & Albert Museum exhibit catalogue, 1983, (Strong 1983)
*Strong, Roy: ''Art and Power; Renaissance Festivals 1450–1650'', 1984, The Boydell Press; (Strong 1984)
*Strong, Roy: "From Manuscript to Miniature" in John Murdoch, Jim Murrell, Patrick J. Noon & Roy Strong, ''The English Miniature'', Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 1981 (Strong 1981)
*Strong, Roy: ''Gloriana: The Portraits of Queen Elizabeth I'', Thames and Hudson, 1987, (Strong 1987)
*Strong, Roy: ''The Spirit of Britain'', 1999, Hutchison, London, (Strong 1999)
*
Trevor-Roper, Hugh; ''Princes and Artists, Patronage and Ideology at Four Habsburg Courts 1517–1633'', Thames & Hudson, London, 1976,
*Waterhouse, Ellis; ''Painting in Britain, 1530–1790'', 4th Edn, 1978, Penguin Books (now Yale History of Art series)
*Yates, Frances: ''Astraea: The Imperial Theme in the Sixteenth Century'', London and Boston: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1975,
Further reading
*Connolly, Annaliese; Hopkins, Lisa (eds.), ''Goddesses and Queens: The Iconography of Elizabeth'', 2007, Manchester University Press, .
{{DEFAULTSORT:Elizabeth 01 Of England, Portraiture Of
Elizabeth I
English Renaissance
Renaissance art
English art
Iconography
*
16th-century portraits
Material culture of royal courts