Question:

How did Queen Elizabeth Get Exicuted?

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im doing a time line about Queen Elizabeth and it is due tomarrow and i dont no how she got exicuted so please help me FAST thankxx

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  1. Ummm, Queen Elizabeth is still alive...Wait!  you mean Queen Elizabeth the First?  she wasn´t executed (note the proper spelling, btw) she died of natural causes.


  2. Executed? Queen Elizabeth I died of natural causes after a reign of nearly 45 years at the age of 69.

    In those days all persons of a higher rank were beheaded e.g. Mary, Queen of Scots, Lady Jane Grey,

  3. queen elizabeth never got exicuted.She died of old age.

  4. Queen Elizabeth I was NOT executed.  She was near 70 years old.  Most scholars believe she starved herself to death, because she refused food and water, and stood, until she was unable to stand.  So, she either died of natural causes or committed suicide.  The suicide theory is new and controversial.  She executed Mary, Queen of Scots.  You may be confused.

  5. Didn't happen. She died of natural causes at the end of her long reign.

  6. Queen Elizabeth was not executed. Her sister, Queen Mary aka Bloody Mary was known for her massive executions of Protestants. Additionally, Elizabeth I had her cousin Mary executed because of the plots to dethrone or assassinate her were uncovered.

  7. She didn't.  Either one of them (so far).

  8. Queen Elizabeth I died of natural old age in March 24,1603. However, it was her mother Anne Boleyn who was accused of witchcraft, incest and high treason against Elizabeth's father King Henry VIII. She was executed on May 19th, 1536.

    Before Elizabeth I was crowned Queen of England, she was known as Lady Elizabeth, and brushed shoulders with the face of execution. During her half sister's reign as Queen Mary I of England,  she had been imprisoned for nearly a year on suspicion of supporting Protestant rebels.

    On 18 March, she was imprisoned in the Tower of London. The terrified Elizabeth fervently protested her innocence.

    Though it is unlikely that she had plotted with the rebels, some of them were known to have approached her. Mary's closest confidant, Charles V's ambassador Simon Renard, argued that her throne would never be safe while Elizabeth lived, and the Chancellor, Stephen Gardiner, worked to have Elizabeth put on trial.

    Elizabeth's supporters in the government, however, among them Lord Paget, convinced Mary to spare her sister, in the absence of hard evidence against her. On 22 May, therefore, Elizabeth was moved from the Tower to Woodstock, where she was to spend almost a year under house arrest in the charge of Sir Henry Bedingfield. Crowds cheered her all along the way

  9. She was not executed, but there were times before she became queen that she feared she would be executed.  She also was very near death early in her reign when she contracted small pox.

    See http://www.elizabethan-era.org.uk/elizab... for a timeline of Queen Elizabeth I

    best of luck to you!

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