Exam Connection: Change & Continuity

Part of Culture and Theatre · Section 6 of 14

Exam FocusUnit: Restoration England 1660-1685GCSE

This exam focus covers Exam Connection: Change & Continuity within Culture and Theatre for GCSE History. Revise Culture and Theatre in Restoration England 1660-1685 for GCSE History with 10 exam-style questions and 15 flashcards. This is a high-frequency topic, so it is worth revising until the explanation feels precise and repeatable. It is section 6 of 14 in this topic. Treat this as a marking guide for what examiners are looking for, not just a fact list.

📝 Exam Connection: Change & Continuity

Culture is useful evidence for "How far did England change?" questions:

  • Change: Theatres reopened, women on stage, French influence, openly sexual content
  • Continuity: Shakespeare still performed (adapted); most people couldn't afford theatre; church music continued
  • Practice questions for Culture and Theatre

    Why were theatres closed during the Interregnum (1642-1660)?

    • A. Charles I ordered them closed as a wartime measure to save money
    • B. The Puritans considered theatres sinful and immoral
    • C. The theatres were destroyed in the Great Fire of London
    • D. French playwrights had taken all the best acting roles
    1 markfoundation

    What was significant about who performed in Restoration theatres for the first time in English history?

    • A. Foreign playwrights were allowed to write English plays for the first time
    • B. Working-class audiences were admitted to the pit for a penny
    • C. Women were allowed to perform as actresses on the public stage
    • D. Boys under the age of twelve were banned from acting
    1 markfoundation

    Quick recall flashcards

    Why had theatres been closed before 1660?
    Puritans banned plays as immoral during the Interregnum (1642-1660) — they condemned theatrical performances as corrupting and irreligious. Charles II's Restoration immediately reversed this, issuing licences for two theatre companies in 1660.
    Who was Aphra Behn?
    First professional woman playwright and novelist in England. Wrote The Rover (1677) and Oroonoko — one of the first English novels (1688). Worked as a spy for Charles II in Antwerp during the Dutch Wars. Pioneer of women in professional writing.

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