Why does queen elizabeth i hate the doctor




















Elizabeth I has a picnic with the Tenth Doctor. TV : The Day of the Doctor. In , she had the Tenth Doctor tortured for information and sentenced to death as a spy. Though in the torture sessions he charmed her with humor and caring about her childhood and caused her to stay the execution.

He proposed to her to see her reaction, in order to prove she wasn't the real queen — which she accepted. In reality, it was actually the Doctor's horse that his shapeshifter DNA-detecting device had been picking up on, meaning that he had proposed to the real Queen Elizabeth.

The actual Zygon then took on Elizabeth's form, but the Doctor's attempt to identify the real one was interrupted by the arrival of the Eleventh Doctor. Once separated from the Doctor, Elizabeth got into a fight with the Zygon Elizabeth, defeating it. The rest of the Zygons then accepted her as their leader, believing her to be their commander.

Elizabeth proceeded to incarcerate the Doctors, now joined by the War Doctor , in the Tower of London. Elizabeth left the door to the cell unlocked, fascinated to see what would happen if the Doctors escaped.

Elizabeth introduced the Doctors and the Eleventh Doctor's companion , Clara Oswald , to the rest of the Zygons and revealed the details of their plan to enter stasis inside a series of Time Lord paintings until Earth was ready for conquest. After the Doctors and Clara departed, she had the paintings locked up in a secret part of the National Gallery , the Under Gallery.

She then left instructions which eventually wound up in the hands of UNIT that the Doctor be appointed Curator of the Under Gallery and that he be contacted in the event of an emergency. Elizabeth I's court astrologer John Dee was apparently another identity of Jared Khan , who was still fruitlessly hunting the Doctor at the time. At this point, the Queen appeared to be on friendly terms with the Doctor, then in his seventh incarnation.

Elizabeth I was responsible for the beheading of her cousin , Mary, Queen of Scots , who she suspected was plotting against her. In that year, Lady Jane Mountville was one of the ladies of her bedchamber. Either the First or Second Doctor was his cell-mate whom he bored with incessant discussion of discovering the potato in the New World. TV : The Mind of Evil. Elizabeth has continued to work since then and will press on with desk-based duties, but will skip the Nov. The queen has long enjoyed robust health and is said to hate having people make a fuss.

But she has reluctantly accepted advice to cut back on her blistering schedule in recent weeks. The fact that she hardly spoke of her and saved all of her praise for her adored father, Henry VIII, has often led to the conclusion that Elizabeth was ashamed of Anne.

On the contrary: all this proved was what a great pragmatist Elizabeth was. Instead, Elizabeth chose more subtle ways to demonstrate her affection. Elizabeth was as famous a flirt as her mother, Anne Boleyn. She loved to surround herself with the most handsome men at court, and also entertained various foreign princes all hoping for her hand in marriage. Elizabeth used her femininity to bring a male-dominated court to its knees, and gave playful nicknames to her favourites.

Or was she? Elizabeth exalted in being the queen bee at court. But although for the early part of her reign she was the most desirable bride in Europe, as her physical charms began to fade she employed dirty tactics to make sure that she kept all of the male attention to herself. Thus, while Elizabeth appeared at court bedecked in lavish gowns of rich materials and vivid colours, her ladies were obliged to wear only black or white.

No matter how attractive they might be in their own right, the plain uniformity of their dress would draw all eyes to the star of the show. To test the effect that this created, the queen once asked a visiting French nobleman what he thought of her ladies. This was exactly the response Elizabeth required. They were also banned from observing Mass. Elizabeth was always fastidious about her appearance, but the ritual of dressing the queen became increasingly elaborate as age began to overtake her: it took her ladies a staggering four hours a day to complete the ceremony of dressing and undressing the queen.

Elizabeth had originally worn wigs that matched her own colouring, but as she grew older these were used to conceal her greying hair. Her face, neck and hands were painted with ceruse a mixture of white lead and vinegar ; her lips were coloured with a red paste made from beeswax and plant dye, and her eyes were lined with kohl. Yet over the plus years of her rule, the young and pretty Elizabeth aged into a balding, frail woman with black, rotten and foul-smelling teeth; scarred by pox, crippled by headaches and plagued by bouts of depression.

Ironically, most of these cosmetics did more damage to the skin than ageing ever could.



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