Challenge to the religious settlement Flashcards

1
Q

Who was unhappy at Elizabeth’s religious settlement?

A

extreme Catholics and puritans

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2
Q

when did dissatisfaction of the religious settlement start to grow?

A

by the late 1560s

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3
Q

Puritans were happy that Elizabeth reintroduced Protestantism in England. However, what did they want her to add?

A

they wanted Elizabeth to add more protestant developments to the church

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4
Q

During the 1560s, where did the main puritan challenge come from?

A

within the church of England itself; especially the bishops

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5
Q

How did the Puritans rebel against the religious settlement?

A

they started ignoring or disobeying parts of the religious settlement - this was a direct challenge to her authority

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6
Q

What did the puritans want?
(their beliefs, how worship should be, how the world should be)

  • world
  • form of worship
  • communion service
  • antichrist
  • their own church
A
  • they wanted to make the world a more godly place by banning sinful activities such as gambling and cockfighting
  • they wanted a simpler form of worship, whitewashed churches and no worship of religious idols, including crucifixes and statues
  • they believed that in the communion service, the presence of Jesus was spiritual, not physical
  • wanted to develop their own church, which would not be controlled by the queen. There would be no bishops and priests would not wear vestments
  • Many Puritans were anti-catholic and believed the pope was the “anti-christ”
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7
Q

why did puritans not want statues or crucifixes?

A

they were seen as ungodly and too catholic

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8
Q

what were the 2 main things that puritans had an issue with?

A

vestments and crucifixes

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9
Q

Explain the crucifix controversy

A
  • Elizabeth kept crucifixes as it gave the church a similar look and feel and she didn’t want to anger the catholic subjects by changing the church drastically
  • Puritans opposed this and some puritan bishops threatened to resign so Elizabeth backed down
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10
Q

why did Elizabeth back down when Puritan bishops threaten to resign?

A

because she could not replace them with educted Protestant clergy of similar ability

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11
Q

Explain the vestments controversy

A
  • Puritans thought that vestments should be very plain and simple as elaborate vestments suggested that priests were set apart from ordinary people
  • Elizabeth wanted the clergy to wear special vestments,as described in the royal injunctions
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12
Q

why did catholics think that priests were special?

A

because they had the power to turn the bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ.

They could forgive sins

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13
Q

By 1565, it was clear that not all clergy were wearing what the queen had commanded. what happened as a result?

A
  • In 1566, the archbishop of canterbuty, Thomas parker, required priests in his book of Advertisements to attend an exhibition showing the vestments they must wear
  • 36 puritan priests lost their posts becuase they refused to attend church and to wear the new vestments required
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14
Q

what was the extent of the puritan challenge?

A
  • While Puritans were active London, cambridge, oxford and parts of East anglia, Puritanism had less of an impact on northern england, where people remained mostly catholic in outlook
  • The government ignored most Purtian demands for reform of the Church of England, including the Admonition to Parliament in 1572, suggesting that Puritanism’s support was limited
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15
Q

What was counter-reformation?

A

Catholic church’s attempt to reverse the Protestant Reformation in Europe and stop its spread

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16
Q

How did the Catholics carry out counter-reformation?

A

by supporting local communities, persecuting heretics and encouraging the waging of war against Protestants

17
Q

What did the pope instruct in 1566 and what was the consequence of this?

A

that English Catholics should not attend the church of England services

  • gave Catholics a powerful religious reason to rebel
18
Q

What were recusants?

A

people who practised the catholic religion in secret

19
Q

How were recusants treated?

A
  • the penalties for those who did not conform to the religious settlement were generally not imposed
  • repeat offenders were punished
  • authorities were ordered not to investigate recusants too closely as Elizabeth did not want to create martyrs and wanted to avoid rebellion
20
Q

what was the punishment for repeat offenders

A

fines, imprisonment, or loss of property, job and even life

depending on the crime

21
Q

How many people were recusants (gentry and nobility)?

A

1/3 of the nobility and a seizable number of the gentry, especially in the north-west of England

22
Q

Catholic nobles tended to be from …

A

traditional noble families that prospered under Mary Tudor

links to Northumberland plot

23
Q

Why was the nobility in the north well placed to incite a rebellion against Elizabe?

A

because they were very influential and had always enjoyed independence from the Crown