Elizabeth I character and aims Flashcards
How old was Elizabeth when she came to the throne?
25 younger than mary
What was Elizabeth’s education like?
well educated
personal experience
tower, wyatt
seymour rship
What were Elizabeth’s character strengths and weaknesses?
shrewd good judge character
cautious protestant under m
What did Elizabeth believe about God?
saved be queen
royal supremacy
but
conserv views
What were Elizabeth’s short-term aims on coming to the throne?
consolidate position
settle religious issues
end french war
In what three ways did Elizabeth swiftly consolidate her power?
m councillor accept, personal assurance
lchanc announced queen before parl .
9 counc accept marriage AB
only cecil appointed, keep m supporters guessing
What was clear about religion when Elizabeth came to the throne?
church broken Rome
re-establish royal supremacy
decide form for country
legal status church 1
books liturgy 2
What was the Elizabethan Church Settlement of 1559 and what did it provide?
framework church between p and c
supremacy uniform, inj, 39 articles, book prayer
What did the Church Settlement establish and when?
first parliament. January - April 1559
royal supremacy + church service
What three religious policies were put in place in 1559?
Act of Settlement and Uniformity
Act of Supremacy
Royal injunctions
What two religious policies were introduced in 1563?
new book common prayer- between 49 and 52
39 articles replacing 43art ‘53
What did the Act of Supremacy do?
repeal papal sup and heresy laws
Reinstated legislation Henry VIII’s reign and allowed crown amend
queen supreme governor
oath of supremacy from all clergymen church officials , remove marian catholics
What did the act of uniformity do?
worship - everyone go church sunday/ holy days pay fine 12p
ornaments like before ‘49 act of uniformity
new and only book common prayer
What was the 1559 prayer book?
version ‘52 more acceptable
black rubric ‘52 prayer book kneeling eucharist excluded
What did the royal injunctions do?
Nominated visitors to inspect the Church and gave specific instructions such as:
The removal/suppression of ‘things superstitious’ from Churches - (Protestant in nature)
The purchase of an English bible and a copy of Erasmus’s Paraphrases by every parish church (as in 1547)
The celebration of the Eucharist as a simple Communion table (not an alter) = direction of reform
The suppression of Catholic practices (e.g. pilgrimages and the use of candles)
The requirement that any prospective wife of a clergyman had to produce a certificate, signed by two JPs to indicate her fitness to the role
Visitors nominated by Cecil to enforce them = strongly Protestant
What were the 39 articles?
Drawn up by the Church in convocation in 1563 (and confirmed by parliament in 1571) they sought to define the doctrine of the Church of England
What were the 39 articles based on so what did they support/say?
Based on Cranmer’s earlier articles, they broadly supported reformed doctrine e.g. they denied teachings concerning transubstantiation and said that ministers could marry
What was the significance of the settlement?
It was a compromise - not clear whether it was intended as an end itself or as a pre-cursor for further reform - some argue E saw it as final but some argue otherwise
What two extremes was Elizabeth placed under the pressure of during the reform?
A ‘Puritan Choir’ of radical clergymen and MPs who may have forced her to accept a more Protestant prayer book that she had really wanted
Catholic bishops and conservative peers in the House of Lords, who having accepted royal supremacy strongly opposed the uniformity bill (only passed in the Lords by 3 votes) , believing the settlement to be too Protestant
What did the Act of Supremacy give Elizabeth the opportunity to do?
Remove Catholic clergy that refused the oath - apart from Bishop Kitchen and the Bishop of Sodor and Man all Catholic bishops refused so this combined with existing vacancies enabled E to appoint 15 bishops (Including Thomas Parker ABoC and Richard Cox)
When the oath from the act of supremacy was issued to the lower clergy what was the response?
Only 4% refused to take it (about 200) in the period Nov 1559 - Nov 1564
When was the first visitation following the Act of Supremacy and what was created?
Began at the end of June 1559 to administer the Oath of Supremacy and to deliver the new Royal Injunctions on Religion - for this a commission of clergy and laymen was created (The Court of High Commission) - it was used to locate and prosecute people with Catholic sympathies
What was the controversial part of the act of uniformity?
The new Book of Common Prayer - based on the Edwardian books of 1549 and 1552 but with significant differences especially the wording to be used during a communion service
In what way was the new book a compromise?
It contained the possibility of pleasing Catholics and Lutherans who believed in the spiritual presence of Christ at communion and the Zwinglians who regarded communion as merely a way to remember the last supper