Elizabeth I: puritan threat Flashcards
1
Q
Walter Strickland bill
A
- 1571
- puritan MP Walter Strickland introduced a bill into the commons to change the prayer book along puritan lines
- Elizabeth closed parliament and banned commons from bringing in bills to do with religion
2
Q
Freedom of speech
A
- Many Puritan MPs challenged Elizabeth over the issue of freedom of speech on religious policy
- e.g. Puritan MP, Peter Wentworth was imprisoned on several occasions for raising the issues of freedom of speech, eventually died in the Tower of London 1597
- 1586, Anthony Cope had been imprisoned with Wentworth for several months for again introducing a bill to change the Religious Settlement
- These setbacks in Parliament forced Puritans to look for other ways to gain influence
3
Q
The Privy Council
A
- Some of her most powerful advisors were Puritans, e.g. Sir Francis Walsingham and her long-standing favourite Robert Dudley, the Earl of Leicester
- relatively moderate Puritans who hoped to encourage Elizabeth to introduce more change
4
Q
was parliament puritanism that big of a threat?
A
- not necessarily
- she had the power to simply close Parliament if they tried to discuss issues she did not want them to
5
Q
Marprelate Tracts of 1588-89
A
- A pamphlet against the role of Bishops and other Puritan complaints
- Puritans now took to printing and issuing pamphlets
- E responded by issuing an order to control the printing presses
6
Q
Prophesyings
A
- 1570s
- Puritans valued good preaching above the services laid down in the Prayer Book
- groups of clergymen began to meet to hear sermons from good preacher
- viewed as dangerous by Elizabeth as they threatened her position as Supreme Governor of the Church of England
- 1577 therefore, Elizabeth issued instructions to her bishops in which she banned prophesyings
7
Q
Three Articles
A
- 1583
- John Whitgift: Elizabeth was able to appoint an Archbishop of Canterbury who agreed with her views
- he produced three articles
- reinforced the 1559 Religious Settlement and clergymen who did not agree were dismissed from their posts
In the ‘Three Articles’, clergy were forced to swear the acceptance of:
- everything in the Book of Common Prayer
- bishops
- the ‘Thirty-nine Articles’ – these laid down the beliefs of the Church of England and had been issued in 1563
8
Q
John Pentry
A
- leading welsh puritan
- educated at Cambridge then Oxford
- 1580s, he took to writing pamphlets that were critical of the Settlement and that called for reform of the Church
- his activities he came into conflict with John Whitgift: 1587 after publishing critical pamphlet, he was arrested and imprisoned