English society at the end of the 15th century Flashcards
What was the structure of society like?
Still partly feudal with the king at the top, followed by the senior churchmen and nobility (land owners), then the gentry, then the yeomen and citizens, then the labourers with the vagrants and beggars at the bottom
Remnants of feudal system well still apparent in the law, social relationships
What was the difference between the nobility and the gentry?
Nobility- owned land - dukes earl and barons - part of government
Gentry- gentleman who lived in large houses in the country and provided armies for war
Who were yeomen citizens and labourers?
Yeomen- farmers, owned land or rented land in the country
Citizens - Rich merchants and craftsmen in towns
Labourers - worked for citizens or yeomen or shopkeepers
Who were the nobility?
They dominated land ownership
Nobility/ peerage Comprised of around 50-60 people who were entitled to sit at house of lords
Henry relied on such families for the maintenance of order
What happened as noble families died out but why was Henry reluctant to do this?
They were replaced by others who had acquired the kings favour - Henry distrusted the nobility as a class so was reluctant to create new peers (only trusted Lancastrian military commanders such as Earl of Oxford and Lord Daubeney) - never really trusted Earl of Northumberland despite him betraying Richard in BoB swaying it in H’s favour
How did Henry control the nobility?
Through bonds and recognisances
In a law in 1487 he attempted to limit their power - the law restricted the practice that wealthy magnates recruited knights and gentlemen known as ‘retainers’ to serve them as administrators or for military purposes
What was the hierarchy of the church like?
The papacy
The church at the top - owned land
The secular clergy
Cardinals
Archbishops (senior churchmen, v powerful, part of government)
Bishops/Abbots of large monastic houses (Important bishops were regional leaders of the church - some helg government office
Parish priests and curates
Social status of the clergy varied enormously
Because England was a catholic country who did churchmen have a dual allegiance to?
Both the Pope and the king
Although Martin V (Pope 1417-31) famously declared that the king of England rather than the pope governed the church in England)
Who was the pope elected by?
Cardinals - under which came archbishops (two in England - Canterbury and York)
How important were the Archbishops, bishops and abbots in larger religious houses?
They were such important figures that the king intervened in their appointment and they sat in the house of lords often undertaking political roles
What did henry ensure that people like archbishops and bishops had?
Used power to appoint bishops with Administrative ability and legal training (valued more than their spirituality)
At Parish level what did the curates and priests deal with v the bishops and abbots of larger religious houses?
The spiritual needs of ordinary people however church influence was all-pervasive and the church even had its very own court and all clergy were tried in here as well as people guilty of religious crimes such as adultery
Bishops + abbots = important figures who were entitled to sit in the HoL and often had political roles
How many people were in the gentry and what did it comprise of?
Around 500 knights, 800 esquires, and 5000 gentleman in 1500
Comprised of the great gentry and the esquires/mere gentry
(in 1490 = about 375 knights)
What were the great gentry?
Often great landowners in their own right and the most important members sought knighthoods to confirm their social status (e.g. Sir Reginald Bray)
Peers and knights together owned 15-20% of the country’s land
What were the esquires and the ‘mere gentry’?
There were far more numerous and had far less social prestige than the great gentry
They were too landowners and both groups may be office holders
Esquire = the eldest son of knights, the younger sons of barons, magistrates and others of wealth
Mere gentlemen = harder to define - in practice a gentlemen = anyone recognised as such by neighbours
How much of the population did the gentry and nobility combined make up?
1%
How many commoners were there?
Little more than 2 million
What was the social ladder like for the commoners in towns and cities?
The Middling sort (Bourgeoisie), Educated and professionals (most numerous/influential group = lawyers, often collaborated with wealthy merchants) and merchants, then shopkeepers and skilled tradesmen (tended to dominate town councils/ borough corporations and played a key role in organisations such as guilds and lay fraternities which were common feature of rural life in pre-Reformation England) , then unskilled urban workers and beggars/prostitutes
What was the social ladder like for the commoners in the countryside?
Yeomen farmers, then husbandmen/richer peasantry (bought or rented their own farms) then labouring peasants (relied on selling their labour or supplementing irregular income through planting of vegetables, grazing rights etc) and beggars.
What did some of the regional, social variation/divisions arise from?
Demographic differences- sparsely populated north/west of imaginary line from Tees estuary to Weymouth = 1/4 of population while 3/4 = more densely populated south/east of line
Difference in agriculture either side of the line
Social attitudes (Londoners may look down at northeners while they envy southern wealth)
Government structures - separate councils for north of England, wales and Ireland - justice increasingly administered at county level but magnate influence often cut across county borders
Church influence - varied by area
Linguistic and cultural differences - particularly in Wales, Cornwall and Ireland