Henry VII: Government - The Nobility Flashcards
1
Q
Attainders
A
- Special law that declared someone guilty of treason without trial
- Their lands and title would be seized
- Could be reversed
2
Q
Attainders: Examples & Figures
A
- 138 attainders passed in total
- 46 reversed
- Henry became more severe throughout his reign - 51 attainders passed between 1504-1509
- Reversal of an attainder was expensive - Sir Thomas Tyrell had to pay £1738 for the reversal of his and his father’s attainders
3
Q
Land & Patronage
A
- Henry largely abandoned Edward IV’s policy of distributing lands to loyal followers
- Giving land to supporters made nobles richer and made them a potential threat
- Henry absorbed vacant lands, making him the largest landowner in England
- Henry increasingly rewarded lower class men by giving them responsibilities and status - they were less distracted by competing loyalities
- Number of nobles fell by 25%
4
Q
Retaining
A
- Retaining involved a noble employing a large number of servants, most of whom were used as gangs or enforcers
- Used to put pressure on tenants who were slow to pay rent, and on juries to deliver verdicts in the noble’s favour
- In 1485, MPs and members of the House of Lords had to swear that they would not retain illegally
- In 1504, nobles had to obtain a licence from the King before retaining large numbers
- Many nobles could have hidden servants’ wages
5
Q
Bond
A
- Noble owned a large sum of money to the king
- Financial control to ensure loyalty of nobles
- Bonds only paid if noble upset Henry
- Debts collected by Council Learned in Law (controlled all finances connected to Henry’s lands)
- 1499 - 1509 - 2/3 of nobles were placed under a bond