Henry VIII - Religious Changes 1529-1547 Flashcards
Was the Church unpopular?
No, H8 wanted to get divorce + acquire Church’s wealth.
1533: Break with Rome + Act in Restraint of Appeals
Act in Restraint of Appeals: “This realm of England is an empire.”
1534: Act of Supremacy + Act of Succession
H8 - head of English Church. Succession: first marriage - invalid. Cranmer - Arch of Canterbury. TC - King’s Deputy in Church Affairs.
1534: Treason Act
1534: Act of Submission of Clergy
Made it a cime to criticise the changes, marriage and succession.
Needed King’s licence and assent to pass church laws.
Swings between Catholicism + Protestantism
1536-39: Prots, 1539-40: Caths, 1541-43: Confusion, 1544-47: Prot
Dissolution of the Monasteries
800 before dissolution. Social role as centres of education + charity. However, they became corrupt + used servants, whilst they got drunk + wasted money they gained from rent.
1536: Valor Ecclesiasticus
Survey of religious houses, exaggerated corruption + decay. Showed that monasteries had potential to double H8’s income + and increased crown land.
Why did H8 dissolve the monasteries?
Finance, Corruption, Power, Centres of Catholic Resistance.
1536: Dissolution of Smaller Monasteries
Closed monasteries with land valued at under £200 pa, whilst it praised the bigger monasteries.
1539: Dissolution of Larger Monasteries
All monasteries closed, except Chantries. 1540: Court of Augmentations: Richard Rich as Chancellor to handle income of dissolved monasteries. Ended tradition stretching back 5 centuries. Monasteries made up 10% of wealth of kingdom, which H8 used for war. However, less taxes paid, but nobility gained. Less learning, less social welfare. Monks found jobs in great Catholic families.
1536: Ten Articles of Faith
Similar to Martin Luther’s Articles, introduced Protestant ideas. Enforced by two sets of Royal Injunctions in 1536 + 1538.
1537: Bishops’ Book
Encouraged Protestantism + gave advice on implementing Ten Articles.
1537: English Bible
Cromwell published Myles Coverdale’s English translation of the Bible.
1538: Royal Proclamation
Every parish church ordered to have a Bible.
1539: Act of Six Articles
Enforces Catholic doctrine on six issues, e.g. transubstantiation and clerical celibacy.