Instability and Consolidation: 'the Mid-Tudor Crisis', 1547–1563 - Succession Crisis of 1553 Flashcards

1
Q

Why did Northumberland want to change the line of succession?

A
  • Edward VI was seriously ill and likely to die
  • Mary I was next in line and she was a devout Catholic
  • Protestant reforms would be reversed and Northumberland’s life would be endangered
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2
Q

What act decided the line of succession for the Tudor children?

A
  • 1544 Third Succession Act
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3
Q

What order were the Tudor children in for the crown?

A
  • Edward VI
  • Mary
  • Elizabeth
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4
Q

When did Edward VI become seriously ill?

A
  • January 1553
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5
Q

What was the name of the plan to change the succession?

A
  • Devyse
  • Devise
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6
Q

How did Northumberland try justifying a change in the succession?

A
  • Parliament had previously declared Elizabeth and Mary illegitimate
  • Henry didn’t set aside claims that his younger sister’s family might make
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7
Q

When did Parliament declare Mary and Elizabeth as illegitimate?

A
  • July 1536, through Second Succession Act
  • Following Anne Boleyn’s execution
  • Elizabeth (Anne’s daughter) and Mary (Catherine’s daughter) made illegitimate
  • Superseded by 1544 Third Succession Act
  • Put pressure on Jane Seymour to bear a male heir
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8
Q

Which person did Northumberland pick to inherit the throne?

A
  • Lady Jane Grey
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9
Q

Why did Northumberland pick Lady Jane Grey?

A
  • She was married to Northumberland’s son, Guilford Dudley
  • Grey was Protestant
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10
Q

When did Lady Jane Grey marry Guilford Dudley?

A
  • May 1553
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11
Q

What was Lady Jane Grey’s claim to the throne?

A
  • She was Henry VIII’s great granddaughter
  • Descendant of Mary Tudor (Henry VIII’s younger sister)
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12
Q

How did Edward VI react to the Devise?

A
  • He agreed with the plan and recent research suggests he was a keen instigator
  • He signed the agreement
  • Wanted to protect Protestantism
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13
Q

When did Edward VI sign the agreement to the Devise?

A
  • Days before his death in July 1553, aged fifteen
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14
Q

When did Edward VI die?

A
  • 6 July 1553
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15
Q

How did parliament respond to the Devise?

A
  • Edward had died before parliament could sanction the Devise
  • So, the Devise became illegal
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16
Q

When did Lady Jane Grey become queen?

A
  • 9 July 1553
  • 3 days after Edward VI’s death
17
Q

How did the Privy Council react to the Devise?

A
  • Privy Council needed a lot of persuasion to support Northumberland
  • Partly agreed because it was the dying King’s wish
18
Q

Did the people support Mary or Lady Jane Grey?

A
  • Mary
19
Q

Why did the people support Mary?

A
  • Mary was seen as God’s rightful choice of monarch, Lady Jane Grey was a usurper
  • As Lady Jane Grey was related to Northumberland, it seemed like a ploy so he could keep power
  • Much support for traditional ways outside of London
20
Q

Who supported Lady Jane Grey?

A
  • Local authorities inside London
  • Berwick on Scottish border
  • King’s Lynn in East Anglia
21
Q

How did Mary react to the Devise?

A
  • Mary gathered together Catholic supporters, including nobles, in Norfolk
  • Little love for Northumberland in Norfolk, due to crushed Kett’s Rebellion
22
Q

How did Mary claim the throne?

A
  • Mary gathered supporters from nobility, gentry and ordinary folk
  • Northumberland’s supporters deserted him, after realising Mary was more popular
  • Mary is proclaimed queen in the marketplace at Cambridge on 20 July 1553
23
Q

When was Mary proclaimed queen?

A
  • 20 July 1553
24
Q

What happened to Lady Jane Grey?

A
  • Mary was reluctant to execute her, she was just a pawn
  • But she represented hope for Protestants
  • After Wyatt’s rebellion led by Duke of Suffolk, Lady Jane Grey’s father, Mary changed her mind
  • Lady Jane Grey executed in February 1554
25
Q

When was Lady Jane Grey executed?

A
  • Convicted and beheaded for treason
  • February 1554