Interpretation - Pilgrimage of Grace Flashcards
What were the main causes of the Pilgrimage of Grace?
Political, Economic, Religious
What were the political causes of the Pilgrimage of Grace?
- Aragonese faction decamped to the North, consolidating and using the North as a power base - North felt excluded from London and were looked down on by southerners.
- Percy’s, Darcy’s and Hussey’s involved- were they planning a coup?
- Some of the concerns of the rebels were also the concerns of the gentry.
- Some gentry and nobles objected to the influence of low-born Thomas Cromwell
What were the economic causes of the Pilgrimage of Grace?
- Bad harvests, heavy taxation, enclosure, rumours of new taxes on sheep and baptism. Rebels did not want to have to pay the taxes due from the Subsidy Act of 1534.
- Statute of Uses, removing right to leave land to whoever wanted & increased tax when estate changed hands, unpopular with nobility.
- ‘rack-renting’, pilgrims wanted rent rates to reduce as under Henry VII
- Dissolution of monasteries had economic element – provided assistance to the poor.
What were the religious causes of the Pilgrimage of Grace?
- Unifying factor and general appeal.
- Concern about religious reforms about Luther’s heresies.
- Wanted restoration of power of pope.
- Protesting gov assault on saints, pilgrimages and holy days.
- Dissolution of the monasteries.
Paragraphs - degree of threat posed by the Pilgrimage of Grace?
Leadership and organisation, location, supporters, government response.
Degree of threat posed by the Pilgrimage of Grace - Leadership and organisation?
- Aske educated lawyer able to articulate issues and encouraged rebellion as trad pilgrimage.
- Rebels well-organised; coordinated and efficient - recruits mustered into companies.
- All rebel groups Aske as overall leader - constant contact - harder for gov to put down.
- Ensured rebellion remained peaceful - gain more support.
- Aske believed VIII’s promises, taken advantage of.
Degree of threat posed by the Pilgrimage of Grace - Location?
- Began East Riding of Yorkshire. Took over York, Hull.
- The rebellion covered most of the North and North East of England by late October; the only region where they were less successful was Lancashire
- In all 9 regional uprisings took place.
Degree of threat posed by the Pilgrimage of Grace - Support?
- Largest mass rebellion of Tudor period - support from members of the nobility and the gentry, clergymen and monks, as well as the commons.
- Influential rebels from nobility and gentry e.g. Darcy, Hussey, Percy families
- Darcy & Hussey members of conservative faction at court. - - Percy family factor in convincing some men to join.
- Local communities often joined if their parish church or monastery was under threat
Degree of threat posed by the Pilgrimage of Grace - Government response?
- Serious threat, nine rebel armies formed across North.
- Taken by surprise, no of rebels & rapidity with which armies gathered.
- Nobles and gentry joined – gov couldn’t rely on usual means to deal.
- Rebel army was 30,000 strong, had to play for time.
- Mistake of sending home for 2nd army - rebels 3 weeks to prepare strategy.
- October, the Duke of Norfolk and Earl of Shrewsbury marched north with 8,000 men and were outnumbered – negotiate – presented with 5 articles to give to King.
- December rebels asked for Kings pardon, granted together with promise parliament in North & negotiations on monasteries. Most rebels went home.
- Jan realised had been tricked, brief unsuccessful rising.
- Rebel leaders executed.
- Where gentry stayed loyal no instability – rewarded loyal
What were the main outcomes of the Pilgrimage of Grace?
Political, economic, religious
What were the political outcomes of the Pilgrimage of Grace?
- Henry VII showed strength
- Percy family destroyed
- Contributed to the removal of Cromwell
- Resulted in re-organisation and strengthening of the Council of the North
What were the economic outcomes of the Pilgrimage of Grace?
- Landlord-tenant relations
- Statute of Uses repelled.
- 1534 subsidy act repealed
What were the religious outcomes of the Pilgrimage of Grace?
- Failed to stop dissolution of monasteries.
- The participation of abbots and monks in the rebellion further proved to Henry that they were a security threat and result in Henry’s support for Cromwell’s dissolution of larger monasteries
- Bishops Book restored many conservative practices.
- The Act of Six Articles (1539) replaced the Ten Articles. Many catholic practices were restored.
Whose rebellion was the Pilgrimage of Grace?
- Elton: organised by an out-of-favour court faction, led by men such as Hussey
- Gunn: work of the parish clergy and leaders of society in villages and small towns e.g. richer yeomen and tradesmen
- Bush: a ‘movement’ of the commons’
Was the Pilgrimage of Grace a rebellion of the gentry?
- Organisation suggest it was not spontaneous and only the gentry would have the ability/connections to organise this large-scale rising
- Some of rebel demands e.g. complaint for Statute of Uses, only appealed to the gentry
- Gentry most affected by changes to royal policy and the new influence of Duke of Suffolk and Lincolnshire
- Nobility and gentry involved had the motive of losing their position in court and the resentment of Cromwell and Boleyn
- Rebel demands attacked Cromwell, Rich and Audley, all men the gentry had lost out to
- Names of heretic who were attacked would not have been familiar to the commons
- Gentry argued they were coerced, but useful get out after the failure