MARY I RELIGION Flashcards

1
Q

WHAT, in England, opposed Mary I achieving her religious policy aims?

A
  • Protestant reformers (minority)
  • Protestant Church of England was protected by statute law
  • Disagreements over ex-monastic land
  • Divisions in her council over the extent of religious reform
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2
Q

WHERE in England was there some support for Protestantism under Mary I?

A

London and other southern parts (albeit small)

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3
Q

WHAT was the problem with returning ex-monastic land to the Church under Mary I?

A

While Mary saw ex-monastic land as illegally gained, many of the political elite (and many MPs) benefited from it and so were reluctant to give it up.

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4
Q

WHO of Mary I’s advisers were for radical religious reform?

A
  • Cardinal Pole
  • Philip of Spain (wanted the prestige of restoring England to Catholicism)
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5
Q

WHO of Mary I’s advisers were against radical religious reform?

A
  • Stephen Gardiner (unenthusiastic about a return to papal supremacy)
  • Simon Renard (worried about the property concerns from the nobility)
  • Charles V and Pope Julius III urged caution as they feared unrest following fast reform
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6
Q

WHAT were Mary I’s 3 options for religious policy?

A

1) Full Protestantism
2) Moderate Catholicism: to the end of HVIII’s reign
3) Full Catholicism: to before the Break with Rome

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7
Q

WHAT were the cons of changing to full Catholicism under Mary I?

A
  • Protestant reformers could rally behind Elizabeth as a focus of their discontent
  • Those who owned ex-monastic land would not support her with returning it to the Church
  • Many might see Mary changing the religion as her following what her husband Philip wants, undermining her independent authority.
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8
Q

WHAT did ordinary people want Mary I to do for her religious policy?

A

Most people expected her to restore full Catholicism, and in most places money was raised for Catholic projects

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9
Q

WHEN was the First Act of Repeal passed (Mary I)?

A

October 1553

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10
Q

WHAT did the First Act of Repeal (1553) do?

A
  • Repealed all religious legislation passed under EdVI, restoring the doctrine and order of service of 1547
  • No more clergy could marry and those who had done so would lose their jobs
  • Legally Church of England remained in place
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11
Q

WHAT was the issue with changing the legal status of the Church of England?

A

Mary would have to use parliamentary law to remove royal supremacy, which would contradict her belief that divine law was superior to statute law.

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12
Q

WHEN was the Second Act of Repeal passed (Mary I)?

A

January 1555

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13
Q

WHAT did the Second Act of Repeal (1555) do?

A
  • Abolished all doctrinal legislation passed since 1529 (including the Act of Supremacy)
  • Did not restore church lands or property
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14
Q

WHAT were the problems Mary I faced after the passing of the Second Act of Repeal?

A
  • Restoration of church land/property was too divisive and complex to resolve
  • MPs had gained confirmed power over religion through the use of Parliament
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15
Q

WHAT pastoral reforms did Mary I introduce?

A
  • Resources of the church had to be restored
  • Better training and supervision of parish priests
  • New editions of the Prayer Book and Bible as guidance
  • Priest recruitment encouraged
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16
Q

WHICH places more strongly opposed Mary I’s pastoral reforms?

A

Southern areas like Kent

17
Q

HOW MANY Protestants did Mary I burn, and according to WHO?

A

Foxe’s Book of Martyrs records her burning 289 victims in total

18
Q

WHICH famous clergymen were burned for Protestantism under Mary I?

A

Archbishop Cranmer, and Hugh Latimer (former Bishop of Worcester)

19
Q

WHAT type of people were targeted by Mary I for Protestant sympathies?

A

Most were people involved in politics, but some humble men and women of low status were also executed. This shows how Protestantism was a genuinely held belief by some people.

20
Q

HOW effective was Mary I’s method of executing Protestants for her religious policy?

A

It had little effect for extinguishing heresy, because:
- Deaths of popular preachers elicited widespread public sympathy
- Deaths of ordinary people strengthened sympathy and turned them into martyrs.

21
Q

WHAT did Pope Paul IV do that limited Mary I’s restoration of the Catholic faith?

A

He dismissed Pole as a papal legate (1557), meaning Pole could no longer act on his behalf. Mary I refused to replaced Pole’s position with the new legate, Peto, and essentially refused to acknowledge superior papal authority.

22
Q

HOW did Mary I undermine papal authority during her reign?

A
  • Used statute law to enforce papal supremacy
  • When Pole was dismissed as a papal legate (1557), Mary I refused to replace Pole’s position with the new legate, Peto
23
Q

HOW FAR did Mary I transform the religious situation in England?

A
  • Most of England remained Catholic
  • Her reign was too short to make any effective impact
  • More could have been achieved regarding:
    1) The delay in restoring the Church’s institutional structure
    2) Divisions between Crown and papacy
    (HOWEVER, both of these weren’t entirely in her control)
24
Q

WHAT elements of humanism were in official (Catholic) religious thought under Mary I?

A

While the Catholic Church wanted to dissociate itself from humanism, there is evidence of Mary I translating humanist texts herself, showing its importance in England.

25
Q

WHAT were the divisions between Protestant exiles under Marian Catholicism?

A

1) Some were happy with the 1552 Prayer Book while others wanted a more radical direction
2) Some were happy to keep existing political structures while others wanted radical and active resistance against the regime.

26
Q

WHAT happened to most of the Protestants exiled under Mary after she died?

A

Most were brought back to England in Elizabeth’s reign.