Religion, Humanism, Arts and Learning Flashcards
What were the four key roles of the catholic church?
Means of maintaining social control
Catered for the population’s spiritual needs
Provided opportunities for employment and social advancement
Played an important political role (in both domestic and international affairs)
How as the church administered in England?
Through two provinces (Canterbury and York) each undet the jurisdiction of an Archbishops- there were also 17 dioceses each under a bishop (some dioceses enjoyed considerable wealth e.g. Durham )
The pope was not expected to interfere in the running of the church so senior churchmen enjoyed positions of great political power and influence
How significant was religious to everyday life?
Essential - the parish and church was central to personal religious experience and community life
Lives were governed religious festivals, and the ritual baptisms, marriage and death
What religious belief had a major influence on behaviour?
The threat of hell and purgatory (the limbo state when a soul had to be cleansed of sins before entering heaven)
What did the church do?
Provide a framework for controlling thinking and behaviour - reinforced allegiance to authority - particularly the monarch.
It spread and upheld Catholic Christian teachings
It offered a way by which a person could acquire Grace in order to reach heaven and minimise the time a soul would spend in purgatory
What was the central religious experience known as mass?
The priests would perform the sacrament of Holy Communion (Eucharist). Catholics believed that at the time the priest consecrated the bread and wine they were transformed literally into the body and blood of Christ (known as transubstantiation)
The priests consumed both the bread and wine, lay members of the congregation, took the bread only
What were some of the roles of lay people?
Donate towards rebuilding parish church buildings
Leave money to the parish church in their wills
Leave money for the foundation of chantries
Gather together in a confraternity to provide collectively for masses or funeral cost of members
Paid for the objects which accompanied services
What were the main religious orders?
Monastic orders
Friars
Nunneries
What were monastic orders?
Around 1% of male adults were monks living in 900 monasteries
The Benedictine order often had large houses - some operated cathedrals=important to community and their members came from wealthier parts of society
Cistercian and Carthusian monasteries were frequently situated in more remote/rural areas
What were Friars?
There were three main orders (Dominicans, Franciscans and Augustinians)
They worked among lay people and were largely supported by charitable donations
They were recruited from lower down the social scale than the large monasteries
They were declining in importance by the late 15th century
What were nunneries?
They usually enjoyed less prestige than the monasteries (they were often populated by women considered unsuitable for marriage)
They were often relatively poor (Syon in Middlesex was an exception to all of these)
In what way was a small minority critical of the practices and beliefs of the church?
Lollardy (first emerged in the late 14th century) following the teachings of John Wycliffe continued in pockets around Britain
Lollardy emphasised the importance of understanding the bible and wanted it to be translated into English
They were sceptical about transubstantiation and viewed the Catholic Church as corrupt + denied the idea of the special status of the priesthood
When had the burning of heretics been introduced into the English law and what happened to Lollard movement?
What was criticism of church like?
1401 but very few had died this way and by the late 15th century Lollardy was in decline and other forms of Heresy were rare - became fewer in number and became geographically restricted + lost intellectual coherence
Criticism of the church did exist but anti-clericalism was not widespread (and often politically motivated) - priests retained the support of most members of the laity (not priests or members of religious order)
What was humanism?
A development of the 14th and 15th century Renaissance
An intellectual movement which affected religious teachings, politics and economics
Believers in the Catholic faith
What was humanism concerned with?
Establishing the reliability of Latin and Greek translations by going back to the original texts
Who was the impact of humanism largely restricted to?
The educated nobles and gentry so it only made a limited impact on England in Henry VII’s reign
Humanism and renaissance had made little impact on England and intellectual life remained dominated by traditional medieval scholastic philosophy which humanists considered old fashioned and too formal
What was English humanism influenced by?
The visit of the Dutch scholar Desiderius Erasmus in 1499
What did Erasmus do?
Criticised Church abuses and sought to regenerate Christianity through emphasis on education and rejection of some of the church’s traditional ceremonies
He associated with English humanists such as Colet and More - which would give a huge boost to humanist ideas in early years of Henry VII
Who was William Grocyn?
Had discovered humanism in Florence and lectured on Plato and Aristotle in Oxford
Who was Thomas Linacre?
Had also discovered humanism in Florence
Influenced by scientific thinking and took medical degree in Padua
Particularly influenced by the scientific thinking he acquired in Italy
Who was Thomas More?
Distinguished lawyer and humanist scholar
His friendship with Erasmus boosted humanist ideas under Henry VIII