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R E L I G I O N & R E L I G I O U S C H A N G E I N E N G L A N D , C . 1 4 7 0 -1 5 5 8
INTERPRETING THE PILGRIMAGE OF GRACE
REBELLION: WHY BOTHER?
• Historical interest in rebellion because:• Evidence of ‘ordinary’ people• Revealing of social/economic/political attitudes• Seen as part of the political system (rather than
anomalous)• Attitudes towards authority & monarchy.
• IT IS INTERESTING• IT SELLS LOTS & LOTS OF BOOKS
THE PILGRIMAGE OF GRACE• Royal Supremacy only 3 years old – a profound
challenge:• Attacked RS as ‘heresy’ & called for Mary to be made legitimate;
upheld monasticism – Parliament could not speak on these issues without the King’s permission.
• Memory: Wars of the Roses; Tudors a ‘new’ dynasty with little legitimacy
• Serious – HVIII had to negotiate:• Promised that Parliament would meet at York to discuss RS; that
dissolved monasteries would stand.
• Wide geographical scope:• Yorks/Lincs/Lancs/Westmorland
• Crossed the social spectrum:• 30-60,000 (largest ‘popular’ revolt in English history)• Nobles/gentry/commons/clerics unified (on some points)
• Nature of the Tudor State:• No standing army/police• ‘Rise of the State’ part of the problem?
THE NORTH – A PROBLEM:
• Mighty feudal overlords (Percys)• Periodic lawlessness• 1489 – a significant rebellion (Yorkshire)• Hostility/resistance to taxation endemic –
instability• CHALLENGE TO MONARCHICAL POWERS
PREVALENT & PERSISTANT.• Was this an opportunity for Henry to expand the
Tudor state?
THE PILGRIMAGE OF GRACE – CONTEXT:
• Context in HVIII’s reign:• Royal Supremacy new• Dissolution – novel & ‘heretical’• New taxation
‘Novelty’ = illegitimacy in early modern minds.It was rarely the RATE of taxation, but its basis in custom which was significant in causing instability.
• Court factions surrounding Aragon; Seymour; Boleyn spanned out into the localities.
• Some historians see PofG as a court conspiracy.
ARE REVOLTS REVOLTING?
PARADOX – A REBELLION WHICH WAS ACTIVELY AGAINST DESTRUCTION
THE LINCOLNSHIRE RISING, 1536:• Based on 3 towns: Louth, Caitor, Horncastle• Lasted 2 weeks in October 1536.
• Royal commissions 1536:• Dissolve smaller monasteries/ Collect Subsidies/ Assess the clergy.• Arrival in Louth trigger – seized by men guarding Church treasures.
• Rumour (fear, anger, not understand crown intentions):• Plate/jewel to be taken from parish Churches/ tax on cattle/ all gold to be
confiscated.• Churches to be pulled down• No one allowed to eat white bread/ goose without paying a tribute to HVIII
• Gentry involvement often contradictory:• Assumed leadership after 2 days• Muster ‘troops’ through normal State methods• But in negotiations with Duke of Suffolk (claiming that they were attempting
to contain the rebellion from proceeding further South).
• Traditional mechanisms of containment failed:• Lords Hussey, Clinton and Burgh fled• So many gentry/JPs involved – legitimacy
Filtered out when Duke of Suffolk’s army within 40 miles – gentry fearful of prosecution for treason & sued for peace.
THE PILGRIMAGE OF GRACE:• Series of different risings under the (loose)
leadership of Robert Aske (lawyer):• West & East Ridings (Yorks)/ Westmorland /
Richmondshire• Proclamation at York October 1536:• ‘This pilgrimage we have undertaken it for the
preservation of Christ’s church of this realm of England, the king our sovereign lord, the nobility and commons the same, and to the intent to make petition to the king’s highness for the reformation of that which is amiss within this realm and for the punishment of heretics and subverters of the laws.’
• Defence of Church/realm/king/community one and the same.
‘ELITES’ AND ‘COMMONS’:• Involvement of the North’s leading families.• Henry Percy, 6th Earl of Northumberland (most
powerful man in the North):• Suspected in London (‘too powerful’).• Not active, but passive acceptance of rebellion.• Surrendered Wressle Castle to Aske & acknowledged him as
‘captain of the baronage’.• Other family members had prominent roles: Sir Thomas
Percy (marched with 5000 to York); Sir Ingram Percy (swore people to the Pilgrim’s cause); gentry leaders Percy tenants.
• Tension/mistrust of gentry by commons• But insist on gentry leadership: why?• Note – ‘leadership’ is loose, not militaristic• Parish by parish organisation far more significant in an active
sense than the gentry
‘ELITES’ & ‘COMMONS’
Commons
• All nine rebel groups tried to secure gentry leadership:• Symbolic: Lord Neville
(13)
• Society of Orders a natural concept:• SHOULD lead them• An obligation• Clergy not permitted
active fighting roles.
Gentry
• Bush: ‘aristocratic conspiracy of inaction’.• Had contained agrarian
unrests of 1535• Stood aside here (tacit
approval?)• Fall of Pontefract Castle
(hiding place) forced them to become involved.
• Damage limitation• ‘We were only trying to
maintain order’• Fearful of
lives/property if refused.
CAUSES: OVERVIEW• Whose rebellion?• ‘Popular’ – people vs regime? Genuine access to ‘ordinary’
sentiment?• ‘Feudal’ • High politics (Elton) – a conspiracy led by ostracised
courtiers; utilising power-bases in the locality to achieve a political victory at Court.
• Motivations?• Religion? (Moral)• Economic/Social? (Banal)• Dodds Sisters (1915) – Aske unable to halt ‘popular’
movement; two ‘movements’ (‘religious’ – gentry led – social/economic – anti-gentry).
• Documentation – did Cromwell distort issues to detract from religious motivations (thus safeguarding Crown policy)?
A ‘COURT CONSPIRACY’? • James/Elton: national politics more important
than local social/economic factors.• 1530-35 – Darcy/Hussey & Aragonese faction at
Court:• Support KofA/Mary & oppose Boleyn marriage.• Side-lined at Court – affront to noble honour.• Rumours that contemplated revolt in 1534.
• 1536 – potential return to royal favour:• Aragon dead; Boleyn executed• BUT: Hussey wanted Mary reinstated as legitimate• Cromwell prevented; ensured Hussey lost position in Mary’s
household.• Hussey’s wife imprisoned (allegations of encouraging
resistance to the RS).
• Elton: PofG borne of frustration, manipulate popular discontent to their own ends.
A ‘COURT CONSPIRACY’?
• Some articles could be read as interpreting Elton’s view:• Attack on Cromwell/Audley/Rich (& Cromwell’s key
policies – Treason Act/Royal Supremacy/ ‘Heresy’)• Second Succession Act (key to Aragonese party)• Attack Henry’s Scottish claims – fearful of HVIII perusing
heir through his sister Margaret (not want a foreign ruler).
• Gunn – remove Hussey, undercut Elton:• Hussey = old, politically marginalised (local & national)• At no point a significant leader of the PofG (actually
indecisive).
A ‘FEUDAL’ REVOLT?• Historiographical context – English medieval
history littered with ‘baronial revolts’:• Brought their tenants with them because they were bound to
their lords.
• Here pilgrims volunteered – took an oath; not feudal loyalty.
• PofG – noble involvement came from minor figures:• Barons: Conyers; Latimer; Lumley; Scope.
• Powerful men not really take part:• Earl of Derby (support HVIII); Lord Dacre (besieged); Earls of
Cumberland (deserted by gentry clients – son married HVIII’s niece) & Westmorland (captured)
• Landed elites not stand together: Darcy’s sons not support him; Aske’s brother defended Skipton Castle.
IF NOT A ‘FEUDAL’ REVOLT, WAS IT A ‘POPULAR’ ONE?
A ‘POPULAR’ REBELLION?• Question of all early modern rebellions: do the articles
reflect the views of the rebels themselves?• Aske not use materials from some petitions (re: landlords/gentry)
• Unpopular recent taxation:• New subsidy issued in peace time (unique)• 1534 Subsidy Act (sold as a benefit to society)
• But, rebellion conservative:• Not taxation per se; but novel taxes which breached custom• Lincolnshire – articles demanded that the King claim no money unless in
defence of the realm.• Attack tithe barns – not Church itself that the target, but unpopular landlords in
general
• Context – two years of poor harvests + new taxes make living hard.
• Pontefract manifesto – two articles relating to economic issues:• Enclosure (fencing-off the common land)• Much more significant in later rebellions.
• Entry fines (payment upon taking upon a tenancy)• More prevalent concern.
CAUSES – RELIGION:
Against:
• Not ‘spiritual’:• Religious
objects/taxation/practices, but not spirit/doctrine.
• A cloak/ banner/ slogan / justification for other motivations:• ‘Functional’ approach to
religion (remember Gregory)• Real motivation material –
greedy king.
• Mendacious clerics:• Propaganda to dupe people into
rebelling
• Confused:• Continental & English reformers
tied together in demands.
For:
• Dissolution:• Co-incidental• Visible & a moral issue.• BUT – too easy (not
reactionary)
• Fear/uncertainty:• Rumour – what did the
Reformation mean for them?• What of parishes run through
impropriation?
• Material fabric of late-medieval Catholicism:• Purgatory; prayers for the
dead; saints – all dependent on ‘material’ aspects of LMC.
RELIGION: EXAMPLES• Traditional patterns of
sanctity:• East Riding (Yorks) – St. Wilfrid’s day• Banning of prayers to the Pope
• Benefits of monasteries:• Praised ‘ghostly living’ as a part of
being Christian – ‘speritual informacion, and preching’.
• Also soc/ec roles – food/gifts/charity/travellers.
• Help tenants: store documents/look after unmarried daughters & elderly.
• ‘Commonwealth’ – united social/economic/religious.
• Re-establish dissolved houses:• Cartmel/ Conishead/ Sawley/ St.
Clements (York)• Popular initiative; clerical lead
elsewhere.
• Oaths to join:
'Ye shall not enter into this our Pilgrimage of Grace for the common wealth but only for the love ye bear to God's faith and church militant and the maintenance thereof, the preservation of the king's person, his issue, and the purifying of the nobility and to expulse all villein blood and evil counsellors against the common wealth of the same. And that ye shall not enter into our said pilgrimage for no peculiar private profit to no private person but by counsel of the common wealth nor slay nor murder for no envy but in your hearts to put away all fear for the common wealth. And to take before you the cross of Christ and your heart's faith to the restitution of the church and to the suppression of heretics' opinions by the holy content of this book’
Banner of the Five Wounds of Christ – Crusades - Christ’s cause - Made traditional offerings of pilgrims
Ritual procession to York.
How do we interpret behaviour as historians?
WHAT DID THEY ACTUALLY DO?
THE CROWN’S REACTION:
• Divide & rule (gentry & commons); propaganda on sinfulness of rebellion.
• Renewed rebellion in 1537 a mandate to display State power:• Francis Bigod & followers believe Aske had been fooled by
HVIII’s promises.
• HVIII’s reaction:• Duke of Norfolk declared martial law.• Proceed ‘without pity of circumstance’ to ‘such dreadful
execution a good number….as shall be a fearful warning’.• 144 executions (known): public/ confession showing breach
of Royal authority.• Vindictive – legally could only prosecute for actions after the
Doncaster pardon (‘evidence’ convicting Darcy/Aske largely invented).
CONSEQUENCES:
Long-term:
• The solidification of the Tudor regime in the North.• Council of the North:• Curb endemic violence• Resolve local feuds• Control Scottish border
• Increased the power of loyal families
• 1537 – Northumberland signed over all lands to HVIII:• Percy interest now
destroyed.
Short-term:
• Henry convinced of the need for obedience.
• Persuaded that the monasteries were now a problem:• Resistance to the RS• Disobedience/pro-Pope• Superstition/Error
• Irony – if the ‘pilgrims’ intended to preserve LMC, their actions ultimately persuaded the king to proceed against it with greater vigour.
GOD’S OWN COUNTRY.