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Summary OCR History A Level Tudor Rebellions Causes

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A detailed summary of the causes of the Tudor Rebellions designed for 25 markers as part of the OCR A Level Rebellion and Disorder under the Tudors 1485–1603 paper.

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TUDOR REBELLION CAUSATION
Socio economic Causes
Taxation
 1489 Yorkshire Rebellion
 1497 Cornwall Rebellion
 1525 Amicable Grant
 minor in Pilgrimage of Grace and Western
 tax collectors often assaulted and locally people claimed they were too poor or not
willing to pay
 1515 Henry VIII returned payments from 19 Yorkshire towns and villages as they
were so poverty stricken
 according to the 1522 Survey 1/3 of people in Exeter and Leicester escaped on
account of poverty
 60% of male population was liable for taxation but was levied occasionally when
there was an emergency

Yorkshire Rebellion 1489

 objections came from Yorkshire council about having to pat a tax for a war that did
not concern them
 parliament voted to allow Henry VII £100,000 to meet the costs of a campaign against
France
 saw it as unfair as traditionally people in south funded wars against France while
northern counties met cost of defending Sottish border
 counties of Northumberland, Westmorland, Cumberland exempted by King on
account of poverty
 protestors affected by bad harvest 1488
 unpopular news that Henry Percy Earl of Northumberland would lead the tax
commission

Cornish Rebellion 1497

 parliament voted for £60,000 for war against Scots
 rebels explained with some justification that customarily wars against Scots were paid
by a scutage (type of tax) or land tax and only by 4 of northern counties
 2 councillors blamed: John Morton, Lord Chancellor and Reginald Bray, King’s Chief
Financial Adviser who had been responsible for finding ways to increase revenue
from royal estate in 1490s
 1497 parliamentary grant was an innovation
 traditionally 15th and 10th were levied as usual rates that had been set in 1334 but
further grant of £60,000 would be collected if war broke out and this money would be
set at rates assessed by royal commissioners
 war didn’t break out and second tax not collected

,Amicable Grant 1525

 non parliamentary tax which commissioners were ordered to collect in the spring of
1525
 objected as in 1522 Wolsey had raised £260,000 in forced loans which he said would
be repaid out of the next parliamentary subsidy - didn’t happen
 1523 Wolsey tried to get parliament to vote a subsidy of £800,000 but ordered only
£151,00 payable over 4 years
 church expected to pay £120,000
 grant made excessive demands on the laity and clergy alike
 since 1513, Wolsey had introduced tax assessments based on land, income and
personal assets and collected what yielded the highest tax
 assessments mad by the gov officials and ended paying fixed rate
 laity required to pay special tax of 5% if they were rated below £20, 7.5% if rated at
between £20 and £50 and 16.5% if rated above £50 a year
 many of the protestors would not have been paying tax for the first time at high rates
 clergy hit harder as had to pay rate of 25% of their annual revenue or value of their
movable goods worth less than £10 and 33% of those above £10
 grave shortages of coinage which is why the gov urgently needed to collect tax and
rising unemployment following a fall in wool prices = economic stress

Pilgrimage of Grace 1536

 only 1 set of articles concerned tax
 didnt want to pay tax due to Subsidy Act of 1534
 in Lincolnshire there were rumours that the tax was a prelude for further fiscal
exactions such as tax on white meat and horned cattle
 subsidy’s yield of £80,000 small and affected onyl few people but many rebels
claimed couldn’t afford it
 there were also attempts to collect taxes in peacetime in 1540 and 1553

Western Rebellion 1549

 Somerset’s Subsidy Act 1549
 tax on sheep and on every pound of wool cloth was levied on pasture farmers and
cloth producers
 tax hit poorer peasants and tenants most of all as wealthy clothiers and sheep farmers
raised prices to pay costs
 west country was not the only sheep farming region but Devon was a largely enclosed
country and was affected more than most
 tax due to be assessed 2 weeks after the introduction of the English prayer Book so
this added to their list of grievances

Enclosures
 caused tensions between landowners and tenants, provoked local disturbances and
riots
 Midland Revolt 1607

, Pilgrimage of Grace 1536

 only 1 of articles cited enclosures as cause
 much rioting over illegal enclosures in course of 1535 and common grievance among
northern rebels
 over 300 people at Gigglewick in Yorkshire pulled down hedges and dykes
 there were riots at Fressington in Cumberland
 both areas sent rebels in the following year to attack the lands of the Earl of
Cumberland, a notorious landlord who had enclosed on his tenants lands in Eden
Valley and denied them grazing rights
 Husbandmen at Horncastle in Lincolnshire were also concerned at the encroachment
of tenants rights although this was a minor grievance among the commons

Ketts Rebellion 1549

 caused by unlawful enclosures
 triggered by local incident between 2 rival landowners, Robert Kett and John
Flowerdew
 both had recently enclosed their lands and Flowerdew, Norfolk’s feodary was not
popular in Wymondham and nearby Attleborough where rioting began
 Kett became the spokesman for the rebels
 sparked by allegations that landlords had been deliberately obstructing a gov
commission that was investigating illegal enclosures
 rebels believed they could have the backing of the gov if they were to take the law
into their own hands
 similar riots and hedge breaking occurred in Sussex, Kent, Cambridgeshire, Midlands
and south west countries but it was in Norfolk where riots turned to open rebellion
 many tenant farmers actually favoured enclosure because it denied their landlords the
ancient right of folding their sheep and cattle on the tenants arable fields and only
opposed enclosure when they denied this practise
 Kett keen to maintain enclosures where saffron was grown so animals could not
damage valuable crop
 concern of wealthy landowners such as lords of the manor who had extensive private
estates pasturing their flocks on common land which was in short supply
 overstocking of common land common complaint
 1540s Norfolk peasants from Hingham and Great Durham has prosecuted their
landlords for grazing animals on common lands → not successful
 magistrates usually landlords themselves and either knew or sympathised with
landlords involved

1549: The year of commotion

 Somerset - open fields converted to deer parks
 Wilton in Wiltshire - peasants removed Lord Herbert’s hedges that had put up a
common land
 Sussex - serious revolts only prevented when the Earl of Arundel forced gentlemen to
dismantle their hedges
 only in low lying sheep corn areas in much of Midlands, East Anglia, southern and
south east England was it an issue

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