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Summary OCR History A Level Impact of Tudor Rebellions

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A detailed summary of the impacts 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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IMPACT OF REBELLIONS
The effects of rebellions on gov and society
Crown Servants
 all dynastic rebellions failed
 most of the protests against gov policies and ministers did a little better
 Crown servants under attack: Morton, Bray, Wolsey, Cromwell, Audley, Rich,
Cranmer, William and Robert Cecil → all survived
 Wolsey relation with Henry worsened after the Amicable Grant but remained in office
for another 4 years
 men like Cromwell, Cranmer, Rich and Audley had not caused the pilgrimage of
grace and Henry ensured that they were rewarded for their part in defeating it
 Cromwell remained Henry’s principal secretary and was granted monastic lands and
annuities from confiscated estates
 When Cromwell fell 1540 - consequence of marriage to Anne of Cleves not rebellion
 Cranmer continued to serve Henry as Archbishop of Canterbury
 Rich rewarded with office of Chancellor of the Court of Augmentations
 Audley stayed as Lord Chancellor
 Duke of Somerset was the only minister to fall from office as a result of rebellion -
failed to repress it

Religious developments
 Pilgrimage of Grace made Henry more determined to severe links with Roman
Catholic Church
 participation of abbots and monks convinced him that their continued existence was a
security risk and led his to support Cromwell decision to dissolve large monasteries
 Cromwell’s Injunctions of 1538 further confirmed the gov’s reformed stance in
respect of saints, pilgrimages and holy days
 Henry’s endorsement of the Act of 6 articles - result of popular iconoclasm and the
conduct of overzealous protestants
 Western rebellion - Cranmer proceeded to publish an even more Protestant book 3
years later
 Mary went ahead with marriage to Phillip and stepped up her campaign against
heretics
 Elizabeth nor intimidated by northern earls and the council introduced penal laws
against catholic recusants
 no religious revolt achieved its goals

Policy changes
 some cases
 Yorkshire - Henry VII agreed not to collect tax and did not impose fine on rebels
 Cornish - relieved of having to pay war tax in 1497

,  Amicable Grant - none paid tax, no benevolence received and parliamentary subsidy
still had 2/4 of its instalments to be collected reassessed at more modest rates for fear
of reigniting taxpayer’s strike
 When Henry collected benevolences in 1540s he targeted wealthier groups instead of
the poor

Henry’s reaction to pilgrimage of Grace

 produced 2 positive changes for the rebels
 Earls of Sussex and Derby successful in preventing rioting from unlawful enclosures
and excessive entry fines as they had examined landlord tenant relations in Kendale
 no further disturbances occurred in this region in the 1540s when much of the country
was experiencing social and economic difficulties
 Statute of Uses of 1536 reappealed in 1540 when a new statute of wills allowed
testators the right to distribute 2/3s of their property without incurring the payment of
feudal taxes to the crown.

Edwardian concessions

 arrest and imprisonment of Somerset by privy councillors
 legislation passed in November 1549 when new regime tried to prevent further
disturbances → Act for the punishment of unlawful assemblies and rising of King’s
subjects declared it treason if 12 or more people gathered to alter existing laws or
tried to kill or imprison any privy councillor or refused to disperse within 1 hour
 declared felony if 12 or more people attempted to destroy enclosures, parks, barns or
grain stores and refused to disperse
 treason if 40 or more people gathered for more than 2 hours
 to improve quality of civil defence in counties that had proved ineffective in recent
times, LLs were given control of shire levies
 although further disturbances occurred 1550-1552 there was not a repetition of the
year of commotion (1549)
 JPs more vigilant, privy councillors and LLs acted decisively and run of good harvests
lowered food prices and reduced social tension

Social and Economic reforms
 Edwardian gov measured to help poor → Subsidy and Vagrancy Acts repealed and
Enclosure Act passed that restricted landlords’ manorial rights over the commons and
wasteland of less than 3 acres. This protected rural peasants from future enclosers of
woods and marginal land.
 Further acts fixed grain prices, prohibited exports and maintained arable land
 Elizabethan council → bishops ordered to give sermons that advertised the good work
the gov was doing in helping the poor, wealthier subjects remined that they had a
Christian duty to organised special charity collections.
 In 1597, the council prosecuted 7 leading Oxfordshire landowners who had enclosed
local common and wasteland.
 2 acts passed to alleviate social distress → act against decaying of towns and houses
of husbandry, act of maintenance of husbandry and tillage

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Written in
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