Zusammenfassung der Ressource
PILGRIMAGE OF GRACE
- WHY
- DISSOLUTION OF THE
MONASTERIES
- Religious and economic
- PROTESTING PROTESTANTISM
- Defence of RCC
- CROMWELL
- Fear and his methods of
suppression - scapegoat, not
Henry
- GRIEVANCES EG ENCLOSURE
- Poor harvests 1535/6,
enclosure, rent
increases, renewals of
tenancies
- TAXES AND RUMOURS
- No war yet high tax eg
inheritance for nobles
- ARAGONESE FACTION
- eg. Lord Darcy and Lord
Hussey in defence of COA
- HOW
- 3 EVENTS
- 3. Bigod's Revolt and the
Cumberland Rising
- 16 JAN - 14 FEB 1537
- EVENTS
- Having persuaded the rebels to stand down, Henry, aided by Cromwell,
now embarked on a policy of "divide and rule". He had been lucky in
that none of the northern magnates had joined the rebels – Shrewsbury,
Derby and Cumberland had all resisted and, in the former cases, led
Government troops. Henry-Percy-6th-Earl-of-Northumberland had been
conspicuous by his absence from either side, although his hated
younger brother, Sir Thomas Percy, was a leading light in the rebellion,
and many of the gentry leaders were tenants of Percy. King Henry now
sought to divide the gentry from the commons. Persuaded of the King's
sincerity, Aske was extolling the success of the year's events, but the
commons, more sceptical, were beginning to doubt, as no delivery on
promises was forthcoming. John Hallam, one of the Captains of the 1536
rising, confided his fears to Sir Francis Bigod. John Hallam, one of the
Captains of the 1536 rising, confided his fears to Sir Francis Bigod.
- John Hallam, one of the Captains of the 1536
rising, confided his fears to Sir Francis Bigod.
Interestingly, Bigod was an Evangelical, but he was
horrified by the idea, that having thrown over the
Pope (which Bigod heartily endorsed) Henry was
now claiming to have the "cure of souls" himself.
- RESULTS
- A plan was hatched to capture Hull
and Scarborough, and then to take
the Duke of Norfolk (whom they
assumed would be sent north)
captive and force him to act as a
mediator with the Government.
The whole campaign was a
disaster. The gentry who had, they
thought, escaped lightly from the
events of the previous year, would
have nothing to do with the
scheme. The commons rose
sporadically across the North-West
and eventually converged on
Carlisle, where they were roundly
defeated on 16 th February 1537.
- 2. Pilgrimage of Grace
- 8 OCT - 8 DEC
1536
- WHO
- 1. Robert Aske (lawyer and leader)
2. Many gentry, monks, priests and
commoners
- EVENTS
- Aske asked for Yorkshire men to
defend the church, and 30,000
met in York and by the 21st
October the rebels effectively
controlled the north.
- RESULTS
- Henry sent the Duke of Norfolk to negotiate and the rebels presented a list of 5
articles - monasteries, inheritance tax, taxes on sheep and cattle, Cromwell and
bishops. A truce was signed on the 27th October. A formal agreement was
reached between 2nd and 4th December in Pontefract, and the rebels disbanded.
- 1. Lincolnshire Rebellion
- 1-11 OCT 1536
- WHO
- 1. Captain Cobbler
(Melton) 2. Gentry,
priests, monks,
ordinary people
- EVENTS
- Began on 1st October in Louth, and
in Lincoln the chancellor of the
bishop was murdered. 10,000 met
and wrote a list of grievances against
the church
- RESULTS
- Most commoners fled in face of
Duke of Suffolks army, and the
gentry begged for forgiveness. The
king's herald scared the remainder,
and the rebellion ended on the 11th.
Henry was not threatened.
- WAS IT A THREAT?
- YES
- Lord Darcy was involved,
a significant figure
- 30,000
- Yorkshire was hard to control -
Henry had no army and was
reliant on dukes etc
- People wrote demands of things they wanted
- If Henry did not intervene, there were no
monasteries and enclosure by the rich meant
that unemployment and starvation could
have caused thousands of deaths
- 3 uprisings, not quashed after the 1st
- The rebels had 5 grievances
which were fair points that
many ordinary people agreed
with. Henry couldn't argue
with them
- Happened in Winter -
determination
- It is seen as the last
battle of the War of the
Roses. Henry, a
Lancastrian, went
agajnst the Yorkshires
- Lasted 2 months
- NOPE
- Lincolnshire rising lasted only 10 days.
People were scared of Henry, as the
chancellor of the bishop was murdered
- People were against Cromwell
and policy, not Henry himself
- In the Lincolnshire rising, people ran away
- It was concentrated in the
north. The south is where
the power is
- No major nobles were involved
- Lots of small rebellions with
different causes. There was not
one goal or one plan
- Lasted 2 months - a long time with little result