Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Why did the Pilgrimage of Grace fail?
- Henry VIII only intended it to be a
temporary concession. He retracted his
proposal of negotiation.
- Henry killed all the main leaders
who did not agree with him including
Lord Darcy, Lord Hussey, Sir Thomas
Percy and Robert Aske in the early
months of 1537.
- Henry VIII used the unrelated
revolts in Westmorland and
Cumberland to carry out reprisals
and hang 74 rebels in Carlisle.
- Robert Aske accepted the King's pardon at the
river Don and trusted that he would bring their
grievances to court.
- Consequently, the rebels dispersed, making it harder for them
to regroup again.
- M. Bush said it was
'interconnected regional
rebellions rather than one fluid
movement.' The rebels stayed
dispersed in the North rather
than going down to London as
a group.
- The rebels tried to negotiate before achieving
anything. They wrongly thought that their numerical
advantage gave them the upper hand in
negotiations.
- Poor leadership- they did not decide how they were
going to get the terms they wanted, only which ones.
- Lack of focus- not everyone was
fighting for the same cause. This made
the movement disjointed.