Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Why Wolsey fell from power in 1529
- Amicable Grant Crisis
- Wolsey created the amicable grant in 1525
- Made this decision without going through parliament
- Created rebellions in Suffolk and East Anglia
- Came after forced loans and parliamentary tax
- Non-parliamentary tax
- Henry lost faith in Wolsey
- Increasingly unpopular government
- 1527-1529
- England alliance with france
- Switched alliance from Charles V to Francis 1 after 1525
- Anglo-French alliance
- Distrupted trade with Low Countries
- Henry in weak position regarding the Great Matter
- Failure in divorce crisis
- Henry always endorsed and supported Wolsey's rise through ecclesiastical ranks
- 1527
- Legate a latere
- Great Matter
- Praumunire
- October 9th
- exercising hia legatine power in England to detrimjent of the king
- hypocritical
- The Problem
- Leviticus
- Prohibited marriage to one's dead brother wife
- Wolsey did create some other ideas
- Henry insisted on Levitical route as a matter of principle
- Pope Clement VII
- Imperial troops sacked Rome in 1527, Charles V held Pope prisoner
- Papal policy became imperial
- Wolset tried to use this as an advantage
- Papal court of Avignon
- College of Cardinals
- Realeas in December 1527 rendered plan obsolete
- Grant Wolsey the power to decide the case in England without the right to appeal
- Pope was unwilling to support the case
- Tried toi compramise that wouldnt offend King nor Emperor
- Cradinal Campeggio
- Sent to England to oversea an ecclesiastical court
- Necessary powers to annul marriage
- Pope privately told Campeggio not to use the powers and to delay proceedings
- Suggested Catherine retire to a nunnery and leave Henry free to remarry
- Catherine refused
- Events in Italy once more favoured the Emperor and the Pope