Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Causes of
Rebellions
- Social Causes
- Famine and Disease:
Interestingly there were no
rebellions that were
directly linked to bad
harvest.
- (Pilgrimage of Grace)
- Along with the religious issues concerning
the rebels, Aske was also backing up the
people that had had their rent raised to an
impossible level.
- The nobility had a social
issue themselves,
concerning who their land
was going to be passed on
to.
- Cromwell was
detirmined to get
every penny he
could given to
the crown.
- Kett's Rebellion
- The rebels wanted a return to the
'good old days' when their were not
any unemployment problems.
- In Norwich the main source of
employment, the cloth
industry, was in decline.
- The main issue was enclosure
and Kett wanted to safeguard
the future for Norfolk.
- Western Rebellion
- Here, the rebels were
more concerned with
the tax on sheep and
wool.
- They wanted to limit the
number of gentry households
to worth 100 marks. They
wanted to narrow the gap
between rich and poor.
- Political Causes
- Probably the most important
cause as there were many
different issues surrounding it.
- Henry VII
- As Henry had come
from the Lancaster's
he had been left with
many enemies.
- Lovell though that he
had a better claim to the
throne than Henry.
- Lambert Simnel
pretended to be a
claiment so that he
might have the
chance to kill the
King.
- Perkin Warbeck pretended
to be the youngest of the
princes in the tower so that
he could overthrow the King
- Henry VIII: Faced no purely
dynastic rebellions.
- He was a more powerful King?
- Had a better claim?
- People were more
concerned with his religious
policies?
- Edward and Mary
- The Marian
Rising was caused
by the fact that
Edward prevented
his sisters coming
to the throne.
- Wyatt's Rebellion was
concerning the fact that Mary
was married to Philip - this
could be linked to Religious
causes.
- Elizabeth
- The refusal to accept
Mary Queen of Scots
as a an heir led to the
Northern Earls
Rebellion.
- Essex wanted
to have more
power.
- Irish Suzeranity
- Kildare: There is some
evidence to suggest that
rebellion was religious, but they
mainly wanted to expel the
English forces.
- Shane O'Neill: He wanted to be
the ruler of Ulster and murdered he
brother to get it. He claimed to be
true defender of the faith.
- Fitzgerald I: He resented the
notion to colonise Ireland, the
English presence and their brutal
treatment of the Irish.
- Fitzgerald II: He wanted to rally
the Irish Catholic against
England.
- Tyrone: To expel the
new English settlers
and achieve
independence.
- Religious Causes
- Religious rebellions
would either be people
defending a faith or
rebelling against it.
- Pilgrimage of
Grace
- There were to main reasons that
the rebels were angry in
Lincolnshire - dissolution and
investigation in the parish
churches.
- In Yorkshire over 100
monasteries were scheduled to
be closed which motivated many
people to rise up.
- In Lancashire four
monasteries had already
been closed and the
monks encouraged people
to rise up against this.
- People were also angry
at the government's
recent assault on holy
days and saints. English
people were detirmined
preserve their saints.
- The First Fruits and
Tenths tax was also highly
unpopular as people felt
that it should go to the
Church and not the
government.
- There were a
number of
reasons why
people rebelled:
(<--)
- In general all the
reasons why people
rebelled in the
Pilgrimage of Grace
was against the
Henrician Reformation.
- Western Rebellion
- They were
rejecting everything
that was new: an
English Prayer
Book, 'Christmas
game' and English
Bible.
- Aims: return of papal images,
chantries and the Six Articles.
However there was no request
to restore the papacy - just the
right of church councils.
- Kett's Rebellion
- This was a
rebellion against
the slow progress
of Protestantism.
- The rebels said that they wanted to have
a better-educated Church as the people
that they had at the moment weren't
providing them with good services.
- They wanted to
improve commitment
to religion.
- (Wyatt's Rebellion)
- There were no religious
rebellions during Mary's
reign even though she
planned on changing the
religion of the county.
- Wyatt was mainly concerned with the
attachment of Catholicism that Mary's
marriage to Philip brought.
- Rising of the
Northern Earls
- The main aim of the Northern Earls was
defending the Catholic faith, which they
believed was against God's word.
- The fine that Elizabeth brought in
for not attending Church was 5p a
week. Many people paid it, or were
protected by JPs, who were
Catholic.
- Nothing was
brought in to stop
them from perusing
a Catholic faith.
- They gathered troops of people
who wanted to see the protestant
reforms put to an end.
- Economic Causes
- Taxation
- Yorkshire Rebellion
- Henry had to meet the goal
of 100,000 pounds to go to
war with France, and the
people in Yorkshire thought
that this was not needed.
- Traditionally the
southern counties
would take care of
France war taxation
and the northern
countries dealt with
Scotland.
- Henry Percy was to collect
the tax and he was hugely
unpopular which didn't
help.
- The Cornish Rebellion
- 60,000 was needed for a war
against the Scots and when
this reached the Cornish, they
were angry.
- They may have
remembered the
Cornish not having to
pay their tax and
thought that they could
do the same thing.
- They wanted the
northern counties to
pay the tax, and not
them. In the end the
war didn't happen and
neither did the tax.
- Amicable Grant
- It was a
non-parliamentary
tax.
- Wolsey had not
repaid loans that were
taken in 1522
- The Grant made
excessive
demands.
- There was a shortage of
coinage and
unemployment was rising
at the time.