Zusammenfassung der Ressource
To what extent did royal power increase in the years 1536-53?
- Define 'power' --> personal
power of the king or the
state, did power come from
financial security, foreign
policy, religious
conformation
- Control over localities
- Wales
- Increased control by
setting up a government
and legal system in 1536
- Allowed
Welsh MPs
into
Parliament in
1543
- In 1543 a Second
Act of Union divided
Wales into counties,
and appointed
Sherriff’s and JPs to
govern each one
- This can be seen as
successful as it was a
predominately peaceful
campaign and was met
without resistance or
unrest
- This was primarily due to the fact that
Cromwell gave the Welsh rights and
status, rather than using force, to
secure respect for the crown
- John Guy
argues: "the
ultimate
object was
control"
- But by executing
this peacefully the
crown gained the
respect it needed
to secure power
- Cromwell wanted to
create a "unitary" state
where the King had total
control over all people
and all areas within his
realm
- An act of parliament
allowed the Crown to
resume control of
Liberties and Franchises
(these allowed private
laws and law
enforcement to operate
alongside, or in place of,
royal authority)
- The North
- The crown needed Lord Percy's lands
to gain control over the north. Luckily
in 1536, they succeeded by forcing
Percy to name the King as his heir
- However, the "Percy
takeover" most likely
contributed the
Pilgrimage of Grace in
1536, which caused
huge unrest in the North
- In 1537, the death of Percy
and the defeat of the
Pilgrimage were used to
gain control in the north
- The Council of the
North was set up in
1537
- It ensured the Crown’s religious
policies were implemented,
monitored the JPs, and provided
a court of equity for the north
- Efforts were also made to improve
social and economic conditions
- Eg enclosure and rights of tenure
which were causes of the Pilgrimage
- However,
resentment remained
- Eg the Wakefield Plot of
1541, which planned to
murder Archbishop Holgate
(the President of the Council
of the North) and seize
Pontefract Castle
- But overall, there
was little support for
magnate uprisings
and the area stayed
quiet and loyal to
the king
- There was also a diminishing role of
magnates as JPs replaced them
- Finance
- A king could demonstrate his
power and superiority by his
wealth and status
- Under Henry VII the
Chamber was the main
storage of money
- The Dissolution of the
Monasteries in 1536
meant that the
Households offices
could not cope with the
sudden influx of money
- An Act was passed in 1536 to establish
the Court of Augmentations which had its
own chancellor and seal
- By the time of
Cromwell's execution
the royal finances had
been divided into 7 main
departments
- Eg reorganisation of The Court of
First Fruits and Tenths established
in 1541, which meant clerical
money that used to be sent to
Rome, was now sent to the crown
- Pre-Cromwell, Henry's
income was around
£100,000, after
Cromwell had doubled
- But Henry used too much of his
expenditure on expensive wars so
much of the income was used up
- But Henry saw foreign wars as a
source of power so the high
expense was justified in his opinion
- Despite receiving loans from
Parliament and banks, he still
owned £100,000 to Antwerp
bankers by 1547
- During Edward's
reign, Somerset then
Northumberland
controlled finances
- Somerset built up heavy debt
from the garrisoning of Scotland
- Somerset followed policy of
debasement to try and solve
financial problems which
only lead to high inflation
- Although
Northumberland ended
debasement and tried to
improve finances, real
wages had dropped by
up to 60% in this period
- Privy Council
- Cromwell reorganised it to
cope with the new acquisition of
land in Wales and Scotland
- Cromwell separated the household
into a series of different institutions
to function efficiently on single tasks
- The Council shrunk in size between
1535-37 to around 20 members
- In the last years of Henry's reign, the
Privy Council met daily at court with
between 12-15 councillors in attendance
- The Privy Council also gained more popularity from
the people as it took on men from lowly backgrounds
- Eg Cromwell was the son
of a brewer but was
Henry's close personal
adviser and made Earl of
Essex in 1540
- Henry viewed the Privy councillors
in terms of service and reward
- This shows the reversal in the Privy Council
from one which required land and money to
enter in 1536, to land and money gained from
entering the Council
- Loades: "a reversal of emphasis which was one of
the most important developments in Tudor
government during the first half of the 16th century
- But it can be argued the Privy Council
changed more to benefit Cromwell
- John Guy: the Privy Council
changed "less because he
lived than because he died"
- Henry's death meant that
Somerset became Lord Protector
- This meant the Privy Council was often
bypassed as Somerset used his own
servants to carry out government duties
- Under Northumberland, there is a
re-emergence of a collective authority of
the Privy Council and it regains its strength
- The Council's authority changed over time but it was made
more efficient during Henry's reign as it reduced in size
- Parliament
- There were increases in the
number of times Parliament
met from 1529 onwards
- Eg from 1529-1536, the sessions
of the Reformation Parliament
occurred almost annually
- Eg from 1536 – 1547, only four of those
years did not witness Parliament in
session. This compares to only 5
Parliament’s between 1509 and 1529
- Parliament became
involved in areas it had not
previously been allowed
- Eg religious
matters
- The Crown still faced
opposition in Parliament,
those opposed sometimes
asked to absent themselves
from the House on the day
an Act was passed
- Eg George
Throckmorton
in 1534
- The House of Commons benefitted from
a greater number of men, acquired its
own Journal (an organised system of
records) and increased in size (addition
of men from Wales)
- Crushing of
magnate power
- Henry wanted a
reduction/destruction of
magnate power in the regions
- In 1538, Cromwell attacking
the Courtenay's - the
dominant family in the SW
- This involved the execution of Henry
Courtenay, Marquis of Exeter
- In 1547, the
Howard's of Norfolk
were also targeted
- The Duke of Norfolk was
imprisoned until 1553
and his son executed
- However, this also
linked to the fall of the
conservative faction
- Sir Edward Neville and Sir Nicholas Carew
of Devon and Cornwall were also executed
- The Royal Progress
- The King's progress
through his kingdom for
several weeks
- This helped establish ties
with the localities as people
could see and meet their King
- This helped create a
strong patriarchal society
- However, it was very
expensive as up to 800 men
travelled with the monarch
- Edward was arguably considered a
weaker King because he could not go on
a Royal Progress because of his age