Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Causes of Kett's rebellion, 1549
- Enclosure
- the rebels attacked fences and
hedges which shows their
opposition to enclosure
- The first articles of
their demands was
about enclosure
- It was the attack on
Flowerdew's enclosure that
triggered the whole enclosure
- 6% of the population
owned 60% of the land
- It was an upset to the
Great Chain of Being
- Article 3: No man shall
"common upon the commons"
- Only 3/29 of the Norfolk
articles concern enclosure
- Economic factors
- 35% of the population were
too poor to pay taxes
- By the 1540s there was high
unemployment in East Anglia because
of the collapse of the cloth trade
- Rebels complained strongly
about an increase in rents
- The period was
experiencing high
inflation
- Rack-renting was
attacked because it was
seen as unscrupulous
landlords passing heavy
taxes to peasants
- Upsetting Great Chain of Being
- Somerset's policies
- Somerset's sympathy with the rebels
may have encouraged rebellions
- Eg Somerset gave support to the
"commonwealth men" - a group of
Christian reformers who campaigned
against the exploitation of the poor
- If the rebels believed they had
Somerset's support they were likely
to express their grievances
- Loades argues Somerset
turned a "harmless moral... into
a potentially explosive ideology"
- Religon
- Many grievances
argue for better clergy
- Only 3/29 articles concern religion
- Wanted clergy to
educate the poor
- Personal
clashes
- John Flowerdew
acted as a tipping
point for rebellion