How did Henry VII consolidate his position?

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This is only a general resource - you should look at the HVII revision powerpoint on the L: Drive in the Year 12 Study Guides section for more detail
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How did Henry VII consolidate his position?
  1. Early moves to consolidate
    1. Dated the start of his reign to the day before Bosworth Field (21/08/85) so those who fought against him could be accused of treason (links to controlling the nobility).
      1. Appointed his most trusted family and friends to be his trusted advisors (his mum, Margaret Beaufort, his uncle Jasper Tudor, step-dad Lord Stanley as well fellow Brittany exiles eg Reginald Bray and Giles Daubeney)
        1. Married Elizabeth of York and created the Tudor Rose symbolising unity between the warring houses
        2. Improved royal finances (view separate resource on more detail for this)
          1. He moved the administration of Royal finances from the slow inefficient Exchequer system to his direct supervision in the Chamber (Eg creating the Court of General Surveyors which increased revenue from Crown land from £11,700 in 1486 to £42,000 in 1508)
            1. He increased scrutiny of accounts for his ordinary income (eg his regular income from sources such as Customs Duties, Crown lands and feudal dues). A good example is the way the Council Learned in Law chased feudal dues so a due like the annual income from wardship rose from £350 in 1487 to £6000 in 1507)
              1. He managed income from “extraordinary” revenue very well (extraordinary revenue was the money the king was entitled to collect for one-off expenses) as there appeared to be very little resistance to his demands for money eg Charles VIII agreeing to pay arrears for the Brittany pension under the Treaty of Etaples netted Henry £159,000 and, as an indication of how secure he felt on the throne towards the end of his reign he managed to collect £30,000 from the nobility as a due for knighting his son Arthur in 1504. Arthur had died two years previously in 1502!
              2. Maintained a steady relationship with Parliament
                1. Henry did not ask Parliament for money for expensive foreign wars, he didn’t want to build resentment among his new subjects so, instead of summoning Parliament to raise money, he found different ways to fill the Royal coffers eg via bonds and recognisances. He also didn’t enact legislation on a large scale, most parliamentary business was passing acts of attainder, this meant there was little debate or possible resistance towards Henry from parliament.
                2. Henry was very lucky, especially at the start of his reign
                  1. The noble families that had been so troublesome during the Wars of the Roses, had been reduced in number. By the time of Bosworth Field, there were only 60 noble families left, many of whom were on the verge of dying out because of the lack of a male heir, or had fled abroad after Henry’s victory, forfeiting their land in England to the Crown.
                    1. Unlike his predecessors, Henry VI and Edward IV, he was an only child, he had no threat to his rule from any brothers etc
                      1. England had been in the midst of an economic depression throughout the 1400s, luckily for Henry, the country appeared to be pulling out of it gradually by 1485 meaning he was untroubled by large-scale civil unrest.
                      2. Controlled the nobility
                        1. This is dealt with on a separate mindmap
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