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109462
Personal Rule (1629-1640)
Description
(History) Mind Map on Personal Rule (1629-1640), created by stacie.carter on 26/05/2013.
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stacie.carter
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stacie.carter
over 11 years ago
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Resource summary
Personal Rule (1629-1640)
Government
Charles' Style
private, shy, family man, not fan of publicity
hunting, travelling between palaces
1630 = Charles born
interest in drama - often took part (themes of order over chaos)
Enforcing Royal Authority
use of prerogative courts - Star Chamber, High Commission, Council of North
Book of Orders - Justices of Peace JPs write reports to PC centralisation of power = unpopular
Style of Government
not intellectual, disliked argument
surrounded by men with same views
attended PC occasionally - left day-to-day to ministers
decisions made privately with advisors
Weston/Cottingham, Laud/Wentworth, Henrietta Maria groups
Government Finance
crown debts = £1,000,000
royal income not match expenditure
crown lands, law courts, customs duties, feudal dues
first steps = peace with France (1629) and Spain (1630)
Reducing Government Expenditure
royal household = 1,800 - 2,600 people (cost = £260,000 pa)
Weston stopped costs rising but not spending
Customs Revenue
continued collecting T & P
revenue increased during peace (Europe @ war so weapons trade open)
Monopolies
Act of 1624 = illegal for individuals to have them but not companies
1630s = Weston's soap company
£29,000 pa by 1635
Richard Weston
1628: Lord Treasurer
1633: Earl of Portland
1635: Died
suspected Catholic supporter
Francis Cottingham
Chancellor of the Exchequer
had Catholic sympathies
Royal Prerogative (fiscal feudalism)
Distraint of Knighthood (fines)
landowners with £40 of land pa had to be knights @ coronation (if refused - fined)
not used since 1550, affected many but raised £170,000
Forest Fines
landowners fined for encroaching on medieval forests (hit many)
Wardships
enforced more harshly
income increase: £35,000pa (1617-22) to £83,000pa (late 1630s)
Ship Money
tax on property - paid on coast in emergency (pay for navy)
1634: collected 1635: collected inland as well by sheriffs (over £200,000 = 98%)
1636: collected again (£190,000) = "most profitable tax ever collected in peace time"
1637: £180,000 collected - John Hampden refused to pay (illegal tax)
1637: Hampden case - 12 judges @ Court of Exchequer
1638: Hampden verdict = guilty by 7:5
1638: 80% collected but rate collapsed in 1639
Situation in 1637
crown solvent - income = expenditure
still faced large debts
Laud and the Church
Background
growing Arminiansim as well as fears of popery
1633: laud - Archbishop Canterbury (changed = Laudiansim)
important political & religious figure with seat on PC
1st politically powerful churchman since Wolsey
Laud and 'Thorough'
wanted to impose uniformity, order & obedience
used bishops - enforce obedience
Puritans disciplined through warnings/suspensions/expulsions in Court of High Commission
Suppression of Preaching
1633: Feoffees for Imprepriations abolished (financed Puritan preachers)
1639: Puritan lectures banned - sermons replaced with 'Catechisms' - official doctrine had to be obeyed
Church Services
strict follow - Book of Common Prayer, 'priest', stained-glass windows, embroidered cloth etc
measures = 'beauty is holiness'
1633: Book of Sports reissued
fears of popery increased - narrowed C of E's support
Recovery of Tithes
tithe = traditional tax on income (10%) - pay for ministers & church
Church finances = poor situation
church buildings in bad repair, poor quality clergy, disorderly & disrespectful congregations
Laud = plans to recover 'impropriated' tithes - protests from landowners
Puritan Opposition
no mass protests etc
emigration grew - esp. to America
pamphlets - bishops = bloodsuckers
Prynne, Bastwick & Burton Case, 1637
Court of Star Chamber
found guilty - involved in pamphlets: ears cropped, fined & imprisoned
treatment unpopular = inv. humiliation & punishment of gentlemen
1637: Bishop of Lincoln tried in Star Chamber (suspended & imprisoned - didn't fully support Laud)
John Lilburne, Puritan, wrote pamphlet criticising Queens love of drama = fined and imprisoned after whipped
Charles, Laud and Catholics
recusancy fines imposed
Catholic worship allowed @ court
people @ Court, inc. Laud, suspected of being Catholic
rumours that Pope offered Laud, Cardinalship
Charles' neutrality during Thirty Years' War interpreted as favouritism towards Catholics
Situation in 1637
fears of popery grown among Protestants (as well as Puritans)
difficult to measure strength/ extent of opposition
Strafford
Background
Wentworth = Yorkshire gentry & MP in early P's (critic of government)
1628: accepted President of Council of North after Buckingham's death
Character
able, arrogant, determined, ruthless
made easy enemies & believed 'end justified means'
order, authority & obedience to crown = important - prevent breakdown of law, order & society
ever @ centre of power - moved lots & never really trusted by Charles
President of the Council of North (1628-32)
job = strengthen royal authority - traditionally hard to do
enforced laws thoroughly - Poor Law, laws against enclosures = unpopular
removed corrupt government officials
made fortune through this = led to accusations
Lord Deputy of Ireland (1633-40)
ruthlessly brought country under stronger royal control then ever before
controlled Irish Parliament - interfered with elections = P cooperatively approved taxes
placed corrupt officials (had been undermining Royal authority)
improved finances = turned annual deficit of £20,000 into profit
exploited divisions between Irish Catholics & Protestants to avoid attacks on him
encouraged industry inc. glass, linen & horses = more jobs - fewer poor = more taxes collected
reduced smuggling = increased payment of customs duties
roads built, bridges repaired = more jobs and easier travel for merchants/army
introduced Poor Law measures
regained church & crown lands, improving finances of church & state
Arminian reforms pursued in Protestant Church of Ireland, inc. Court of High Commission (reforms affected Irish Protestants and Presbyterians)
Catholics largely left alone by religious policies
plantations continued - spread to Western Ireland, dispossessing Catholics
improved navy & built full-time army of 9,000 men = many Catholics (English army = occasional and unprofessional)
Conclusion
some thought reforms of Ireland = blueprint for England
Irish Catholic Army = widespread fears
army used against Protestant rebellions in England
Scottish Crisis
Riots against Prayer Book
23rd July: riots in St Giles' Cathedral in Edinburgh when Prayer Book used
bishops houses attacked, protests nationwide led by nobles, landowners and clergy
nationwide support - united by hatred of Catholicism, foreigners and bishops
Charles I = needed to supress revolt to prevent growth in pressure from opponents in England & Ireland
Background
James I = 1st monarch to rule entire British Isles
Scot = Presbyterian church
der C = Act of Revocation enforced (church lands recovered) - faced strong opposition
1633: C travelled to Scot for 1st time as king - stayed for 2 weeks, attended Pres church = appalled & determined to reform Scot Church
relied on advice from Scot bishops& PC - not Scottish P
planned to introduce new canons & Prayer Book - drawn up by Scot bishops
1634: Court of High Commission set up
1635: new canons published based on those in C of E, inc. C as Head of Church
May 1637: new Prayer Book published
National Covenant, Feb 1638
Scot national leaders drew up National Covenant = response to Charles declaration all rebels = traitors
contained demands & oaths
defend "true reformed religion" with lives
abolish Scot bishops
demand calling of Scot P & meeting of General Assembly of Church @ same time
declared loyalty to C as king (opposed bishops & advisors)
hundreds of thousands of Scots signed it
Glasgow Assembly, Nov-Dec 1638
joint meeting of Scot P & General Assembly
C agreed = playing for time but Scots = stronger position& voted to abolish Prayer Book, canons, Court of High Commission & bishops
no agreement reached - both sides prepared for war
First Bishops' War, June 1639
Scots
commander = Leslie (experienced soldier)
army = 22,000 well-trained men , paid, determined & united
support = popular, taxes, many volunteered
English
commander = Charles, Howard (no experience)
army = 21,000 untrained men, unenthusiastic, unpaid
support = unpopular, refused taxes, £17,000 of £70,000 of SM paid
Treaty of Berwick, June 1639
C= agreed to hold peace talks - signed treaty
both sides = disband army
C = meet with Scot P & General Assembly to reach settlement
neither side disbanded armies - leaders not willing to compromise ( C = playing for time to raise army)
Scot P & General Assembly met - abolished bishops & Prayer Book
Recall of Wentworth, Sept 1639
Thomas Wentworth recalled from Ireland: appointed to PC = earl of Strafford
advised Charles to: defeat Scots & recall P as patriotic MPs would approve taxes
C opposed @ 1st - on 5th Dec recalled P to meet April 1640
Situation in 1638
1638: looked like Charles could rule without P for foreseeable future
many Parliamentary critics of C = dead
no sense of impending crisis - country calm & no protests
concerns growing under surface: Arminianism in church taxation (landowners) centralisation of power
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