Henry VIII only intended it to be a
temporary concession. He retracted his
proposal of negotiation.
Henry killed all the main leaders
who did not agree with him including
Lord Darcy, Lord Hussey, Sir Thomas
Percy and Robert Aske in the early
months of 1537.
Henry VIII used the unrelated
revolts in Westmorland and
Cumberland to carry out reprisals
and hang 74 rebels in Carlisle.
Robert Aske accepted the King's pardon at the
river Don and trusted that he would bring their
grievances to court.
Consequently, the rebels dispersed, making it harder for them
to regroup again.
M. Bush said it was
'interconnected regional
rebellions rather than one fluid
movement.' The rebels stayed
dispersed in the North rather
than going down to London as
a group.
The rebels tried to negotiate before achieving
anything. They wrongly thought that their numerical
advantage gave them the upper hand in
negotiations.
Poor leadership- they did not decide how they were
going to get the terms they wanted, only which ones.
Lack of focus- not everyone was
fighting for the same cause. This made
the movement disjointed.