Major English Revolts in the eras of the Tudors
In
the 16thC, the crown kills 13/10,830,
V tolerance/anti-reformation/Protestant/Catholics/enclosure,
& witches,
Well actually a few 100 of them were other elite' kills,
If
including gays, & some poachers executions it rises a bit more,
But I
do know their percentage, witches were only killed in the next C,
In very
large numbers in England, Plus 100s of unfairly treated poachers, Not that poaching
is a essential thuing, it was the case in those days, encolsures were unfairly
newly making it a crime, which was unfair, as the only people benefitting were
the powerful,
& people, in local noble's kills, of peasants & such,
Of peasants,
During famines, & others things like of some Welsh badly
treated,
Not including the 1530s mass killings, which were partly political,
& also much well others,
Though they may not be included in it, it's just
my guess,
Ans that would double for battles deaths for kills, of gays, &
Welsh immigrants in battles, & others,
So actually lets add on another
1000 for political kills in the land, & political rebels,
And local
nobles, etc. which is a minimum,
Maybe 2000, could have killed many, as of
their massive power, for instance in one case somebody was killed by a noble,
& the noble to punished so surely loads would have died in their prisons,
for purely poluitical power reasons of the nobles, & I have not included the
deaths from being sacked as monks, of evicted form enclosures or suffering from
discrimination v Welsh or Cornish, or lower classes, or others,
Which would
maybe increase the stat even more, & also of there being other things, but
they are part of democides,
Which add onto many things, or hangings of vagabonds,
who were at times, violent scumbags,
But obviously at times they would have
been just unfairly treated people,
Which would add on many thousands, plus
the evictions,
I mean surely 100s, would have been hung that C, & next
as of that, for this, which I do not include in other things, & also many
for bankruptcy which at times was unfair, & of criminals, who were normally
people doing bad, & just being punished, but brutally,
And would have been
in next C, aswell,
And well 3/6,000 were massacred, of the first stat,
1000,
lets say, for a change I will not be precise,
As actually the stat is complexly
misunderstandable,
So I think that is a very reasonable guess,
For purely
religious reasons, & about half by Catholics, half by Protestants,
Like
mass executions by leader's policy,
But also local gentry killing rival believers,
in their massive control of some areas,
Though as I say, the people were not
totally led, by them maybe like us sheep,
Or automatons, N-regionalists murky
villagers march,
Through tramping their feet, after eachother, sometimes in
angry mobs,
Into raining Lincolnshire, E-Anglia/Yorkshire, brown or orange
moor hills, & into the town's long Pontefract castle, on a flat hill, Which
had a path aside, on this long route, beside the not that high walls,
They
now end regional baronies,
With 100s, there hung, on the same hanging thing,
In worst massacre in England, for a while, to end revolt, in one revolt against
Elizabeth, like something from Ivan the Terriblw who ruled at a simmilar time,
in Russia,
The Pilgrimage of Grace, The Lincolnshire rising, was
a popular rising by Roman Catholics in Northern England in 1536, in protest against
England's break with Rome & the Dissolution of the Monasteries, as well as
other specific political, social & economic grievances. Although the Pilgrimage
was a specific uprising around York, the term has come to describe a series of
rebellions that occurred in the North in late 1536 & early 1537.
The Lincolnshire
Rising was a brief rebellion of Roman Catholics against the establishment of the
Church of England by Henry VIII & the dissolution of the monasteries. It began
at St. James Church, Louth, after evensong on October 1, 1536, shortly after the
closure of Louth Abbey, & quickly gained support in Horncastle, Caistor &
other nearby towns. The people of Louth had recently purchased a new church spire.
Angry with the actions of commissioners, the rebels demanded the end of the collection
of a subsidy, the end of the Ten Articles, an end to the dissolution, an end to
taxes in peacetime, a purge of heretics in government, & the repeal of the
Statute of Uses. With support from local gentry, a rebel force, whose size has
been estimated at up to 40,000, marched on Lincoln & by October 6 had occupied
Lincoln Cathedral, demanding the freedom to continue as practising Catholics &
protection for the treasures of Lincolnshire churches. The rebellion was effectively
ended on October 10, 1536, when King Henry sent word for the occupiers to disperse
or face the forces of Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk, which had already
been mobilised. By October 14, few remained in Lincoln. Following the rising,
Thomas Kendall, the vicar of Louth & its spiritual leader, was captured &
executed, as were most of the other local ringleaders over the next twelve months.
However, the Lincolnshire Rising would inspire shortly the more widespread Pilgrimage
of Grace.
The movement broke out on 13 October 1536, immediately following
the failure of the Lincolnshire Rising, & at this point was the term 'Pilgrimage
of Grace' used. The causes of the rebellion have long been debated by historians,
but several key themes can be identified: Economic Grievances The northern
gentry had concerns over the new Statute of Uses. There were also popular fears
of a new sheep tax. The harvest of 1535 had also led to high food prices, which
may have contributed to discontent.
Political Grievances Many northerners
had disliked the way in which Henry VIII had 'cast off' Catherine of Aragon. There
was also anger at the rise of Thomas Cromwell.
Religious Grievances
The local church was, for many in the north, the centre of community life. Many
ordinary peasants were worried that their church plate would be confiscated. There
were also popular rumours at the time which hinted that baptism might be taxed.
The recently released Ten Articles & the new order of prayer issued by the
government in 1535 had also made official doctrine more reformed. This went against
the conservative beliefs of most northerners.
Robert Aske, a London barrister
from a Richmondshire (Aske Hall) family, & a band of nine thousand followers
entered & occupied York. There he arranged for the expelled monks & nuns
to return to their houses; the king's tenants were driven out & Catholic observance
resumed. The success of the rising was so great that the royal leaders, Thomas
Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk & George Talbot, 4th Earl of Shrewsbury, opened
negotiations with the insurgents at Doncaster, where Aske had assembled between
thirty & forty thousand men.
Henry authorised Norfolk to promise a general
pardon & a Parliament to be held at York within a year. Aske then dismissed
his followers, trusting in the king's promises.These promises were not kept, &
in January, 1537, a new rising took place in Cumberland & Westmoreland (which
Aske attempted to prevent) under Sir Francis Bigod of Settrington in the East
Riding of Yorkshire. Upon this, the king arrested Aske & several of the other
leaders, such as Lords Darcy, Constable, & Bigod, who were all convicted of
treason & executed. Aske was hung in chains from the walls of Norfolk castle
as a warning to other would-be rebels. Sir Robert Constable & the abbots of
Fountains & Jervaulx were executed in July 1537. The loss of the leaders enabled
the Duke of Norfolk to quell the rising, & martial law was imposed upon the
rebellious regions, ending the rebellion.
The Lincolnshire Rising & the
Pilgrimage of Grace have traditionally been seen as complete failures. However,
they did achieve results.
The government postponed collection of the October
subsidy. This had been a major grievance amongst the Lincolnshire rebels.
The
Statute of Uses was negated by a new law, the Statute of Wills.
Four of the
seven sacraments were omitted from the Ten Articles, restored in the Bishop's
Book of 1537. This marked the end of the drift of official doctrine towards Protestantism.
The Bishop's Book was followed by the Six Articles of 1539.
An onslaught upon
heresy was promised in a royal proclamation in 1538.
Thomas Cromwell was pushed
from power in 1540.
Princess Mary (later Queen Mary I of England) was restored
to the succession in 1544.
The Council of the North was re-established in
1537.
The dissolution of the monasteries continued unabated, with the largest
monasteries being dissolved in 1540.
Masses of land were taken from the Church
& given to the monarchy.
The moves towards official Protestantism achieved
by Cromwell were not reversed (excepting the reign of Mary I 15531558).
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Kett's Rebellion was a revolt in July 1549 instigated by Robert Kett of Wymondham. Kett himself had been a tanner who had used enclosure on the common landKett. When rebels came to rip down his fences he was convinced by their arguments & soon became the leader of the rebellion. It was aimed at bringing attention to the economic problems faced by agricultural workers in East Anglia. In the spirit of the Levellers of the next century, the leaders demanded the abolition of enclosures, the end of private ownership of land, & the dismissal of counsellors. To a lesser degree, the rebellion also had religious leanings, with the rebellion campaigning for further Protestant reforms & the right to choose their own priests. The rebels themselves did not believe that they were rebels as they didn't think that they had done any real harm & they thought that they had the support of the Duke of Somerset. He had made it seem to them that he was going to aid them in the enclosure crisis & establish enclosure commissions. But this was never to be;somerset was not going to risk upsetting nobles who had most likely been using enclosure just to help some peasants. The insurgents amounted to maybe 15,000 men, but after some initial excitement they were defeated in August by an army under the command of the Earl of Warwick--the rebellion was started in the area of Wymondham in Norfolk & came to an end in Dussindale one of the long dales that led from Mousehold Heath at the time. The actual site has never been proven. The most popular is that the Dale began in the vicinity of Plumstead Road East allotments that swept into the Valley Drive into the present remnant of Mousehold, into the Long Valley & out into what is now Gertrude Road & the allotments. In Victorian times this area was known as `Ketts Meadow`. The other Dussindale is the name given to a recent housing development in nearby Thorpe St Andrew, which appears to have more to do with the Civil War judging by the various road names.
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Lady Jane Grey, Wyatt's Rebellion (1554) is a popular rising named for Thomas Wyatt the younger (son of Sir Thomas Wyatt). After Mary I, "Bloody Mary" ascended the English Throne, she intended to bring the Kingdom of England back into the Roman Catholic Church & restrict the rights of Protestants in the kingdom. Wyatt, among others, greatly opposed re-entry into the Catholic fold & rose up against the Queen. Jane's claim to the throne came through her mother, Lady Frances Brandon, the daughter of Mary Tudor (herself a daughter of King Henry VII of England) & of her second husband, Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk. The will of Edward VI excluded Lady Frances (who lived until 1559), so the succession passed over her & directly to her daughter Jane. According to male primogeniture, the Suffolks - Brandons & later Greys - comprised the junior branch of the heirs of Henry VII. The 1543 Act of Succession restored both Mary & Elizabeth to the line of succession, even though the law continued to regard both of them as legal bastards. Furthermore, this Act authorised Henry VIII to alter the succession by his will. His last will re-enforced the succession of his three surviving children, then declared that, should none of his three children leave heirs, the throne would pass to heirs of his younger sister, Mary. Henry's will excluded the descendants of his elder sister Margaret Tudor, whose claims had primacy over those of the Suffolks, owing in part to Henry's desire to keep the English throne out of the hands of the Scots monarchs, & in part to a previous Act of Parliament of 1431 barring foreign-born persons, including royalty, from inheriting property in England. Several Protestant nobles had become wealthy when Henry VIII closed the Catholic monasteries & divided the Church's assets among his supporters. John Dudley, Duke of Northumberland, figured prominently among the Protestant nobility, & in the last years of Edward's reign had acted as Edward's principal advisor & chief minister. Northumberland, when it became clear that Edward VI would not survive long, led the faction that feared accession by Mary Tudor. This fear stemmed from the knowledge that Mary would certainly revoke the religious changes made during Edward's reign, & that she might reclaim from the nobility all former church & monastic properties in order to restore them to the Roman Catholic Church. Many Englishmen also expressed concern that Mary favoured for herself a Spanish marriage which might bring in Spanish nobles to rule England in place of Northumberland & his colleagues. Northumberland arranged for his son Guildford Dudley to marry the Protestant (and anti-Catholic) Jane, hoping through him to gain control over his new daughter-in-law & the reins of England. When informed by her parents of her betrothal, Jane refused to obey: she regarded Guildford as ugly & stupid. Historians do not know what made this seemingly quiet & obedient girl turn against precedent to refuse her parents' marriage arrangements. Jane's refusal notwithstanding, her parents forced her into submission.
The
question of the succession had arisen as a result of the religious unrest that
had occurred during the reign (1509 - 1547) of Henry VIII. When Henry's Protestant
son & successor Edward VI lay dying (1553) at the age of 15, his Roman Catholic
half-sister Mary held the position of Heir Presumptive to the throne. However,
Edward VI named the (Protestant) heirs of his father's sister Mary Tudor (not
his own half-sister Mary) as his successors in a will composed on his deathbed,
perhaps under the persuasion of Northumberland. He knew that this effectively
left the throne to his cousin Jane Grey, who (like him) staunchly supported Protestantism
& had a very high level of education. At the time of Edward's death, without
Edward's will (which had dubious legal standing, since it ran contrary to the
Act of Succession of 1543), the crown would have passed, under the terms of both
the Act of Succession of 1543 & of Henry VIII's will, to Mary & her male
(not female) heirs. Should Mary die without male issue, the crown would pass to
Elizabeth & her male heirs. & should Elizabeth die without male issue,
the crown would pass not to Frances Brandon but rather to any male children she
might have produced by that time. In the absence of male children born to Frances,
the crown would pass to any male children Jane might have. Jane thus did not feature
in the line of succession prior to the last draft of Edward's will of June 1553.
Only in the last draft did Edward finally include Jane Grey as his heir presumptive,
knowing the line of succession included no Protestant-born male children. This
may have contravened customary testatory law because Edward, then just 15 years
old, had not legally reached legal testatory age of 21. But more importantly,
many contemporary legal theorists believed the monarch could not contravene an
Act of Parliament, even in matters of the succession; Jane's claim to the throne
therefore remained obviously weak.
Painting sometimes claimed to depict
Lady Jane Grey; by an unknown 16th century artistEdward VI died on July 6, 1553.
Northumberland had Lady Jane Grey proclaimed Queen of England on July 10, 1553,
just four days later once she had taken up a secure residence in the Tower
of London (English monarchs customarily resided in the Tower from the time of
accession until their coronation). According to some fictional accounts, Northumberland
tricked Jane into putting on the crown; however, she refused to name her husband
as king by letters patent & deferred to Parliament. She offered to make him
a duke instead.
Northumberland faced a number of key tasks in order to consolidate
his power. Most importantly, he had to isolate & , ideally, capture Mary in
order to prevent her from gathering support around her. Mary, however, advised
of his intentions, took flight, sequestering herself in Framlingham Castle in
Suffolk.
Mary I proved to have more popular support than Jane, largely because
the English people regarded her as the rightful heiress, but perhaps partly because
of the continuing sympathy for the memory of her mother, Catherine of Aragon (Henry
VIII had had his own marriage with Catherine annulled). At Framlingham Castle
Mary amassed a force of 20,000 men, which marched to London & deposed Jane.
There then initially seemed some likelihood that Mary, who had now taken the throne,
would spare Jane's life. Queen Mary sent John de Feckenham to Lady Jane in an
attempt to convert her to Catholicism.
Wyatt expected that others would join him in revolt plans were made for a country wide rebellion. However, his co-conspirators were unable to rebel & unable to tell Wyatt, so his forces rose anyway. The rebellion seized much of Kent, & Wyatt led his forces in a march on London. Significantly Mary was able to rally London to her cause by appearing at the City gates & announcing herself as the legitimate queen. Wyatt's rebellion was defeated a matter of weeks later. What it demonstrated though was that legitimacy in England during the 16th century trumped religious affiliation: many Protestants had supported Mary during Wyatt's rebellion & the earlier period of uncertainty surrounding her accession, plenty of Catholics ended up supporting her sister & had supported her father & brother. The failure of Wyatt & other confessional rebellions has often been seen by historians as one of the reasons why Tudor monarchs were able to seesaw so effectively between the religious faiths during the 16th century. Personally the rebellion was a disaster for Wyatt; he was executed & Queen Mary took away Wyatt's title & lands including the family home, Allington Castle.
Ridolfi Plot The Ridolfi plot was a Roman Catholic plot of 1570 to assassinate Queen Elizabeth I of England & replace her with Mary I of Scotland. The conspirators were led by Roberto di Ridolfi, who, posing as an international banker, was able to travel between Brussels, Rome & Madrid without attracting too much suspicion. Ridolfi had discussed his plans with the Duke of Alba in the Netherlands. Charles Baillie, a Scot favourable to Mary's party, was arrested at Dover carrying compromising letters, & revealed the existence of the plot under torture. The Duke of Norfolk was discovered to have been funding Mary's party in Scotland & was arrested on September 7, 1571. Norfolk was put on trial for treason early in 1572 & executed in June.
The Rising of the North or Northern Rebellion was an unsuccessful uprising against Elizabeth I of England in 1569 by Catholics of Northern England. Its objective was the deposition of Elizabeth & coronation of Mary I of Scotland as Queen of England. The rebellion was led by two members of the great Northern nobility: Charles Neville, 6th Earl of Westmorland & Thomas Percy, 7th Earl of Northumberland. They were instigated in part by Leonard Dacre, who was playing a double game. As heir-male of George Dacre, 5th Baron Dacre of Gillesland, he hoped to betray the conspirators & obtain, as a reward, the lands held by his nieces, the coheirs of Lord Dacre. The rebel Earls occupied Durham & had Mass sung in the cathedral there by the old rites. They marched south to Bramham Moor, while Elizabeth struggled to raise forces sufficient to confront them. However, hearing of a large force being raised by the Earl of Essex, the rebels abandoned plans to besiege York, & captured Barnard Castle instead. They proceeded to Clifford Moor, but found little popular support. Essex marched out from York on December 13, 1569 with 7,000 men to their 4,600, soon followed by 12,000 under Lord Clinton. The rebel Earls retreated northward before him & finally dispersed their forces, fleeing into Scotland. The treachery of Dacre was discoved, & he gave battle with 3,000 Cumbrians against a detachment of the royal army under Lord Hunsdon. Dacre was vanquished, but escaped to die in exile in Flanders. As a result, Raby Castle was lost by the Neville family. The Earl of Westmorland was attainted, but escaped to Flanders & died impoverished in Spain. The Earl of Northumberland fled into Scotland, was imprisoned by the Regent Moray, & turned over to Elizabeth in 1572, being summarily beheaded in York. Various lesser personages & Catholic priests also fled into exile or were executed.
Pope Pius V aided the Catholic Rebellion by excommunicating Elizabeth & declaring her deposed in a Papal Bull. The Bull of Deposition, Regnans in Excelsis, was only issued in 1570, arriving after the Rebellion had been put down. After the Bull of Deposition was issued, however, Elizabeth chose not to continue her policy of religious toleration. She instead began the persecution of her religious enemies, leading to various conspiracies to remove her from the Throne.
Neville's wife Jane Howard had more to do with raising the troops
than he did. She hoped to arrange the marriage of her brother, Thomas Howard,
4th Duke of Norfolk, to Mary Queen of Scots & put them both on England's throne.
Despite being the first to urge the rebels to rise up, she expected Elizabeth
to pardon her when they failed instead, Neville fled to the continent,
she lived the rest of her life under house arrest & Thomas was imprisoned
but then forgiven, only to fall in the Ridolfi Plot.
The Prayer Book Rebellion
or Western Rebellion was a popular rising occurred in the southwest of England
in 1549.
In the 1540s the government of Edward VI introduced a range of legislative measures as an extension of the Protestant Reformation in England & Wales, the primary aim being to remove certain practices from the church which were perceived as being too Catholic. In 1549 the Book of Common Prayer in English replaced the four old liturgical books in Latin. The change was widely unpopular amongst religious conservatives particularly in areas of traditionally Catholic religious loyalty, for example, in Devon & Cornwall.
Some commentators believe that the roots of the rebellion can be traced back to the Cornish Rebellion of 1497 & the subsequent destruction of monasteries from 1536 through to 1545 which brought an end to the formal scholarship that had sustained the Cornish & Devonian cultural identities. The smashing & looting of colleges like Glasney & Crantock played a significant part in fermenting opposition to future cultural reforms. Apart from being missed as centres of indigenous culture, many would have seen these institutions as being a bridge to the Celtic past, a link to a time before the perceived imperial overlords achieved ascendancy, back even to the Christianised paganism of their forefathers. Relying on his general warrant to return to England, given under the great seal, Essex sailed from Ireland on 24 September 1599, & reached London four days later. The queen had expressly forbidden his return & was surprised when he presented himself in her bedchamber one morning at Nonsuch Palace, before she was properly wigged or gowned. On that day, the privy council met three times, & it seemed his disobedience might go unpunished, although the queen did confine him to his rooms with the comment that "an unruly beast must be stopped of his provender".
Essex appeared before the full council on 29 September, when he was compelled to stand bareheaded before the table during a five hour interrogation; the councilhis uncle Knollys includedtook a quarter of an hour to compile a report, in which it was found that his truce with Tyrone was indefensible & his flight from Ireland tantamount to a desertion of duty. He was committed to custody in his own York House on 1 October, & he chose to blame Cecil & Raleigh for the queen's hostility. Raleigh advised Cecil to see to it that he did not recover power, & Essex appeared to heed advice to retire from public life, although the population was thought to be with him.
During his confinement at York House, Essex probably communicated with King James VI of Scotland through Lord Mountjoy, although any plans he may have had at that time to ease the Scots king on to the English throne came to nothing. In October, Mountjoy was appointed to replace him in Ireland, but matters seemed to look up for the earl. In November, the queen was reported to have said that the truce with Tyrone was "so seasonably made . . . as great good . . . has grown by it". Others in the council were willing to justify Essex's return to Ireland, on the grounds of the urgent necessity of a briefing by the commander-in-chief.
Essex was found guilty & , on 25 February 1601, was beheaded on Tower Green. At Raleigh's own treason trial in 1603, it was alleged that Raleigh had said to a co-conspirator, "Do not, as my Lord Essex did, take heed of a preacher. By his persuasion he confessed, & made himself guilty." In the same trial, Raleigh also denied that he had stood at a window during the execution of Essex's sentence, disdainfully puffing out tobacco smoke in sight of the condemned man.
Some days before execution of sentence, Captain Thomas Lee was apprehended as he kept watch on the door to the queen's chambers. His plan had been to confine her until she signed a warrant for the release of Essex. Lee, who had served in Ireland with the earl & acted as go-between with the Ulster rebels, was tried & put to death the next day.
Perkin Warbeck In 1497, he landed in Cornwall, hoping to capitalise on the Cornish people's resentment in the aftermath of their uprising only three months earlier. As the freedom fighters had been defeated, however, Perkin found little support for a renewed rising against King Henry. Leaving Cornwall for London, he mounted a feeble military challenge to Henry but fled Henry's army a few days before battle would have been joined. He was captured & imprisoned in the Tower of London alongside the genuine claimant Edward, Earl of Warwick, with whom he tried to escape in 1499. Captured once again, he was hanged as a traitor at Tyburn.
Perkin reportedly resembled Edward IV in appearance, which has led to speculation that he might have been Edward's illegitimate son.
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