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Summary The Relationship between Church and State in the early 1500s. $6.34   Add to cart

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Summary The Relationship between Church and State in the early 1500s.

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Notes on the set up of parliament in Tudor England, with a section on the Act of Supremacy 1534, the parliaments of Henry VII and Henry VIII. Also includes the roles and relations of the church before 1529.

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  • January 29, 2023
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HOW DID THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE STATE AND THE CHURCH CHANGE?



Church-state relations

 Parliament = gained important powers by Tudor period
 Included sole right to grant taxation and sole right to pass laws
 Monarchs still retained the right to veto any laws they didn’t like and could summon
and dismiss parliament at will
 Unlike today, parliament was not involved in day-to-day government
 Most monarchs would still call parliament periodically

How was Parliament organised?

 2 chambers: 1. House of Lords – unelected house where hereditary peers and bishops
sat. 2. House of commons – elected MPs (2 elected to represent each county in
England)
 To vote = necessary to own property generating income of 40 shillings (£2) a year 
means that voting = restricted to those wealthy enough to own property
 Parliament tended to represent the interests of the landed gentry and the nobility
 To pass an act through parliament – bill had to be heard in both Houses before being
given assent by the monarch
 Tensions between parliament and the monarch arose over taxation, religion and the
royal succession etc.

The role of parliament under Henry VII

 Henry forced to call parliament periodically – needed grants of taxation to fund
defence
 Summoned parliament 7 times in 24 years – parliament sat for a total of 72 weeks
 1504 – last meeting of parliament
 Parliament was only called when Henry needed a grant of taxation – Parliament
granted this request on every occasion apart from 1504
 Since the early 14th century, the Commons had acquired the right to challenge the
monarch about taxation

The early parliaments of Henry VIII, 1509-23

 Parliament only met 4 times between 1509-1529: 1510, 1512-14, 1515 + 1523
 Role in this period = mainly grant taxation to fund Henry’s wars
 By 1517, Parliament = less keen to grant increasing amounts of money – after
military failures internationally
 This was due to MPs (landowners) fearing rebellion from increasing taxation
 1523 – Wolsey faced opposition from Commons to detail the amount of taxation he
wanted
 by this date - £288,814 had been raised in taxation and £260,000 in unpaid loans
 Henry and Parliament’s relationship remained harmonious until 1529 when Henry
began the annulment against Catherine of Aragon

The role of the Tudor Church before 1529

 Before 1529 – Roman Catholic church = enormously powerful
 Since Middle Ages, the Church had grown in wealth and influence – with its own
complex structure and hierarchy
 Head of Catholic church = Pope – believed to be placed here by God
 Pope had power to appoint senior churchmen (Cardinals, bishops, Archbishops)
 Technically these appointments reflected the wishes of the English Monarchs
 Roman Catholic beliefs and practices = in every aspect of people’s lives

,  Church performed marriages and funerals, a key source for alms and cared for the
sick and elderly
 Lent, Christmas and Easter = key events in most people’s lives – most legal
documents would be dated by referring to the closest religious festival.
 Church taught that Heaven, hell and Purgatory were real places: how people
behaved on Earth could affect what happened to their souls after death
 Attendance at regular church services = crucial as well as performing good deeds,
confessing sins, and going on pilgrimage
 Transubstantiation – belief that at Mass, during the consecration, the bread and
wine would become the body and blood of Jesus
 Church = main source of learning and education
 Papacy challenged those who conflicted the Church’s teachings – heresy
 Punishment for heresy = burning at the stake
 Church services and the Bible were in Latin – many couldn’t understand what the
priest was saying
 A career in the Church offered opportunities to rise to the top of society – Thomas
Wolsey is an example of this
 Was the son of an Ipswich Butcher but became Henry VIII’s chancellor and chief
minister – Alter Rex
 Before 1529 – church had supporters and critics – debate over popularity and
relevance to everyday life
 Humanist thinkers criticised the power and wealth of Church and clergymen – in
the Bible, the original Church and Priests = poor and humble
 Criticised Church for the exploitation of fear for what would happen to souls after
death
 Worship of saints seen as superstitious and non-biblical
 Antagonism towards the church = anticlericalism
 Tudor period = Church = biggest landowner in England

Relations between the Tudor state and the Church before 1529

 Tensions between factions tended to arise over the power and privileges of the
Church, esp. when thought to be undermining or challenging the power of the
monarchy
 Further source of tension = ability of the papacy (based in Rome) to intervene in
English Church affairs
 Papal foreign intervention = could be seen as an attack on the power of English Kings
 As a usurper, Henry VII needed the support of the Church to equate for support from
God following Bosworth
 1489 + 1491 – Henry passed laws tightening controls over who could claim benefit of
clergy – seen as an attempt to ensure those who claimed privileges were genuine
members of the clergy --- not intended as an attack on the Church’s power
 Henry’s relationship w/papacy was good. Able to ensure that the Pope appointed John
Morton (Henry’s candidate as Archbishop of Canterbury)
 Anticlericalism existed in England and was sometimes expressed in Parliament –
e.g., between 1512 + 1515
 1512 – another Act to limit the benefit of the Clergy – may be seen as continuation of
process begun by Henry VII
 1515 parliament – anticlerical feeling exacerbated by the Hunne affair – rich London
merchant found dead in the Bishop of London’s prison
 Church claimed he committed suicide, but was rumoured Hunne was murdered –
parliamentary criticism of power and corruption of the Church
 Henry VIII regarded himself as a loyal catholic – published a book Assertio Septem
Sacramentorum (The defence of the seven sacraments)
 Henry’s chief minister, Wolsey, = one of the most powerful men in Europe after being
appointed as Cardinal by the Pope

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