But the failure was not the Protector's alone. The gentry, who by their pursuit of self-interest had abdicated their duty to the commons, seemed powerless to act, and 'looked one upon another'. Unable to raise their tenants against the rebels, they fled. The commons seemed to hold their governors to ransom. 'Commons is become a king', appointing terms and conditions to their rulers. 'Grant us this and that, and we will go home,' they were said to demand. Somerset now wrote with patrician horror of 'a plague and a fury among the vilest and worst sort of men', who had all 'conceived a marvellous hate against gentlemen, and take them all as their enemies'. To the mortification of the evangelical establishment there were revolts both in the name of the 'commonwealth', which the commons had appropriated for themselves, and against it by conservatives determined to halt and to reverse reform. How should the the governing orders react? All rebellion was sin. Archbishop Cranmer rebuked the rebels: even if their magistrates were 'very tyrants against the commonwealth', subjects must obey. The risings took many forms, as was likely 'of people without head and rule', and there was little cohesion in motive and organization between the different areas. Some cried 'Pluck down enclosures and parks; some for the commons; others pretend religion'. Most of the riots were pacified easily enough, especially where the local lord acted expeditiously, as the Earl of Arundel did in Sussex, and deference prevailed. By 10 July the Council could assure Lord Russell in the West that everywhere was 'thoroughly quieted', except Buckinghamshire, but even as they wrote thousands of rebels were marching on Norwich. Far distant from each other in motive and action as in place, the rebels in the South-West and East Anglia held out and held out.
When the commons of Attleborough in Norfolk tore down the hedges on 20 June it had seemed a spontaneous local protest, little different from many another. Yet at the celebration of the feast of St Thomas the Martyr at Wymondham a fortnight later many came prepared for more concerted action. Finding their leader in Robert Kett, on 10 July thousands marched upon Norwich in a protest against the exploitation and venality of local governors who governed in no interests but their own. Leading figures in the city, including the mayor and perhaps the bishop, colluded with the rebels. Above Norwich on Mousehold Heath a rebel camp was set up, with its own laws, discipline and daily service. The rebels summoned captive gentlemen before a popular tribunal, at the Tree of Reformation, crying either 'a good man', or 'hang him', but this vigilante justice was prevented and a certain decorum prevailed. In the King's name Kett ordered purveyance on a grand scale, seizing tens of thousands of the sheep which had dispossessed them in order to provision a camp 16,000 strong. Four times Kett was offered pardon, and four times he refused it: he denied any offence. The Norfolk men had mounted a grand demonstration, not against central government but in support of it, and they waited in their camp for the Council to fulfil its promises of reform and justice. And they waited. Kett's Mousehold camp was one among many in the summer of 1549. In Kent and Sussex, Norfolk and Suffolk, the 'camp men' 'enkennelled' themselves; new words for new forms of alternative government by the commons, a form of self-assertion by the lower orders which bewildered and alarmed their social superiors. In their camps they dispensed justice themselves.
Kett's rebels held out at Mousehold until the end of August, encouraged by a prophecy that
The country knaves, Hob, Dick and Hick,
With clubs and clouted shoon
Shall fill up Dussindale
With slaughtered bodies soon
But, after a bloody confrontation with the Earl of Warwick's troops, the slaughtered bodies which made Dussindale a graveyard were the rebels' own. Later, there were those who regretted the quiesence of the camps, promising that the next time they would have not a 'lying camp but a running camp'. In the South-West the rebels had never believed that the government was for them, rather against them, and they had planned not to camp in protest but, as once before in 1497, to march upon London. Their actions were different from those rebels in East Anglia but so was their cause. They, too, harboured resentments against their gentry, but their animus was principally shown against the evangelical gentry in their midst. Religion was the cause which had first driven them to rise, and it was for religion that thousands died from the remote counties of Devon and Cornwall. The Council had swept away ceremonies and practices which lay at the heart of the traditional religion to which they were devoted. Their rebellion was a direct challenge to the evangelical revolution which was beginning.
The accession of a new king and the rule of a Council known to contain evangelicals had occasioned high and urgent hopes of reform among reforming zealots. Under the new Josiah, they expected the temple of Baal would be cast down, idolatry overthrown, the primitive Church restored. Zealots rushed to effect reformation, without government sanction. This was a time of unprecedented freedom and prosperity for reformist printers. In evangelical strongholds, down went the roods, the image of saints; in their places were whitewashed walls, the royal arms and scriptural messages, including, 'Thou shalt make no graven images, lest thou worship them'. 'Hot gospellers' preached a crusade against false worship. For some of the raicals the idolatry of worshipping the Mass. Many hoped that the Mass was 'yesterday's bird', and sang ballads against that 'blasphemous monster' which promised remission of sins by offering Christ's body and blood: 'Farewell to Mistress Missa'. But the sacrilege and zealotry of the iconoclasts appalled their Catholic neighbours, who threatened violence against them. The authorities insisted that it was not for the people 'of their preposterous zeal' to 'run before they be sent'.
Yet every move of the Protector's government signalled its intent to lead the infant Church of England under its juvenile king further towards reform. The homilies that were ordered to be read in every parish from July 1547 asserted justification by faith alone, leading Bishop Gardiner to prefer prison to compliance. The injunctions issued on the same day intended the 'suppression of idolatry and superstition'. Not only were images themselves to be destroyed but even the 'memory' of them was to be obliterated. Could memories be erased as easily as walls could be whitewashed? Now praying upon rosaries was forbidden, and no candles were to be lit before images, but only upon the high altar, before the sacrament. It was an altercation between a Devon gentleman and an old woman whom he found praying still upon her rosary which provoked the rising of the parishioners in St Mary Clyst in Devon in June 1549. In December 1547 chantries and religious guilds had finally been outlawed, not, as under Henry VIII's legislation of 7 December 1545, upon grounds of economic exigency but through religious principle. If purgatory was not a place, if it was not found in scripture, if the dead were beyond the power of prayer, then what need was there for chantries? Yet the institutions were cast away before the belief that had sustained them was lost, and people lamented the loss of spiritual solace. The armies of morrow mass priests, Jesus mass priests and chantry priests, who had played a vital part in the life of the parishes, were now redundant. No one who suffered the trauma of the religious changes could doubt the reforming drive behind them.
Mainly I would like this blog to be about my favourite subjects throughout history, like the ancient egyptians, and greek mythology and stuff like that, but I am also a tv series and movie fanatic, so I thought that I'd probably include stuff about new and coming films and tv shows, and perhaps even my own personal online journal, so that everyone can read it.
Popular Posts
-
The town of Ireland were the heartlands of the Englishry. Their citizens spoke English, wore English dress, lived in houses like those in En...
-
The treason charges against Somerset were framed, so Warwick confessed later, but Warwick's guilt does not exculpate Somerset, who was n...
-
The first Ango-Norman conquerors had been granted great lordships upon the ruins of the Irish supremacies. In Munster the Fitzgeralds becam...
-
Thomas Denys died for saying that the Eucharist was not 'The very body of Christ, but a commemoration of Christ's passion, and Chris...
-
Thomas More warned good Catholics, complacent in their ancient faith, that the new heretics were few but formidable; as different from them...
-
But although the laity attended Mass frequently, they received communion rarely, perhaps only once a year, at Easter, after confession in H...
-
THE REIGNS OF EDWARD VI (1547-53) AND MARY I (1553-8) The accession of a baby queen, Mary, and...
-
'In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God and the Word was God.' This text, which opens St John's Gospel, was a...
-
Richard's supporters were in disarray, not knowing whether to resist or to make terms with the new order. Some fought on, some were imp...
-
In the summer of 1536, for the first time, the King used his newly assumed power to define doctrine, and many people believed that the Cath...
No comments:
Post a Comment