Mary I: restoration of papal authority Flashcards

1
Q

Who were Mary’s most influential advisors?

A

Cardinal Pole, Charles V and Simon Renard

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2
Q

what was unusual about Mary’s privy chamber?

A

7 members were women

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3
Q

when was the first parliament

A

August 1553

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4
Q

How effective was Mary’s government?

Effective government:

A
  • succeeded in restoring catholicism
  • no rebellions after Wyatt
  • Marquis of Winchester, who served as Lord Treasurer under Edward VI, provided continuity in financial policy
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5
Q

How effective was Mary’s government?

Lack of effective government:

A
  • due to early death, Mary failed to restore Catholicism on a permanent basis
  • marriage to Phillip II was a failure: provoked the Wyatt rebellion, didn’t produce Catholic heir Mary desperately wanted, involved England in a war against France
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6
Q

What did the first Parliament achieve?

A

Restored the service in place in 1547 and repealed most of Edward’s religious legislation

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7
Q

How did Mary organise her Privy Council which was different to Henry and Edward?

A

It had both Catholics and Reformers

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8
Q

What was Pope Julius III’s view on the restoration?

A

England could only return to the fold if all monastery land was returned

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9
Q

Council of Trent

A
  • 1545-1563

- allowed clergymen to come together and form a defence for all aspects of catholicism disputed by protestants

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10
Q

act of repeal

A
  • 1553

- reinstated the six articles

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11
Q

second act of repeal

A
  • 1554

- reversed all anti-papal legislation

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12
Q

the second parliament

A
  • 1554
  • The only bill to be passed was the restoration of the bishopric of Durham; other proposed bills included statutes against Lollards and heretics
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13
Q

Third parliament

A
  • November 1554
  • A statute of repeal returned religion to that of 1529 on the agreement that monastic lands would not be returned to the Church
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14
Q

Heresy laws

A
  • 1555
  • to secure the religious conversion of the country
  • regarded as a religious and civil offence amounting to treason to believe in a different religion from the Sovereign (catholicism)
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15
Q

Mary succeeded in making England a catholic country by 1558

A
  • brought back mass and catholic doctrines e.g. transubstantiation, clerical celibacy
  • didn’t rely solely on persecution to restore catholicism: cardinal pole cracked down on clerical abuses e.g. pluralism, non-residence, cath translation of the New Testament, cath book of Homilies
  • burnings not as unpopular as assumed: accumulated large crowds in support of catholicism
  • parliament agreed to restoration of the mass 1553 and restoration of heresy laws in 1554
  • evidence suggests Mary’s policies were succeeding and ultimately failed b/c she died early
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16
Q

Mary failed in making England a catholic country by 1558

A
  • Mary’s policies didn’t have enough time to make an impact before they were revered
  • ultimately failed policies because of her early death
  • failed to leave a catholic heir, enabling Elizabeth to restore protestantism
  • M could restore the Mass, clerical celibacy, the papal supremacy etc but not the monasteries of chantries b/c the gentry who had brought their lands were determined to hold onto them