EdVI RELIGION Flashcards

1
Q

WHICH areas of England were more Protestant at the start of EdVI’s reign?

A

(Mainly South-East) Kent, Sussex, Essex, Bristol, the East Anglian ports

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2
Q

WHICH areas of England were more Catholic at the start of EdVI’s reign?

A

Catholicism dominated all areas of England and Protestants were almost non-existent in areas outside the south-east. Particularly strong areas:
* The north (e.g. Lancashire and the Midlands)
* The far south (e.g. Cornwall)

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3
Q

WHAT were some key religious changes implemented under Somerset?

A
  • 1547 injunctions: attacked Catholic holy days, images/stained glass, etc.
  • Dissolution of the chantries (and religious guilds)
  • 1549 Book of Common Prayer: centralised and translated services to English (BUT, ambiguous on transubstantiation)
  • Iconoclasm (destroying icons/images): less widespread
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4
Q

WHAT were some key religious changes implemented under Northumberland?

A
  • 1552 Book of Common Prayer: restricts music, vestments and ceremonies, changes communions (less ambiguous), rewrote services to be more understandable
  • Forty Two Articles of Religion: official religious doctrine, much more explicitly Protestant
  • 1552 Second Act of Uniformity: attendance at CofE services was compulsory
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5
Q

WHEN was each Book of Common Prayer passed under EdVI?

A

Somerset: 1549
Northumberland: 1552

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6
Q

HOW were ordinary churches changed under EdVI?

A
  • Altars replaced with communion tables
  • Vestments were banned
  • Gold and silver ornaments were removed
  • Somerset banned images from churches (influenced by iconoclasm)
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7
Q

WHAT evidence is there that the religious changes had a significant impact on society/ordinary people?

A
  • Churchwardens’ accounts suggest the slow destruction of Catholic habits
  • Expenditure on church goods declined
  • People were less likely to leave money to their church in their wills (although perhaps they just didn’t trust the Crown with the Church’s money now)
  • Evidence for a decline in church attendance
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8
Q

WHAT evidence is there that the religious changes did not have a significant impact on society/ordinary people?

A
  • Restoration of Catholicism under Mary I was quick
  • Some parish churches hid their treasures to avoid the Crown confiscating them in 1553
  • Hooper (Protestant radical of the time) admitted reform was hampered by public opinion
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9
Q

WHAT did historian Eamon Duffy say about the ordinary response to religious change under EdVI?

A

That there was a ‘climate of discontent and disobedience’

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10
Q

WHAT did Archbishop Cranmer say about the slow speed of religious reform?

A

“We are now in doubt how men will take the change, or alteration of abuses, in the church.”

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11
Q

WERE humanists Catholic or Protestant?

A

Initially, they had been neither, but the rise of Protestantism saw the group being divided. Some were more conservative, while other younger thinkers were more closely linked with Protestantism

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12
Q

WHAT are some examples of humanist influences under EdVI?

A
  • Archbishop Cranmer
  • 1547 injunctions required each church to have a copy of Erasmus’ ‘Paraphrases’
  • Humanist influenced reformers like Peter Martyr and Martin Bucer, and the Lutheran and humanist scholar Philip Melanchthon were all invited to work in England
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13
Q

WAS Northumberland influenced by humanism?

A

Not as much as Somerset. He was more militant and influenced by the radical John Hooper, rather than humanist scholars. He also had a strained relationship with Cranmer.

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