Social reforms Flashcards

1
Q

What could the poor do?

A

Swell the ranks of protestors and exacerbate social and economic problems for the authorities

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2
Q

What did the measures taken reflect?

A

The need to tackle a problem before it got out of hand

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3
Q

Wha was the impact of the remedies?

A

Not all were successful and seemed quite inadequate

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4
Q

What had Tudor society done?

A

For the first time in 300 years introduced reforms

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5
Q

What did urban and rural authorities succeed in doing and despite?

A

Keeping the poor under control

Population doubling, severe trade depressions, and the closure of the monasteries

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6
Q

What was the first Tudor administration to address the growing number of beggars?

A

That of Cromwells in the 1530s

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7
Q

Until the 1530s what was the case?

A

Itinerant beggars were put in the stocks for three days and then returned to their previous known residence

Impotent beggars weren’t allowed to roam the countryside

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8
Q

What did the depression of the 1520s lead to?

A

Large numbers of unemployed people taking to the roads which galvanised the government and some towns into action

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9
Q

What happened in 1531?

A

An Act made a distinction between the impotent and idle poor; the former were licensed by JPs to beg, the latter were to be whipped

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10
Q

What did London introduce in 1533 and how was this extended?

A

Voluntary alms collections in 1533

An Act of 1536 which also required parish authorities to find work for the able-bodied but lazy poor

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11
Q

What was the impact of alms collections?

A

Few collections were made, village constables were given neither money nor raw materials to set the poor to work, and proved ineffectual

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12
Q

What happened to vagabonds during the Edwardian government?

A

Continued to be punished, most notably between 1547 and 1549 when a proclamation sentenced them to two years’ slavery for a first offence

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13
Q

What happened to the genuine poor during the Edwardian government?

A

Received dole money from church donations

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14
Q

Why did the attempt in 1552 at stopping begging fail?

A

Donations remained discretionary

The threat of being admonished by the priest or bishop awaited non-contributors

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15
Q

What had cities such as Norfolk and London instituted?

A

A compulsory poor rate levied by the parish

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16
Q

What is clear?

A

That measures adopted by town authorities were much more effective than government legislation

17
Q

By 1533 what was the case?

A

Several hospitals in London had been founded and endowed

Bridewell housed vagabonds, Christ’s looked after 400 orphans, and St Thomas’s and St Bartholomew’s took in six people

18
Q

What happened in Elizabeth’s reign?

A

Cities like Norwich, Ipswich, and Exeter came to accept their responsibility for funding and managing the welfare of their citizens

19
Q

What did the 1572 Act recognise and require, and who was appointed?

A

That the ‘deserving poor’ were to be helped and vagabonds severely punished

JPs to assess how much was needed to keep them

Overseers to collect compulsory parish taxes

20
Q

What did parishioners develop and what they were keen to do?

A

A collective responsibility for maintaining order

Discourage begging and vagrancy

21
Q

What was a fundamental flaw in the 1572 Act and what happened?

A

It made no provision for men and women who wanted to work but were unable to find any

Rectified four years later

22
Q

What did the 1576 Act require?

A

Parishes to provide wool, flax, iron, and hemp so that all able-bodied people had to work

23
Q

What combined to alarm the government to pass a poor law in (blank)?

A

A run of five bad harvests between 1594 and 1598, large numbers of young people who were out of service, and disbanded soldiers and sailors

1598

24
Q

What did the 1598 laws do?

A

Modified and codified previous legislation

25
Q

What did the Act for the Relief of the Poor do?

A

Replaced overworked JPs with churchwardens to oversee the welfare of the genuine law and unemployed people

26
Q

What did the Act for the Punishment of Rogues and Sturdy Beggars do?

A

Separated vagabonds into two groups: dangerous vagabonds were to be rounded up and sent to the galleys or banished; other beggars were to be returned to their parishes of birth or placed in houses of correction

27
Q

What did local overseers do?

A

Administer relief that was compulsory levied on parishioners and went towards food, clothing, providing work, and treating sick and older people

28
Q

What fell to the JPs?

A

To ensure that this system of social welfare actually worked

29
Q

What was done?

A

Enough to ensure that the poor did not pose a threat to the stability of the country