Ch 3 Finances of Crown & Attempts @ Reform Flashcards
(43 cards)
How did James attempt to strengthen Crown finances?
- the Treaty of London (1604)
- the Book of Rates (1608)
- the Book of Bounty (1608)
- the Great Contract (1610)
- the creation of knights (1603)
- Lionel Cranfield (1618)
What was the key issue w/ raising Prerogative Income?
-worried the Political Nation, since the money came predominantly from them, & the more funds the Crown raised, the greater possibility of monarch becoming absolutist
Who were monarchs dependent on for funds?
-monarch dependent on Parliament, & thereby also the Political Nation; especially during times of war
Why was the Crown’s expenditure rising?
- due to inflation caused by rising prices (1502-1622)
- food prices increased significantly above rest
Why was the Crown’s income falling when James I started his reign?
-due to Elizabeth’s failure to reform the Crown’s major sources of income before him
What failures of Crown income was Elizabeth responsible for (1558-1603)?
- she did not update the Crown’s sources of income, & due to period of inflation, this was a big problem
- major reform needed, but was safer for monarch’s to organise their finances in short term, than undertake financial reforms that would mean dealing w/ vested interests of Political Nation represented in Parliament
Who recognised major reform was need during James I reign?
-1st chief minister Robert Cecil (had also been chief minister under Elizabeth I
What was the Great Contract of 1610?
- Cecil negotiated w/ Parliament a major reform of Crown finances
- in return for annual grant from Parliament of £200,000 & the removal of debts (approx. £600,000), the Crown would give up SOME prerogative income
Why did the Great Contract of 1610 fall through?
-both Crown & Parliament felt they had too much to lose in such agreement (reform never attempted again under James)
What were the greatest sources of expenditure in 1603; more specifically by James himself?
- foreign policy & war (military struggle w/ Spain)
- financial extravagance (spent lots & was generous to courtiers)
What happened to the 3 subsidies Parliament gave James I in 1606?
- 3 subsidies supposed to help w/ James’ debt
- instead he gave £44,000 of money to 3 of his Scottish friends
- such generosity made MPs reluctant to consider reform that was needed; as they worried James would simply give money away, in particular to favoured Scots
What was the Ante-Supper?
- most notorious example of court extravagance
- involved preparation 2 feasts; first was displayed to courtiers & then thrown away; while 2nd was consumed
What did one Ante-Supper in 1621 cost?
-around £3,300
What year did James I dissolve Parliament?
-1611
What was the Cockayne Project (1614)?
- plan to reorganise cloth trade
- rather than helping Crown finances, it actually hindered them
- a monopoly of the production & sale of finished cloth was granted to businessman William Cockayne, but his scheme failed
- the Dutch refused to purchase finished cloth from England, resulting in slump in English cloth trade
What amount was royal debt by 1617?
-£726,000
What amount was royal debt by 1620?
-£900,000
What was the Thirty Years War (1618-48)?
- since the Reformation & emergence of Protestantism, religion was divided in Europe
- 1618, series of wars broke out between Catholics & Protestants
What year did James bring Parliament back after dissolving it in 1611?
-1614
When was James I’s third Parliament?
-1621-22
When was James I’s fourth Parliament?
-1624
How much money did Parliament grant James in 1621 & why?
- only approx. £140,000
- they wanted their grievances addressed before allowing James more money (fearing he would dissolve Parliament again after obtaining sufficient funds)
What was the problem with the sale of monopolies by 1621?
- there were over 100 monopolies; as James finances deteriorated, he had granted more to try & increase his own fund
- MPs discovered people (e.g. Mopesson, relative of Buckingham) had abused their monopolies
- dispute by Lionel Cranfield & Edward Coke to remove their mutual rival Francis Bacon where they revived the feudal device of impeachment (whereby Commons could remove a Crown minister)
- James sacrificed Bacon to appease the Commons; mostly to prevent attack on Buckingham (who had several relatives who had exploited monopolies)
What further weakened Crown finances in 1623/24?
-bad harvests