The Social and Economic Reasons for Rebellion Flashcards

1
Q

What was enclosure blamed for by contemporaries?

A

The growth of poverty and vagrancy in Tudor society

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2
Q

Why was the practice of enclosure common in the South East and the Midlands?

A

Because it could be used for arable or sheep farming

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3
Q

What was the common land used for?

A

It was shared by all for the growth of crops and the grazing of animals

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4
Q

What did the practice of enclosure aim to do?

A

To create larger profits from the land, rearing sheep for the cloth trade could bring financial opportunities made necessary by rising inflation

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5
Q

Why was sheep farming attractive?

A

It needed little man power and could bring large profits an lead to large scale enterprises

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6
Q

How did enclosure affect commoners?

A

They were reliant on the land for their animals and their crops and could no longer grow enough food to survive

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7
Q

What was engrossing?

A

Merging two or more farms together

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8
Q

What was rack renting?

A

Where landlords rapidly increased rents so that tenants were unable to pay in order to evict them

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9
Q

Who was most vulnerable to enclosure?

A

Copy hold tenants - leases open to challenge and the landless who needed the land to survive

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10
Q

What legislation was put in place in 1489 to counter enclosure?

A

1489 - Act of Parliament to regulate enclosure

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11
Q

What did Thomas Wolsey do in 1517 concerning enclosure?

A

Issued a commission of inquiry into illegal enclosures

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12
Q

What did the 1533 Sheep Farms Act do?

A

Tried to restrict the number of sheep kept per farmer to 2400, engrossing was allowed but only of 2 farms

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13
Q

What was introduced in 1549 to further regulate sheep farming?

A

A tax on sheep to restrict the size of flocks and discourage landlords from turning to sheep farming

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14
Q

What were entry fines?

A

Placed economic pressure on tenants, improved landlord profit margins

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15
Q

Were these economic concerns new?

A

No, rebels in the Pilgrimage of Grace had complained about enclosure, rack renting and entry fines

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16
Q

Could enclosure be beneficial for tenants?

A

Yes, dependend on the region’s rural economy, East Anglia was dominated by sheep farming meaning it negatively impacted commoners

17
Q

Why was enclosure a benefit in the East and North West of Suffolk and the North of Norfolk?

A

Sheep farming provided the necessary manure for crops to be fertilised with as the soil was light meaning plants struggled to grow

18
Q

Why did foldcourse make the situation more complex in the East and North West of Suffolk and the North of Norfolk?

A

Tensions arose when landlords challenged their tenants rights to enclose as landlords used foldcourse to graze their sheep on the tenants’ land

19
Q

How did concerns differ in Central Suffolk and South East of Norfolk?

A

The area was more densely wooded and the soil was heavier making it hard to find suitable areas to grow crops - enclosure seen as a nuisance

20
Q

Why did the commonwealth men criticise enclosure and who were they?

A

Politicans, clergymen and intellectuals - strong reformer faith - saw enclosure as a public nuisance and a fundamental source of poverty

21
Q

How did the commonwealth men express their dislike for enclosure?

A

Gov official John Hales, writer Robert Crowley and Hugh Latimer - Bishop of Worcester preached about the need for social reform and the need to control enclosure

22
Q

How did the commonwealth men influence the Duke of Somerset?

A

He introduced commissions of illegal enquiry

23
Q

How did the commonwealth men influence commoners?

A

They could hear about and understand the idea about the need for a more just society and the greed of landlords; influenced rebel aims and actions in 1549

24
Q

Why were the commonwealth incorrect about the real causes of poverty?

A

Population growth - pressure on the job market, wages fell and prices rose, as demand and inflation increased, enclosure made it worse but wasn’t the cause

25
Q

What economic crises did England face in the 1540s?

A

1525-1551 population grew from 2.3 million to 3 million - became harder to ensure an adequate food supply = high prices = hit poorest = pressure on land = enclosure

26
Q

What did a larger population mean in terms of unemployment?

A

Increased competition for jobs and increased unemployment, led to vagrancy and begging

27
Q

What exacerbated these problems in the 1540s?

A

Poor harvests in 1545 and 1549 made food shortages worse

28
Q

What did the Duke of Somerset do?

A

He was the protector and passed a private parliamentary bill to protect copyholders on his own estates from enclsoure

29
Q

Who did Somerset appoint and why?

A

John Hales to oversee gov reform of socila and economic problems

30
Q

What did Hales do?

A

Tried to introduce a series of bills encouraging social and economic reform - all failed because parliament represented the interests of the landed elites

31
Q

What did Hales and Somerset do together?

A

Introduced a series of commissions that were to inquire into illegal enclosures and report the evidence back to the government

32
Q

What was a weakness of Hales and Somerset’s commissions?

A

They did not have the power to order illegal enclosures to be taken down or to punish those found to be in breach of the law

33
Q

How did the 1548 failure of the commissions not deter Somerset from taking action?

A

They took direct action against illegal enclosures by ordering the ploughing up of the land e.g Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk’s land and a park belonging to the Earl of Warwick, John Dudley

34
Q

What did Somerset introduce in 1549?

A

New enclosure commissions where they were told that illegal enclosures could be destroyed but this was illegal

35
Q

What consequences did the enclosure commissions have?

A

It alienated the landed gentry and nobility who were the targets and meant that they wouldn’t support Somerset in a rebellion but it got the commons on Somerset’s side

36
Q

What suggests that enclosure wasn’t actually to blame?

A

Only a 2% increase in 1500-1600, by Elizabeth’s reign, only 9% of land was enclosed