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Henry VIII and the English

Reformation
IN THE SAME SERIES

General Editors: Eric J. Evans and P.D. King

Lynn Abrams Bismarck and the German Empire 1871–1918


David Arnold The Age of Discovery 1400–1600
A.L. Beier The Problem of the Poor in Tudor and
Early Stuart England
Martin Blinkhorn Democracy and Civil War in Spain
1931–1939
Martin Blinkhorn Mussolini and Fascist Italy
Robert M. Bliss Restoration England 1660–1688
Stephen Constantine Lloyd George
Stephen Constantine Social Conditions in Britain 1918–1939
Susan Doran Elizabeth I and Religion 1558–1603
Christopher Durston James I
Eric J. Evans The Great Reform Act of 1832
Eric J. Evans Political Parties in Britain 1783–1867
Eric J. Evans Sir Robert Peel
Dick Geary Hitler and Nazism
John Gooch The Unification of Italy
Alexander Grant Henry VII
P.M. Harman The Scientific Revolution
M.J. Heale The American Revolution
Ruth Henig The Origins of the First World War
Ruth Henig The Origins of the Second World War
1933–1939
Ruth Henig Versailles and After 1919–1933
P.D. King Charlemagne
Stephen J. Lee Peter the Great
Stephen J. Lee The Thirty Years War
J.M. MacKenzie The Partition of Africa 1880–1900
Michael Mullett Calvin
Michael Mullett The Counter-Reformation
Michael Mullett James II and English Politics 1678–1688
Michael Mullett Luther
Robert Pearce Attlee’s Labour Governments 1945–51
Gordon Phillips The Rise of the Labour Party 1893–1931
J.H. Shennan France Before the Revolution
J.H. Shennan International Relations in Europe 1689–1789
J.H. Shennan Louis XIV
Margaret Shennan The Rise of Brandenburg-Prussia
David Shotter Augustus Caesar
David Shotter The Fall of the Roman Republic
David Shotter Tiberius Caesar
Keith J. Stringer The Reign of Stephen
John K. Walton Disraeli
John K. Walton The Second Reform Act
Michael J. Winstanley Gladstone and the Liberal Party
Michael J. Winstanley Ireland and the Land Question
1800–1922
Alan Wood The Origins of the Russian Revolution
1861–1917
Alan Wood Stalin and Stalinism
Austin Woolrych England Without a King 1649–1660
LANCASTER PAMPHLETS

Henry VIII and the


English Reformation

D.G. Newcombe

London and New York


To my parents

First published 1995


by Routledge
11 New Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EE
Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada
by Routledge
29 West 35th Street, New York, NY 10001
This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2001.
© 1995 D.G. Newcombe
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or
utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now
known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any
information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the
publishers.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Newcombe, D.G. (David Gordon)
Henry VIII and the English Reformation / D.G. Newcombe.
p. cm. – (Lancaster pamphlets)
Includes bibliographical references.
1. Great Britain–History–Henry VIII, 1509–1547. 2. Henry VIII, King of
England, 1491–1547. 3. England–Church history–16th century. 4. Reformation–
England I. Title. II. Title: Henry Eighth and the English Reformation. III. Series.
DA332.N49 1995
942.03'4–dc20 94–39263
ISBN 0–415–10728–8 (Print Edition)
ISBN 0-203-13040-5 Master e-book ISBN
ISBN 0-203-18262-6 (Glassbook Format)
Contents

Chronology viii

Glossary xi

Introduction 1

1 Why a Reformation? 7

2 The ‘King’s Great Matter’ 22

3 The break with Rome 36

4 The progress of the Reformation 52

Notes 76

Further reading 80

vii
Chronology

1489
March Treaty of Medina del Campo.
1491
June Henry Tudor born.
1501
November Marriage of Arthur Tudor and Catherine
of Aragon.
1502
April Arthur Tudor dies.
1505
March Julius II grants the dispensation for Henry to
marry Catherine.
1509
April Henry VIII succeeds to the English throne.
June Marriage of Henry Tudor and Catherine of
Aragon.
1512
February War with France and Scotland.
Wolsey comes to prominence.
1513
August The battle of the Spurs.
1517
Luther publishes the 95 Theses.

viii
1524
Tyndale goes into exile.
1525
February French defeated at Pavia by imperial forces.
Tyndale’s translation of the Bible printed.
1527
May Charles V sacks Rome.
June Henry VIII decides his marriage is unlawful.
1528
October Cardinal Campeggio arrives in England.
1529
May Hearings open in London to determine the
validity of Henry’s marriage.
June The battle of Landriano and the treaty of
Barcelona.
July Hearings adjourned in London.
November The Reformation Parliament convenes and
passes acts against probate, mortuary fees
and non-residence.
1530
November Death of Wolsey.
December The clergy charged with Praemunire.
1532
March Supplication against the Ordinaries.
May Submission of the clergy; resignation of
Thomas More from the chancellorship; first
Act of Annates.
1533
January Henry secretly marries Anne Boleyn.
March Act in Restraint of Appeals.
May Cranmer declares Henry’s first marriage
void.
September Elizabeth is born.
1534
March Second Act of Annates; Act of Succession;
Treason Act.
December Act of Supremacy; Act of First-Fruits
and Tenths.
1535
June Fisher executed.
July More executed.

ix
1536
January Catherine of Aragon dies.
April Statute of Uses; dissolution of the lesser
monasteries.
May Anne Boleyn executed; Henry marries
Jane Seymour.
July Publication of the Ten Articles.
August Injunctions of 1536.
October The Pilgrimage of Grace begins.
December The Pilgrimage of Grace ends.
1537
October Edward is born; death of Jane Seymour;
Matthew Bible issued; the ‘Bishop’s Book’
published.
1538
September Injunctions of 1538.
1539
April Act of Six Articles.
1540
January Henry marries Anne of Cleves.
July The marriage is annulled; Cromwell
executed; Henry marries Catherine Howard.
1542
February Catherine Howard executed.
October War with Scotland.
1543
July Henry marries Catherine Parr.
May The ‘King’s Book’ published.
Act for the Advancement of True Religion.
Attempts to remove Cranmer fail.
1544
July War in France.
Attempts to discredit Gardiner fail.
1545
November Henry makes a plea for tolerance in religion.
1546
December Norfolk arrested for treason.
1547
January Henry VIII dies.

x
Glossary

benefit of clergy the exemption of clergy from trial by a secular


court. This privilege was extended to all
orders of clergy and to nuns. By the six-
teenth century the exemption usually only
applied to a first felonious offence.
chantries a benefice maintained to say the Mass for the
benefit of souls, specifically the soul of the
founder but possibly including others. Usu-
ally a chantry was a chapel or altar located
in a larger church or cathedral building, but
many examples exist of detached chapels
built specifically as chantries. They were
particularly popular in the fourteenth and
fifteenth centuries.
confraternities associations formed to pray for the souls of
and religious members who had died and to make provi-
guilds sion for their funerals. They did have other
religious roles, such as the maintenance of
shrines. Some even founded schools or
made arrangements for members who were
in financial difficulty.

xi
indulgences the remission, by the Church, of punishment
due to sin. The Church assumed that all sin
was punished either on earth or in purgatory.
Christ and the saints, however, had built up
a ‘treasury of merit’ in heaven which the
Church could draw upon in consideration of
the good works of any individual. The sys-
tem was abused widely.
Lollards followers of John Wyclif. Probably meaning
‘mumblers of prayers’, the term came to be
loosely applied to those suspected of heresy,
dissatisfied with the Church or disputing
tithes.
mortuary fees fees payable to the clergy for burial in conse-
crated ground.
nepotism the granting of a benefice or ecclesiastical
office to a relative.
non-residence continual absence from a benefice lawfully
held.
Ordinaries all clergymen who had the authority to exercise
jurisdiction. This jurisdiction included
teaching, governing, adjudicating, and the
administration of the sacraments.
pilgrimages journeys to holy places. They were undertaken
as acts of devotion, penance or in search of
miraculous cures. Jerusalem was one popu-
lar pilgrimage destination, as was the tomb
of St Thomas Becket at Canterbury.
pluralism the holding of more than one benefice at the
same time.
Praemunire the statutes of 1353, 1365 and 1393 were all
referred to by this title. They were designed
to protect the English Crown against juris-
dictional encroachments by the papacy.
Appeals from English courts to Rome were
forbidden, and the promulgation of papal
bulls and excommunications was also pro-
scribed.

xii
probate fees fees charged for the proving and administration
of wills.
Provisors passed in 1351, this statute prohibited the Pope
from presenting any benefices in England.
purgatory a place of punishment where those who have
died with some sins unforgiven must go
until they have done sufficient penance.
Once they have endured their punishment,
they are permitted to enter heaven. Purga-
tory is like hell but not eternal.
simony the buying or selling of Church offices or other
spiritual things.
tithe the tenth part of all produce from the land,
labour and livestock to each clergyman
serving a parish for his maintenance. Calcu-
lations of what was owed as a tithe were the
subject of continuous dispute.

xiii
Introduction

When Henry VIII died on 28 January 1547, he left behind him a


Church in England that was in transition. It had left the obedience of
the Church of Rome and, however much the English Church may
have considered itself part of the universal Church, Rome
considered it schismatic. It no longer looked to the Pope as the
supreme head – now that role had been assumed by the king. But it
was only in throwing off the authority of the Pope that the Church in
England bore any resemblance to the Protestant Churches on the
continent. There were few doctrinal changes of any significance.
The rejection of papal authority and the adjustment of ecclesiastical
administration that resulted while an essentially orthodox structure
of belief was maintained made the Church in England unique. This
was entirely due to the particular needs and tempestuous leadership
of Henry VIII. The king was not a Protestant and did not want a
Protestant Church in England, but a break with Rome had served his
political and dynastic purposes. In 1547, the government of the new
king, Edward VI, and the episcopal leadership of the Church were
prepared and willing to go much further down the Protestant path in
practical and doctrinal terms than had ever been envisaged by the
monarch who started it all, for Henry remained orthodox in his
theology to the end. If the Church was not Protestant on 28 January
1547, it was about to become so.
1
Of course, the Church in 1547 did not look Protestant. Few
people would have noticed many changes in the day-to-day practice
of their religion. It is true that by that date the monasteries had been
dissolved and the Pope had been removed from the prayers that were
recited at services of worship, but the Mass was retained, as were
most of the beliefs and ceremonies that had come to be such
important parts of the lives of local parishioners. This presented
quite a different picture from that created by the radical changes that
had taken place on the continent. The Reformation in England
during the time of Henry VIII was different: it was different in its
motivation; it was different in the methods used to achieve its ends;
and it was different in its immediate result.
As a result, any study of the Reformation in England is plagued
with confusion and unexpected paradoxes. Modern methods of
research into the period, using not only surviving chronicles, letters,
sermons and propaganda but also official government documents,
private wills and diocesan and parish registers, have shed some light
but often served only to confuse matters. Were abuses widespread or
were they not, for instance? The evidence is not clear. Were the
clergy respected, despised or tolerated by the people? It is difficult
to know. What people thought is just as important as what the
evidence shows, and yet knowing what ordinary folk thought
presents enormous problems. In fact, we will probably never really
know. What we do know, however, is this: the traditional Protestant
interpretation of an old and decrepit Church, riddled with abuses of
all kinds and controlled by an Italian princeling whose only concern
was to sap England’s wealth for his own temporal ambitions, is no
longer viable. What is more, any notion that Protestantism swept to
prominence in England on the crest of a great wave of popular
revulsion against the old Church does not stand up to close scrutiny.
The Reformation in Henry VIII’s time was an enormously
complex process. It was complicated by the fact that so many of the
changes that were made were wrought in the political not the
ecclesiastical arena. The government and Parliament had the
initiative, not the Church. The historian Maurice Powicke’s famous
observation that the English Reformation was an act of state rather
than an act of faith has been embedded in the minds of all students of
2
the period but it bears repeating. Powicke was not the first to notice
this: the Protestant historian John Foxe, whose descriptions of the
events of the Reformation in England were so instrumental in
forming the traditional picture of what happened, was convinced
that Henry VIII had no real intention of reforming the Church, but
rather intended only to secure the succession by a divorce which he
could only ensure if he controlled the necessary machinery of the
Church in England.1 The actual transformation that took place later,
from Catholic to Protestant, may seem almost an accidental or
incidental byproduct of what was essentially a political solution to a
dynastic problem. The political solution is rather easier to define
than the religious change. While statutes may be passed in an instant,
beliefs change much more slowly.
What complicates all of this is that there was a significant
minority of people in England who were influenced by the process
of reform that was occurring elsewhere. On the continent, from
Martin Luther’s protest of 1517 onwards, challenges were being
thrown down to the Church of Rome, its doctrine and its practice.
The Church had been challenged before, as we shall see, but never
in so effective or widespread a manner. Owing to the many contacts
that sixteenth-century England had with the continent, politically,
intellectually and economically, these challenges were known in
England and they influenced politicians, scholars, churchmen and
merchants. Indeed, there is evidence that these subversive religious
ideas, which would later be called ‘Protestant’, percolated down into
the population. England had its own home-grown variety of
heretical opinion in those who followed the teachings of the
fourteenth-century Oxford thinker and critic of the Church, John
Wyclif, and this minority was especially receptive to Protestant
ideas.
But Henry VIII’s agenda was quite different and he was generally
hostile to the reforming ideas that began to find their way to England
from continental Europe. It is best not to forget that it was under
Henry’s name that a defence of orthodoxy, Assertio septem
sacramentorum adversus Martinum Lutherum (Defence of the
Seven Sacraments against Martin Luther), was published in 1521
and earned him the title ‘Defender of the Faith’. This papal
3
recognition pleased Henry and he kept it in his royal style even after
the break with Rome. Indeed, there is little evidence to suggest that
Henry was dissatisfied with the doctrines or practices of the Church
in themselves. Yet he was not above using the ideas of the
continental reformers when it suited him, and he sent out such mixed
signals that Luther’s right-hand man, Philip Melanchthon, dedicated
one of his most important theological works to none other than
Henry VIII: the same Henry VIII who had so violently attacked
Lutheran doctrine in 1521.
If this appears confusing now, imagine how confusing it was for
people at the time. In the first flush of excitement after the break with
Rome, many changes were mooted: a Bible and services in the
vernacular, and an end to the celibacy of the clergy, to name but two.
Yet the king was never comfortable with most of these ‘reforms’ and
was easily persuaded to revert to orthodoxy when he felt that things
had gone too far or when those factions that resisted radical reform
were in favour at court. Those who saw the king as a Protestant were
sadly mistaken, and some paid for their mistakes with their lives.
The Reformation in England was different, then. Attempting to
understand what happened with any clarity is a thorny problem and
has often sparked off acrimonious debate among historians. A
number of attempts have been made to identify what was different
about the English Reformation, and why, and students of the period
are to be forgiven if they become confused by the multitude of
theories. Although the subject of this pamphlet is the Henrician
Reformation, it is worth noting that some of the more sophisticated
arguments tend to take the entire sixteenth century into account and
often reach well into the seventeenth century for an understanding of
the process of Reformation. But most theories have at their heart the
notion that it was the reign of Henry VIII that ‘got the ball rolling’,
regardless of when they date the actual conversion of England from
a Catholic to a Protestant nation.
In very broad brushstrokes,2 there are two main schools of
thought about the Henrician Reformation. One school, led by
Professor Geoffrey Elton, argues that the Reformation in England
during the reign of Henry VIII happened quickly and was imposed
by the government. According to this analysis, the Reformation was
4
‘official’ and depended more on the strength of statutes passed in
Parliament than on any evangelical efforts made by the reformers.
As it was imposed from above, the actual business of changing what
people believed was less important than conformity to the law.
Enforcement at a local level was therefore important. This was often
difficult: some areas readily accepted the changes that were made
while others, most notably much of the north of England,
demonstrated strong resistance. The key point in this argument,
however, is that the Reformation was enacted and enforced by the
government.
The second general school of thought was pioneered by the
historian A. G. Dickens. He argued, in his groundbreaking study The
English Reformation, that there was sufficient heterodox opinion in
England on the eve of the Reformation to make the transformation
from a nominally Catholic nation to a Protestant one rather easier
than might have been expected. To one degree or another, the
initiative for this change came from the people. Dickens and his
disciples point to anticlerical and anti-Catholic sentiment at the
grassroots as well as to strong Lollard* influences. He notes the
growing influence of Lollardy among merchants and artisans and
the evidence of heterodoxy at a local level being dealt with in the
Church courts. According to this view, the Reformation in England
went as far as it did with the speed that it did because of support from
the people. The Reformation was fast and from below.
Neither of these views is entirely satisfactory. On the one hand,
Elton and his school have been accused of undervaluing the
problems that the government had in the enforcement of the official
Reformation. Dickens, on the other hand, appears to give too much
weight to the Lollards and to the existence of heterodox opinion in
England generally. What the two have in common is the idea that it
all happened quickly and clearly. From a strictly legal standpoint, as
we have seen, this may be true, but sufficient evidence exists to make
us doubt how quickly and clearly the Reformation won the hearts
and minds of the people. Some historians, notably Professor Patrick
Collinson, have taken a longer view of the changes and, while
admitting that the ‘official Reformation’ took place very quickly

5
indeed, have maintained that the process of conversion took rather
longer and may not have even begun until the reign of Elizabeth.
The very fact that the Reformation in England looked so different
from what occurred elsewhere has prompted some historians to
question the validity of the very concept of a single, unified event
called ‘the Reformation’. Christopher Haigh has argued that there
were several reformations during the sixteenth century and that only
one of these was evangelical in nature, the rest being purely
political.3 This represents what he refers to as a ‘deconstructed’
view. Yet it is hard to separate out the issues in this way. The move
towards religious reform was part and parcel of the political reform
that was going on at the same time, and each supported and informed
the other. It is certainly hard to see that the issues were separated at
the time.
The Reformation in the time of Henry VIII was motivated by the
desire of the king to secure the succession of the Tudor dynasty in
England. When the normal means of achieving his ends were
exhausted without a positive result, Henry set about reaching his
goal by using, encouraging and, perhaps, amplifying critical
religious sentiment and even what had previously been considered
heretical opinions. In doing so, he let the genie out of the bottle. What
had been a minority opinion was given a much more powerful voice
than it would otherwise have had because of the difficulties the king
was having with an uncooperative Pope. Any description of the
Henrician Reformation must begin with an examination of the state
of the Church before the process that led to the break with Rome and,
ultimately, doctrinal change.

6
1
Why a Reformation?

The Church, like most institutions, is always in need of reformation;


in fact, it is a sign of health when it recognises the need and acts to
renew itself. Throughout its history, it has frequently undergone
massive internal change in order to meet the challenges that new
times and ideas have thrown down to it. One need only reflect for a
moment on how St Francis introduced a new dimension to the
ministry of the Church through his reforming movement in the
thirteenth century, to see how this reform within the Church was both
possible and desirable. Popes, too, far from always being resistant to
change, were frequently responsible for re-ordering, rationalising
and reforming the Church in order to minister more effectively in
changing times and circumstances. Reform and reformation did not
necessarily imply the destruction of the Church, its forms of worship
or its structure. It did mean growth, albeit sometimes painful.
If, however, we use the term ‘Reformation’, we are not referring
to the normal process of renewal that the Church had engaged in for
centuries. As a technical term, ‘Reformation’ applies to the great
social and religious upheaval that occurred mainly in the sixteenth
century. Of course, most people interested in radical change would
not have seen themselves as attempting to introduce anything new or
7
innovative – far from it. Rather they believed they were restoring the
Church to what they considered to be its former purity. Just when that
time of the pure Church existed was open to debate and there were
many different opinions. For some, like the radical Protestant bishop
of Gloucester, John Hooper (c. 1495–1555), the Church may have
lost its purity after the martyrdom of St Polycarp (second century
AD); others tended to date the decline of the Church much later,
perhaps six hundred or even a thousand years after Christ. What they
all had in common was a vision of the purity of the primitive Church
and a determination to reestablish its practices and theology as they
understood them. As far as they were concerned, the papacy and the
Church of Rome had polluted that purity with false and invented
doctrines. The Church needed cleansing to return it to purity. Their
critique of the Church, therefore, concentrated not only on the
abuses that many perceived among the clergy but also included the
doctrine of the Church, which they felt had gone seriously astray.
For our purposes, then, the term ‘Reformation’ has a very
particular meaning. It is applied to those events, religious, social and
political, which appear to have occurred in relation to a shift away
from the traditional Catholicism of the Church of Rome, its
theology, discipline and spirituality, and towards those ideas,
innovations and forms of worship which have come to be known as
Protestant. But the term ‘Protestant’ itself was not in common usage
during the sixteenth century except in very specific circumstances
and is a term applied by historians to those of particular religious
points of view.1 What is indisputable is that something happened in
sixteenth-century Europe on a grand scale. Part event, part process,
it involved an enormous range of disparate elements: social,
economic, even technological changes came into play. Beginning
with Martin Luther, although with antecedents in the fourteenth
century, like Wyclif in England, or in the fifteenth century, like Jan
Hus in Bohemia, it swept through Europe like wildfire and touched
the lives of most people one way or another. Some it consumed,
others it strengthened; all it influenced.
How far had this Reformation touched England before Henry
VIII broke with Rome? The answer to this question is enormously
complex, in large part because of the complicated motives behind
the move to reform in the first place. As we have noted, the
8
Reformation in England was different. There appeared to be no
compelling reason to move away from the Church of Rome. There
seems to have been general satisfaction with the way the Church
operated, and the number of dissidents was small. In addition, the
process of internal reform was not being neglected. Where problems
were found they were dealt with, and structures to make reform
possible existed. Diocesan bishops were often engaged in the
business of looking after the pastoral needs of their dioceses, while
John Morton, archbishop of Canterbury from 1486 to 1500, had been
notable in his efforts to correct abuses he found among the lower
orders of the clergy and to curb the excesses of some of the monastic
houses.
Still, dissatisfaction did exist. In large part this was because
abuses were only the tip of the iceberg. There were always those who
were jealous of the wealth of the Church and who sought to turn that
wealth to their own use. There were also those who resented the
influence of the Church courts and desired to bring more, if not all,
legal questions under the jurisdiction of the Common Law courts.
These resentments were nothing new. But there was emerging in
England a more serious challenge to the Church, with which its
normal disciplinary structures could not cope. Whereas Archbishop
Morton might believe it necessary to prune a few branches from an
essentially healthy tree, there were some for whom the trunk was
rotten. Abuses among the clergy were acknowledged by everyone to
one degree or another, but for some they were symptomatic of a
much deeper ill. If, for instance, spurious pardons were being sold,
or indulgences* preached using questionable methods, then perhaps
this reflected a serious defect in the Church’s traditional
understanding of the doctrine of salvation, not simply the problem
of a few unscrupulous pardoners. If the clergy were guilty of having
mistresses in spite of their vows, then the problem might lie in the
requirement of celibacy.
More dangerous still was the reliance of these challengers on
Scripture as the final authority and their consequent denial of the
authority of the Church and the Pope. As Professor Guy points out,
William Tyndale’s development of ‘the ideas “Truth as revealed in
Scripture” and “We must rather obey God than men”’ became
essential to the defence of the king’s position in the 1530s.2 This
9
point brought the ideas of the reformers and of the king into a strange
and often uncomfortable conjunction: despite the usefulness of his
ideas, Tyndale was forced into exile – just as the king was about to
embark on a serious challenge to ecclesiastical authority. Orthodox
on most theological matters, the king found these heterodox ideas
useful.

Who were the early reformers in England?

As yet in England there were few who looked beyond the correction
of abuses and wanted a complete overhaul of the doctrine of the
Church. Typical of the kind of reforming spirit in the early sixteenth
century were men like Thomas More, the lawyer and future
chancellor, and John Colet, dean of St Paul’s. Heavily influenced by
the humanism of Desiderius Erasmus, men such as these were not
afraid to criticise the Church but were intent on remaining within it.3
The humanism or ‘New Learning’ that Erasmus championed built
upon a revival of the study of pagan, classical writers and a deep
textual criticism. Erasmus, while publishing a number of satirical
works which were sharply critical of the clergy and the Church,
made his most significant contribution in a new translation of the
New Testament. Returning to the original Greek texts, his version
was more accurate than that commonly used, the Vulgate, and his
corrections served ‘to undermine the scriptural authority of the
priesthood and the papacy’.4 Armed with new critical tools,
humanists in England attempted to revitalise the Church.
More’s great work Utopia satirised contemporary Christian
values by imagining a society which was essentially humane yet not
Christian. His ironic point was that this imaginary, pagan society
was superior to, and had much to teach, sixteenth-century Christian
European society. While More’s subtlety was not lost on his readers,
John Colet took a more direct approach. Invited to preach before the
Convocation of Canterbury in 1511, Colet was scathing in his
criticism of the clergy and of the bishops. The clergy were guilty of
worldliness, lust, greed and ambition, and the bishops, who ought to
have been attempting to rectify these problems, were setting poor
examples themselves. These attacks were not welcomed by the
10
ecclesiastical establishment, but it was always clear that neither
Colet nor More desired to do any more than reform the existing
structure from within it. Colet was never a ‘Protestant’, and More
became the scourge of those who challenged the doctrine of the
Church. However uncomfortable the humanist critique may have
been for the leaders of the Church, the followers of this ‘New
Learning’ were not heretics.
As noted earlier, England had its own tradition of heretical
teachings. John Wyclif had first advanced his ideas at Oxford
towards the end of the fourteenth century. That was a time when
confidence in the Church was at a very low ebb: the papacy had
earlier moved from Rome to Avignon (prompting English
suspicions that the Pope was no more than a French chaplain),5 and
there were at one time three separate and competing popes.6
Wyclif’s teachings had called for a Bible in English and the
dissolution of monasteries, had attacked Church property and had
argued for a rolling-back of priestly and papal power. He also had a
vision of ‘a new order of society . . . in which citizens obeyed the lay
prince as priest and king’.7 In fact, Wyclif’s programme for reform
anticipated many of the criticisms that reformers in the sixteenth
century were to level at the Church.
However, Wyclif’s reforms, although interesting to the powerful
John of Gaunt, who became his protector, were never instituted, not
least because the English government in the late fourteenth century
was unstable enough as it was without embarking on so ambitious a
project as Wyclif proposed. The support that he had among the
nobility and middle classes gave his ideas a certain respectability
until they became associated with the rebellion of Sir John Oldcastle
in 1414. Wyclif’s followers now began to be persecuted and were
forced underground. There they remained, known as Lollards, only
surfacing periodically to be tried for heresy.
How extensive a community the Lollards were in the sixteenth
century is a matter open to question. By the eve of the Reformation
they appear to have existed in some regions of the country primarily
among the merchant and artisan classes. The complicated and
elegant ideas of John Wyclif had degenerated somewhat over the
course of a century into a very simplistic attack on ceremony, the
11
veneration of images, belief in purgatory, and priests, and the
identifying badge of Lollardy was the translation of the Bible into
English known as the ‘Lollard Bible’. Lollardy seems to have been
largely a phenomenon of southern England. London, Essex and
Kent in particular appear to have had strong Lollard communities.
Bristol in the southwest and Coventry in the Midlands were also
centres of Lollard support. However, the Lollards were hardly
representative of common public opinion, and whether Lollardy
provided any real leadership in the Protestant cause is debatable. In
fact, it has been argued that Lollards and Protestants did not always
consider themselves fellow travellers.8 However, there were those
in England who took matters a step further than either the Lollards
or the humanists.
In the early part of the sixteenth century a new breed of reformed
thinker was emerging. It must be stressed that they were few, and it
is as a result of the ultimate victory of Protestantism over
Catholicism in England that these early reformers have been given
the prominence by historians that they have received. At the time,
they were on the margins, even if their attacks did sometimes
provoke responses from the highest levels of government.
The centre for this group of reformers was Cambridge, its leader
the Augustinian prior Robert Barnes. Barnes was an intelligent and
vocal critic of the clergy and the bishops and, although forced to
recant his views in the 1520s, continued as an important voice for
reform under the protection of Thomas Cromwell until 1540. Barnes
and his followers initially gathered at the White Horse Tavern,
where they discussed, and were influenced by, the writings of Martin
Luther and other continental reformers. From this group would
emerge two of the future leaders of the Church in England: Thomas
Cranmer and Hugh Latimer.
Perhaps the best known of these new Protestants was William
Tyndale, because he published his criticisms and his English
translation of the New Testament. Horrified by what he saw as the
ignorance of the clergy, particularly in his West Country home, and
influenced by the writings of Luther on salvation, Tyndale began a
campaign of criticism which attracted followers in the 1520s. He
was persuaded by the Lutheran concept of salvation by faith alone
and, as a consequence, attacked the doctrine of purgatory and the
12
practice of indulgences. More than that, he developed a political
theology that challenged the power of the priesthood and vested the
power to reform the Church in the king, who, after all, was chosen
by God to govern. Although these opinions, and especially
Tyndale’s antagonism towards the papal authority, were attractive to
a king who wished to challenge that authority, there was no question
but that Tyndale’s opinions were considered heretical, especially
after the publication of his translation of the New Testament in 1525.
It was Tyndale’s most important contribution to the Reformation.
This Bible in English, based on Erasmus’ translation from the Greek,
added much that was antipapal and anticlerical in the margins,
although the translation itself was faithful. In 1524, he was forced to
flee to the continent, where he carried on a violent pamphlet battle
with Thomas More until he was captured and executed for heresy by
the forces of the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V in 1536. In
Tyndale’s thinking, the ideas of the Lollards and humanism
amalgamated and grew. His reliance on Scripture as the final and
most important authority made him uncompromising in his
positions. Therefore, although his opinions on the authority of the
Pope were much to the liking of Henry VIII, he was unable to support
the king’s wishes for a divorce because he could find no Scriptural
justification for it.
The issues were not raised by Tyndale alone. Others, such as
Thomas Bilney, Thomas Arthur and John Frith, found themselves in
trouble with the authorities for their outspoken opinions. Frith, a
devoted disciple of Tyndale, was expelled from Oxford for his views
and fled to the continent in 1528 to join his mentor. Returning to
England to organise support for the Protestant cause, he was
captured and burned at the stake in 1533. Bilney and Arthur were
both tried for heresy at Cambridge in 1527. While Arthur, who had
criticised ecclesiastical jurisdiction, admitted his error, Bilney
proved a much more difficult case. On most matters very orthodox,
indeed hardly a Protestant at all, he was outspoken in his opposition
to the veneration of images, which he deemed idolatry, and to papal
pardons on the grounds that these seemed to denigrate the
sufficiency of Christ in the matter of salvation. Was Christ’s sacrifice
on the cross not enough to ensure forgiveness of sins? Recognising
his peril, Bilney managed to answer carefully the questions put to
13
him, but in the end was forced into a humiliating recantation. The
recantation was half-hearted, however. Soon thereafter Bilney was
distributing Protestant books and preaching without a licence in
Norfolk. For this he was burned at the stake in 1531 and was
immortalised by Protestant historians (most notably John Foxe) as a
martyr to a cause to which he was only ever marginally committed.
The importance of these early reformers was inflated later by
Protestant historians. The reformers reached only a small percentage
of the population and, as often as not, preached to the already
converted or the disaffected. They were primarily influential among
the young scholars at Cambridge during the halcyon days of the
White Horse Tavern. Important though their influence was among
the future leaders of the Church of England, they were not
particularly influential with the general population.

What were the issues?

Just as the newly formed Parliament of 1529 was about to meet, a


Protestant firebrand, Simon Fish, published his tract A Supplication
of Beggars. He painted a dismal picture of the clergy and the state of
the Church, as did his fellow common lawyer, Christopher St
German, who built a case against the clergy by listing known
examples of clerical abuse. We have already noted John Colet’s
criticism of the clergy in 1511. All these have been seen as evidence
of the reality of violent anticlerical sentiment in England and the
abuses that were laid at the door of the clergy.
But what were those abuses, and what were the issues that the
reformers focused on in their attack on the Church? There were two
levels of criticism directed at the Church. First, there was criticism
of abuses of practice – aspects of Church discipline which were
violated and either ignored or not dealt with effectively by the
existing structures within the institution. Second, there was criticism
of practices which the reformers felt to be intrinsically wrong –
ceremonies, traditions, and ‘superstitions’ based on an incorrect
analysis of Scripture or a faulty theological interpretation. While
Thomas More or John Colet might agree that there were problems of
discipline that cried out for reform, they would not agree that the
theology of the Church was in error.
14
The problems that existed in ecclesiastical discipline in the early
sixteenth century were nothing new. The Church had been wrestling
with these persistent breaches of discipline for centuries: sometimes
effectively, sometimes not. The abuses most commonly cited were
simony,* pluralism,* non-residence,* nepotism,* sexual
misconduct, ignorance and benefit of clergy.*
All of these had been recognised as abuses from very early on and
for good reason. Often used as a means of unfair advancement in the
Church, simony had been outlawed by early councils of the Church,
but it proved very difficult to control. Pluralism was frowned upon
because it meant that some parishes might be neglected by clergy
who were busy elsewhere. However, one benefice might not
produce sufficient income for the clergyman’s support, and so
dispensations were granted by Rome if this was the case. Assurances
were required that all parishes would be looked after adequately by
curates, but there were abuses of this system: some clergy held more
than two benefices, some bishops held more than one diocese. The
curates hired by pluralists were not usually of the best quality; as
they were paid only a small percentage of the income of the parish,
such a position was not attractive to the best candidates. In some
cases, no curate was provided at all. The main complaint was that the
people of the parish were not being served adequately.
Non-residence might be the result of pluralism, but a more
common cause was that the priest might be employed elsewhere. It
was not uncommon for the clergy to serve as stewards, managing the
estates or affairs of the wealthy. In addition, the clergy often served
the government in a variety of positions which drew them away from
their parishes or dioceses on a regular or even permanent basis. Even
a casual glance at the men who served Henry VIII as diplomats
reveals that many were either bishops or priests. If they were
conscientious, they left men adequate to look after their cures but
sometimes this did not happen. Again, those who suffered were the
people whose spiritual needs the Church existed to serve.
The more powerful among the clergy were often guilty of
nepotism as they often had a number of benefices at their disposal to
dispense as they saw fit. (Thomas Cardinal Wolsey, chancellor of
England and archbishop of York, for instance, secured benefices for
his son Thomas Winter even though Winter was studying in Paris.)
15
As a consequence, nepotism was followed by non-residency and,
because one benefice was often not enough to provide a comfortable
living, by pluralism.9
Sexual misconduct was simply that: the clergy had all taken a
vow of celibacy and were not supposed to have sexual relations of
any kind. By the sixteenth century clerical celibacy had been in force
for some five hundred years, although it had not always been part of
the tradition of the Church. Sometimes local custom accepted clergy
who had female companions and even families, despite the overall
ban on such behaviour. The bulk of sexual charges (and there were
few of these) brought against the clergy had to do with behaviour far
more scandalous than simple cohabitation.
Ignorance was a charge which was made especially against the
poorer clergy who served as curates in parishes held in plurality.
While some of the clergy had university education, a great number
had only rudimentary training. The issue was not whether the clergy
were highly educated but whether, in some cases, they were able to
read the services and understand them. After the break with Rome,
it was discovered in Gloucester that ten of the clergy could not recite
the Lord’s Prayer. This was taken as an indication of how badly
standards had slipped in the pre-Reformation Church. Charges of
ignorance raised real questions about the ability of the clergy to
perform their parochial function.
Originally designed to protect the clergy and extended even to
the minor orders, benefit of clergy was a privilege where the
opportunities for abuse were plentiful. The Church had recognised
this and took steps to curtail abuses – even going so far as to brand
the hands of those who had claimed benefit of clergy and were not
entitled to do so again. But the apparent injustice of this privilege
could still provoke anger among the laity. In 1514, when the
coroner’s jury returned a verdict of murder and charged several of
the bishop of London’s officers after Richard Hunne was found
hanged in a cell in the bishop of London’s palace, the accused
escaped trial by claiming benefit of clergy. London was outraged at
the time, and the case had not been forgotten by those who assembled
in Parliament in 1529.
In addition to these abuses, there were long-standing grievances
to do with the way the Church raised money to maintain its ministry,
16
and the way it administered justice in its courts. The Church raised
its money through a tax known as the tithe,* and through fees that it
charged for a variety of spiritual services. Refusal to pay could result
in arrest and prosecution before the Church courts. Richard Hunne,
for instance, found himself in the bishop of London’s gaol because
he had refused to pay one such fee – the mortuary fee.* Some
questioned whether it was possible for the Church to dispense justice
fairly where its own financial interests were involved or where its
own officials were in jeopardy.
While these issues of practice tended to be eye-catching –
everyone understood what the sexual misconduct of the clergy
meant – the more specifically theological issues were equally, if not
more, important in the debate. Here we find a number of issues
which caused serious disagreement. Most of these were based on an
understanding of Christian theology which relied on the ultimate
authority of Scripture and on the insights of Martin Luther. The
central problem was how one could come to eternal life, and the
question that the reformers asked was simply: what is necessary for
salvation?
Like Luther, they found the answer in the Bible. They argued that
only those requirements for eternal life found specifically in
Scripture were necessary. Anything else was superfluous, of human
invention, or even antithetical to the pursuit of salvation. For some
reformers this appeal to Scriptural authority meant that any
observance, custom or belief that could not be supported by
Scripture was not to be accepted; indeed, acceptance might be
harmful to one’s spiritual health. Others, like the writer Thomas
Starkey, would argue that some of the traditions of the Church, while
not being necessary, might be useful to one’s spiritual life. This
moderate position was not generally shared by radical reformers
although the Church of England would ultimately follow the middle
way that Starkey first enunciated.
The key to understanding all the issues raised by the early
reformers, however, is the doctrine of salvation by faith alone. Once
a theologian accepted the notion that there was nothing one could
actively do to achieve eternal life except have faith, then the
structure that the Church had built around the doctrine of salvation
began to crumble. The doctrine of purgatory,* the half-way house
17
between heaven and hell, was objected to as a human invention
without Scriptural authority or proof. Indulgences were objected to
because they implied that the love of God as demonstrated in the
sacrifice of His Son was not enough and that somehow the human
agency of the Pope or the Church might have some control over the
benefits of God’s love. The veneration of the saints, nowhere
commanded in the Bible, was seen as denying that Christ himself
was sufficient to intercede for our salvation. The veneration of
images was seen as idolatrous and completely contrary to Scripture.
Pilgrimages* were seen as superstitious and not required of
Christians. Finally, transubstantiation, the doctrine that the
consecrated bread and wine of the Eucharist actually became the
body and blood of Christ (despite their appearance), was attacked as
absurd and lacking Scriptural authority.
As the central text on which the reformers based these criticisms
was the Bible, the refusal of the English Church to allow the Bible to
be published in the vernacular was seen as an attempt by the Church
to keep the Christian religion in the hands of the Church and away
from the people. Access to this essential Christian text was believed
by reformers from Wyclif to Luther to be vitally important to the
development of faith. Up to a point, the people were encouraged by
the reformers to make up their own minds. While the Bible was
available in the vernacular in several countries, the Council of
Oxford in 1407, moved by hostility to the Lollard Bible, had
outlawed English translations. In fact, parts of the Bible in
translation did exist and many reformers included in their tracts large
sections of Scripture in translation, but no complete and official
version existed. The established Church feared unorthodox
interpretations which could lead to heresy, such as Lollardy, and
wanted to maintain control of the central text.
The debate over the vernacular Bible, especially when seen from
a distance, would seem to be evidence of great dissatisfaction with
the Church, but was it? We have already suggested that the
traditional view of a decrepit Church riddled with corruption will no
longer stand the test of the evidence and we have argued that those
who were so vocal in their criticisms were an unrepresentative
minority. What was the state of the Church in England in the early
sixteenth century? What did the people think?
18
England and the Church on the eve of
the Reformation

John Foxe and many Protestant historians who followed him


depicted a Church which was diseased and in need of radical surgery.
The Church was corrupt at the top, according to these historians, and
the people hated and ridiculed their clergy. Modern research,
however, suggests an alternative view. The Church may not have
been in such bad shape after all.
We know that at the beginning of the sixteenth century
parishioners continued to support their parish and its needs with their
time and treasure. Bequests to local churches and other religious
foundations continued unabated. Confraternities and religious
guilds,* originally designed to serve the same function for the souls
of the less well-off as chantries* did for the wealthy, saw their most
popular period during the first quarter of the sixteenth century. What
is more, along with their primary function of praying for the souls of
the dead thought to be suffering somewhere between heaven and
hell, they were expanding their activities to include a wide range of
services for the living community. Whatever the reformers might
think of the doctrine of purgatory, it was alive and well in early Tudor
England, as were traditional ceremonial and piety. One historian has
recently noted the enormous popularity of books of traditional
devotion well into the 1530s and wonders why, if Catholic
Christianity was as displeasing to the general population as the
Protestant writers would have us believe, these books went through
so many editions.10 Local traditions and customs, such as
observance of saints’ days, were also important and helped to define
and bring together communities; the great reluctance to give these up
was demonstrated later in the 1549 uprisings throughout the West
Country, especially in Devon and Cornwall. The people appear to
have been, by and large, content with orthodoxy and suspicious of
change.
If the people were orthodox, they were certainly encouraged in
this by the Crown. All students of medieval English history are
familiar with the occasional conflicts between English kings and the
Church. The well-known contests between Henry II and Thomas
Becket or King John and Pope Innocent III are just two examples of
19
a long-running struggle between the temporal and ecclesiastical
powers for jurisdiction and control. But by the fifteenth century that
battle had been decided, as a matter of practice, for the Crown. From
that time a state of cooperation existed between the English Crown
and the papacy despite periodic sabre-rattling and the continued
existence in English law of statutes designed to curtail the rights
traditionally claimed by the papacy. The Statute of Provisors
(1351)* and the Statute of Praemunire (1353)* were both introduced
at a time when the papacy had its headquarters at Avignon and when
England, at war with France, was suspicious of French influence.
Both were intended to prevent papal (and French) interference in
English ecclesiastical appointments and legal decisions. These
statutes, however, were enforced selectively at the best of times and
completely ignored when it was in the best interests of the Crown.
Moreover, since the early years of the fifteenth century, there had
existed what might be termed a ‘special relationship’ between
England and Rome. In 1417, on the strength of his brilliant successes
against the French on the battlefield, Henry V was in the political
ascendancy in Europe. As a result, English delegates to the Council
of Constance carried far more weight than was usual and were
instrumental in restoring some kind of order to the Church, which
had found itself divided by factionalism and by three separate popes
competing for the allegiance of all Western Christendom. Pope
Martin V, who eventually emerged from the maelstrom, was
prepared to grant kings of England powers of patronage and control
over the Church such as he granted to no one else. Although English
kings had been exercising these powers for some time, this was
official recognition, and though future popes may have regretted
Martin’s generosity and attempted to claw back some of that power,
they were never successful.
What is more, the English Crown always did rather well
financially out of the Church. The clergy in England had always
been taxed heavily – although the convenient fiction had been
maintained that the clergy were voluntarily donating money to the
Crown – and that burden grew during the reign of Henry VII. Far
from preventing Rome from taxing the English people, the Crown
usually allowed collection and then skimmed substantial
percentages from this revenue for its own use. The papacy, always
20
eager for English support, rarely objected too strenuously. A healthy,
wealthy and compliant Church was always in the best interests of the
Crown.
In his sermon of 1511, alluded to earlier, John Colet identified the
main complaints against the clergy and the bishops. We have looked
briefly at all these problems, and the one common theme running
through them is that they were thought to get in the way of effective
ministry either by bringing the Church into disrepute or by
distracting the individual clergyman from his main task, which was,
after all, to serve the spiritual needs of those souls in his care.
Charges of sexual immorality against the clergy, for instance, always
attracted much gossipy attention. Yet, despite several spectacular
scandals, there seem to have been relatively few clergy brought to
book on charges of this sort. When the evidence is examined
carefully, one finds that the same is true of almost all the abuses cited
by the reformers – things were not as bad as they claimed them to be.
Non-resident clergy were, for the most part, responsible in their
appointment of curates. The level of education among the clergy had
been rising since the fifteenth century. There were fewer cases of
simony and nepotism. The Church courts, in general, were serving
justice not with an eye to profit, but with a sensitivity to the pastoral
needs of the community.
If the Church was not in desperate need of radical reform, why
did it come about? The answer to this question is to be found, first, in
the vested interests of the noble and merchant classes, who had much
to gain materially if the power and wealth of the Church were
broken. These men seized on the polemic of Fish and St German’s
work as proof of the corruption of the Church. Fish’s work was more
hyperbolic than realistic, and St German’s list of abuses reflected
more what was happening on the continent than anything that was
true in the English Church. These only served the purposes of those
who wished to diminish the Church for their own benefit. The
second reason for the Reformation in England, and by far the more
important, was to be found in the mind of Henry VIII and his
dynastic and political priorities.

21
2
The ‘King’s Great Matter’

It was hardly a surprise when, on 23 May 1533 in the archiepiscopal


court at Dunstable, Archbishop Thomas Cranmer pronounced the
marriage of Catherine of Aragon and Henry VIII null and void. The
king had been agitating for such a decision for the past six years and
if that decision would not be made in Rome, then it was now possible
in Canterbury. This was no ordinary decision by the archbishop, and
the events which led up to it were no less than extraordinary. For in
the process of seeking an annulment1 of his first marriage, Henry
VIII had done the unthinkable. The king of England, the ‘Defender
of the Faith’, had led the Church in England out of obedience to the
Church of Rome.
No one except Henry VIII ever really knew when he developed
his famous scruples about his marriage to Catherine of Aragon for
the first time. His confessor, Bishop Longland of Lincoln,
remembered that Henry may have mentioned his misgivings as early
as 1522 or 1523. If so, it was a well-kept secret until 1527, when the
king informed first Cardinal Wolsey and then Catherine of his
concern. Prior to that Henry had been, on the whole, a dutiful
husband. At first the marriage appeared to have the qualities of a
chivalric romance: in 1513, for instance, Henry had raced home in
22
advance of his army to present his queen with the keys to Tournai and
Thérouanne, trophies of the desultory campaign of that summer in
northern France. Henry also involved Catherine in affairs of state
publicly, and he listened to her advice privately. This is not to say that
he was not a king of his times. We know that he had extramarital
affairs but, as Professor Elton points out, they were, ‘for a king,
almost ludicrously few’.2 Nevertheless, one illegitimate son, Henry
Fitzroy (later created duke of Richmond), was recognised by the
king, and another child was suspected of being a royal bastard –
William Carey, son of Mary Carey, married sister of Anne Boleyn.
Even so, despite whatever early worries Henry may have had about
the validity of his marriage, he does not seem to have turned away
from his wife entirely until at least 1525, by which time his
infatuation with Anne Boleyn had grown into something far more
threatening to the peace and stability of the realm than a typical court
romance.

The origins of the first marriage

The marriage between Catherine of Aragon and Henry Tudor came


about as a result of the diplomatic machinations of Henry VII.
Seeking recognition of the legitimacy of his dynasty and a strong
continental alliance, he had, in 1489, signed the treaty of Medina del
Campo and committed England to war with France in support of
Spain. Apart from any other benefits that England might have
realised through this treaty, it was agreed that the alliance should be
sealed by the union of the two royal houses by marriage. By 1496,
the negotiations had concluded and Catherine, daughter of
Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain, was to be married to the heir to the
English throne, Arthur Tudor. After some delay, while the kings
haggled over the bride’s dowry and other financial considerations,
Catherine arrived in England in October 1501 and was married in
November. The marriage lasted just five months. Arthur, never as
robust as his younger brother, died of consumption in April 1502,
leaving the marriage alliance in tatters, Catherine a stranger in a
strange land, and Henry VII with a diplomatic problem. After the
death of his own queen in 1503, Henry VII briefly contemplated
taking Catherine for himself but was persuaded against this. He
23
chose to follow the first course of action which had suggested itself
after Arthur’s death: Catherine would be passed on to the next
eligible Tudor heir, Prince Henry.
It was not that simple. Under normal circumstances such a
marriage could not take place. In canon law (the laws of the Church)
there were a number of reasons why a marriage might be deemed
unlawful and therefore prohibited. Usually these impediments arose
as a result of some existing relationship between the two parties
proposing to be married. Close blood relationship, for instance, was
regarded as an impediment, although the Church at the time
considered even fourth cousins to be too closely related – a
somewhat more extensive prohibition than exists today.3 There
were, however, other ways of establishing a relationship which
might prove a hindrance to marriage, and Henry and Catherine were
connected in at least two of these.
In the first place, they were related because Catherine and Arthur
had been married – Henry and Catherine were ‘in-laws’, and any
marriage between them would be considered scandalous by the
Church. This was referred to in canon law as an offence against
‘public honesty’. This relationship need not have been a serious
obstacle, however, as the offence was a matter of human law and
design, and there was no question of overturning any commandment
or law of God. While it could not be ignored, it could be put in order
easily. The Pope could grant, for good and sufficient reason, his
special permission (a bull of dispensation) that the previous
relationship be ignored and that a new marriage take place.
In the second place, Henry and Catherine were related to one
another by what was known as ‘affinity’. Affinity was a relationship
which was thought to be established by sexual intercourse. In other
words, if Catherine and Arthur had consummated their marriage,
then Catherine and all of Arthur’s relations were related in a way
which could not be overlooked. Unlike an impediment on the
grounds of an offence against public honesty, the prohibition of
marriage between persons related by affinity was based not on
human law or contract but on Scripture. Nevertheless, the
established practice of the Church allowed the Pope to dispense with
this impediment also if he found compelling reasons to do so.
24
All of this was known to Henry VII and his councillors when they
came to consider making an application to the Pope to allow this new
marriage. They, like everyone else, assumed that the first marriage
had been consummated and appealed to Rome to remove the
impediment of affinity. Pope Julius II granted this dispensation, and
Henry Tudor was betrothed to Catherine of Aragon in 1503. All
these points were to prove important later, as was the fact that the
only dissenting voice in the whole of the process was that of
Catherine herself, who, for reasons she never made public, always
maintained that the dispensation had been issued in error: she
claimed that her marriage to Arthur Tudor had never been
consummated despite the fact that they had cohabited for some five
months. Her complaint was ignored both in England and in Spain,
and a dispensation for affinity was granted.
Apart from Catherine, everyone seemed to be pleased by the
arrangement. An odd incident in 1505, when Prince Henry publicly
disclaimed the marriage treaty and professed himself unwilling to
honour it in any way, was the only sour note, but the reasons for this
demonstration seem to have had little to do with his own wishes.4
Indeed, virtually the first thing that Henry did when he came into his
inheritance on the death of his father was to make his marriage
official on 11 June 1509. If Henry had any doubts at all, they were
forgotten in a headlong dash to wed the princess to whom he had
been engaged for six years.

Scruples

Why, then, did Henry VIII become disenchanted with his wife?
Human relationships are complex at the best of times, and Henry’s
reasons for wanting to rid himself of his wife after eighteen years of
marriage are not simple. It is important to understand from the
outset, however, that Henry was indeed sincere in his belief that he
had been living in sin. Much of this sincerity may have to do with
Henry’s uncanny ability to convince himself of his own
righteousness in most circumstances, but, once convinced, he was
impossible to shift. That having been said, other reasons may have
come into play.
25
By 1527, Catherine of Aragon was aged 42 and more or less past
the age of childbearing; she was therefore vulnerable to Henry’s
discontent. Despite the fact that she had been pregnant often during
their marriage, she and Henry had been singularly unsuccessful in
producing a male heir who survived for very long. The fault was
ascribed to her: Henry knew that he was capable of producing
healthy male offspring, as we have seen. But the king’s only
legitimate child who did manage to live past infancy was a girl,
Mary, and she was not seen as a viable successor to the throne.
England remembered all too well the chaos into which it could
descend if the leadership at the centre was perceived to be weak: the
reign of the ineffectual Henry VI and the Wars of the Roses which
had consumed most of the latter half of the fifteenth century were not
forgotten. There were no precedents in English history for women
monarchs in any case, and those women who had attempted to win
the crown or wield power (the Empress Matilda and, some would
argue, Henry VI’s wife, Margaret of Anjou) did not inspire
confidence. Henry could not, of course, know that the sixteenth
century would be notable for the number of strong women who
managed the affairs of European states; nor could he know that one
of his own daughters would govern with as much fame and success
as any other monarch in the century (if not more). According to the
wisdom of the times, a queen, as opposed to a king, was weak and
might provide an opportunity for those who sought the restoration of
a house far older than the house of Tudor. What is more, there were
those still about who had better claims to the throne than the upstart
Tudors or any of the bogus pretenders who troubled the first Tudor
reign. The ‘White Rose’, Richard de la Pole, was alive until 1525 (he
died at the battle of Pavia) and he had a powerful friend in the king
of France. The Pole family, most of whom still lived in England and
would eventually suffer at the hands of the Tudors, had Plantagenet
blood, but there were others still who might be persuaded to
remember distant claims that they might make on the crown if the
Tudors appeared the slightest bit shaky. Henry was concerned for his
dynasty and held it to be of no less importance than his father had
before him. What came to be seen as Catherine’s failure to produce
the necessary ingredient for dynastic survival troubled him.
26
Catherine was also vulnerable because of the fluidity of
European affairs. She was rapidly becoming a diplomatic liability to
a king who was beginning to turn away from the old alliance with
Spain which had been cultivated by Henry VII and which he himself
had maintained in his early years. The traditional enemy, France,
now began to look a likely ally after the new king of Spain and Holy
Roman Emperor, Charles Habs burg, appeared to be in the
ascendancy. Although a France ruled by the prematurely old and
tired Louis XII had been Henry’s early victim in 1513–14, a new
French king, Francis I, had rudely awakened Henry from his dreams
of past glory. Francis had shattered the Swiss in northern Italy at
Marignano in 1515. The significance of this victory put Henry’s
much vaunted triumph at the battle of the Spurs in its proper
perspective as a minor skirmish with no decisive outcome. In 1513,
Henry had carried back the keys to two French towns; in 1515,
Francis took all of northern Italy. While Francis held sway an
English and Spanish alliance made a good deal of sense, but after the
emperor crushed the French at Pavia in 1525 the situation altered.
Initially, Henry had seen Pavia as an opportunity to dispose of
France once and for all. Despite his offer to renounce his claim to the
French throne in a generous moment at the Field of Cloth of Gold
some time earlier, Henry still dreamed of making that claim a reality.
He wanted to join forces with the emperor so that they could carve
up France between them. As the emperor was Catherine’s nephew
and had been friendly to England early on, Henry was confident of
success. Charles Habsburg, however, had different ideas. He
rejected both Henry’s plans for France and the hand of Henry’s
daughter in marriage. This did not please the king of England. A
realignment was taking place and there were those, notably the
king’s closest advisor, Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, who saw definite
advantages in breaking the royal connection with the Habsburg
family by annulment of the king’s first marriage and seeking a more
useful union elsewhere, even in France.
Catherine was made all the more vulnerable by the arrival at court
of the young Anne Boleyn. Sister of a former mistress to the king,
daughter of a prominent courtier and niece of the duke of Norfolk,
Anne attracted much attention among the young men of the court. At
length she caught the eye of the king but she did not follow her
27
sister’s path to the king’s bed. Anne was made of entirely different
stuff from Mary Carey and her vision was much more ambitious: she
would not sleep with the king unless she was his lawful wife and
queen. She was ambitious to be sure, but she was no fool and she was
prepared to play a waiting game. She judged the king’s temper and
ego correctly: the more she refused him, the more he pursued her.
The queen could not compete. Beautiful though she had once been,
Catherine was the victim of time and too many pregnancies. What is
more, she was always given to a strange and depressive type of
religious devotion, and this tendency grew more pronounced as she
grew older. Against this, Anne Boleyn must have seemed a breath of
fresh spring air and all the more desirable for being bright, full of life
and, as far as anyone knew, fit to bear children.
The situation, then, was not simple or straightforward. Henry had
real concerns of a diplomatic and dynastic nature which served to
make his marriage to Catherine of Aragon all the more unattractive
by the mid-1520s. It would be wrong to assume that the king would
be moved to contemplate the annulment of his first marriage simply
because a young woman of the court refused to submit to him. Henry
VIII was a man whose ego and appetites were as large as his daunting
physical size, but he was not stupid. While the love that Henry
professed for Anne Boleyn was important, it must not be thought that
the king would have taken such drastic action had there not been
other compelling reasons to cast off his eighteen-year marriage.
Whenever the idea first occurred to him and whatever weight he
gave to his various reasons, by 1527 Henry VIII had resolved to end
his marriage to Catherine of Aragon and take Anne Boleyn as his
wife and queen. Henry had every reason to expect that the Pope
would comply with his wishes, and there were recent precedents: the
marriage of Anne of Brittany to the Emperor Maximilian I was a case
in point and, closer to home, the duke of Suffolk had had his first
marriage annulled. The process was straightforward enough: if
Henry were to be granted an annulment he must seek it at the hands
of the Pope and he must demonstrate some compelling reason why
the marriage had been unlawful from its beginning. Henry was
confident that he could show the original bull of dispensation to
contain some fault which invalidated it. But in this he miscalculated.
Popes were never eager to admit that they had made mistakes, nor
28
were they happy to overturn decisions of their predecessors: in the
earlier cases the circumstances had not required any reversal of a
papal decision. Whatever case Henry chose to put would have to be
a good one.
There were several approaches that might have been taken to
prove the bull to have been in error. One approach was identified by
Wolsey early in the process. Everyone was agreed that a
dispensation of some kind was necessary for Henry to marry
Catherine in the first place. The dispensation that had been issued
appeared to be only for the impediment of affinity. If it could be
proved that the bull had dispensed with a non-existent impediment
(affinity) but had not dispensed with the actual impediment (public
honesty), then the marriage would be seen to be invalid. Catherine,
of course, had always maintained that her marriage to Arthur had
never been consummated, despite what everyone else had assumed
and the boasting of the adolescent Arthur on his wedding-night. She
had always held that the dispensation should have been for public
honesty, not affinity. Henry himself had on more than one occasion
been heard to say that Catherine had come to him a virgin. It was a
legal technicality and hardly a watertight case, as later canon
lawyers were easily able to point out, but it could have served had
circumstances been different.
A second approach, and one which Henry initially seized upon,
was to question whether the Pope had the power to dispense the
impediment of affinity at all. Henry knew that there were at least two
passages in the Holy Scriptures which specifically prohibited the
marriage of a man to his brother’s widow.5 The argument that Henry
constructed on the basis of these two passages grew over the course
of time. At first he seems to have allowed that the Pope might have
the power to dispense the Levitical laws but had done so improperly
in this case. As evidence he cited the problems that Catherine had in
child-bearing. Because the prohibitions specifically stated that those
who broke the law would be childless, Henry saw this as proof of the
unlawful nature of his marriage. The fact that Mary had survived was
irrelevant to Henry because, as king, he considered the production of
a male heir all-important. Clearly, God was punishing him for
breaking the Levitical laws by depriving him and the realm of a
suitable heir to the throne.
29
As time went on, however, Henry’s argument grew into an attack
on the Pope’s power to dispense any law that might be considered
‘divine’ rather than ‘human’. The Levitical passages represented
God’s law and, as such, were beyond the competence of any Pope or
human being to overrule or ignore. This attack on the Pope’s
authority made the writings of Tyndale and the early reformers very
attractive to the king because they elevated the importance of the
Word of God (the Holy Bible) above that of the traditions of the
Church and the Pope. An enormous amount of time and energy was
committed to proving this case, but with little success. The fact that
there was a contradictory passage in the book of Deuteronomy
which, far from prohibiting a man to marry his brother’s childless
widow, appeared to command it was a problem which was never
really explained away satisfactorily.6 What is more, the weight of the
evidence from the early Christian Fathers, from more contemporary
theological thought and from papal precedent was overwhelmingly
against Henry’s position. In fact, Henry’s argument was never
convincing to anyone who did not actively want to be convinced.
The canon lawyers and theologians of Rome, and the supporters of
Catherine of Aragon in England, had by far the better of the dispute.
A final approach was to challenge the assumptions under which
the bull of dispensation was issued in the first place. Whenever a bull
is granted to allow an action which would normally be contrary to
canon law, some good cause must be shown for overlooking the
canon law in question. This is true in all cases as dispensations are
not simply issued arbitrarily. In the case of the dispensation which
permitted Henry’s marriage to Catherine, the cause that was cited in
the bull was that the marriage would ensure peace between England
and Spain. It was therefore argued that the bull was invalid because
England and Spain were not at war, had been allies for some time
before the marriage and needed no insurance of peace between them.
The premise on which the bull was promulgated was false, in other
words. Moreover, even if the premise were correct, was this a cause
weighty enough to justify the human suspension of what was, after
all, God’s law? Technical problems with the bull were also seized on.
The bull had been written as if Henry himself were making the
request, but he was under age at the time and therefore incapable of
suing for the dispensation. In addition, by the time the marriage was
30
solemnised all those who had made the original application and for
whom, presumably, the cause of peace had been so important were
dead. This entire line of argument sought to challenge the motivation
of Julius II in granting the original bull. As that motivation was seen
to be faulty, the bull itself was therefore argued to be void.
At various times during the proceedings these arguments
surfaced and were pursued. In order to make his case, Henry turned
to scholars, lawyers and theologians in England and, eventually, on
the continent. Henry’s quest for an annulment would become a
drawn-out process, finally being thrown into the lap of the English
Parliament. However, in the first instance, Henry turned to the most
powerful man in England, apart from himself, to make his desires a
reality: Thomas Cardinal Wolsey, archbishop of York, legate a latere
(the Pope’s personal representative) and chancellor of England.

Wolsey

Thomas Wolsey had risen from modest beginnings to a position of


prime importance in the government of Henry VIII by a combination
of hard work, good luck and inborn ability. Although, as one must be
careful to remember, Henry VIII was always in charge despite the
fact that he was never terribly interested in the day-to-day business
of government (most especially in his early years), Wolsey, among
all the king’s councillors, came to dominate. Many who did not
know the king assumed that Wolsey had a good deal more power
than he did. Perhaps, in unguarded moments, even the cardinal
himself believed this. Nevertheless, as Professor Guy has noted,
although the king’s ministers sometimes enjoyed a great degree of
freedom in pursuing their policies and in managing the affairs of
state, ‘they operated within the limits of Henry’s trust and
confidence’.7 This was true of all Henry’s councillors, no matter
how important they may have appeared: they did their jobs at the
pleasure of the king, and those who displeased the king were in
serious jeopardy – as both Wolsey and, later, Thomas Cromwell
discovered.
Born in Ipswich in 1472, the son of a butcher, Wolsey possessed
an intellect and ability which were recognised early. In a way that
was more typical of previous centuries and was just beginning to
31
change in the sixteenth, he made his way to power through the
Church. After a series of ecclesiastical appointments which brought
him to the attention of Henry VII, Wolsey’s potential as a diplomat
was recognised and he was entrusted with several missions of
importance, gaining in consequence more substantial ecclesiastical
offices for his support.8 After the death of Henry VII, Wolsey
remained in government service and proved to be of invaluable
assistance to the young Henry VIII during the French campaign of
1513. If this campaign was a success (and the king thought that it was
despite the lack of any real strategic gains), Wolsey was in large part
responsible for it and for the beneficial peace that was negotiated
afterwards. Above all, it earned him Henry’s trust. From about 1514
until his fall in 1529, Wolsey was Henry’s most powerful minister.
In fact, Wolsey held unprecedented power for a subject of the
Crown. By 1514 he had been made archbishop of York, and in the
next year the Pope made him a cardinal. In 1515 he became
chancellor of England. In 1524 he managed to have his status as a
papal legate a latere made permanent (an unusual appointment) and
so combined in himself enormous power over both the Church and
the State: Wolsey was in a position to achieve much. His
opportunities for the reform of the Church, of the government and of
the legal system were limitless. All needed attention and in all areas
he managed to make some changes. But he was criticised for his
apparent lack of scruple and because he was known to be one of the
worst offenders in those abuses for which the clergy were starting to
be maligned. He was a notable pluralist, always holding more than
one bishopric and a host of other Church offices besides; he ignored
his promise of celibacy and was the father of several children; he
appointed his own children to benefices and was guilty of both
nepotism and the ordination of minors; and he was known to sell
ecclesiastical offices (simony). All of his reforms, whether in the
Church or in the government or the law, were tinged with the
suspicion that they were undertaken with his own best interests at
heart – and this was true to a large extent. His arrogance and his
ostentatious display of his personal wealth were also resented and he
made many enemies at the English court: this would prove critical
later when Anne Boleyn and her supporters actively worked against
the cardinal. Whatever his worth as councillor to the king and leader
32
of the Church, Wolsey was viewed by many as exemplifying all that
was wrong with the Church and all that was in need of changing.
However, Wolsey was most interested in foreign affairs. It was
obvious that the most powerful monarchs in Europe were Francis I
of France and Charles V, the Holy Roman Emperor. The struggle
between these two was central in European affairs, and Wolsey was
determined to keep both England and himself as close to the centre
as possible. The question was, where did England fit into the
struggle between these two sixteenth-century super-powers?
As Wolsey attempted to answer this diplomatic question, Henry
approached him in 1527 with the news that he was interested in
seeking an annulment of his marriage with Catherine. Far from
being closed to the idea, Wolsey saw some real possibilities. But the
king had not made his intention to marry Anne Boleyn clear to his
minister; if he had, Wolsey might have received Henry’s news with
less enthusiasm. To the chancellor, Catherine was a symbol of a
previous alliance which had outlived its usefulness. Securing the
annulment and the king’s remarriage to a French princess might be a
more advantageous arrangement for England. It never occurred to
Wolsey that the king was making all this fuss over a pretty young girl
at court, and he was horrified when the truth of the king’s intentions
finally became obvious. Yet Wolsey was prepared to do all that he
could to further the king’s desires – that had always been his worth
to the king and it would remain so. As legate a latere, Wolsey had the
power to make the necessary judgement in this case. He could grant
the annulment in the name of the Pope but his decision would not be
final: should Catherine choose to appeal against his decision, the
case would automatically revert to Rome, where there was no
certainty that it would be resolved in the king’s favour. There was
little doubt that Catherine would make such an appeal. This would,
of course, complicate matters and, as we shall see, as time went on
the likelihood of a decision at Rome in Catherine’s favour became
almost inevitable. Henry, on the other hand, wanted absolute
certainty that his annulment would be granted, and so he and his
chancellor moved swiftly and secretly.
In May 1527, Wolsey called the king before a secret tribunal.
Wolsey sat with the archbishop of Canterbury, Warham, to establish
whether the king’s marriage was lawful. Acting in his capacity as
33
legate a latere, Wolsey would hear the king’s explanation for a
marriage which appeared to be in violation of canon law. Once
Henry had put his case, Wolsey would declare the marriage in
violation of the law and therefore annulled. This would be confirmed
by the Pope, and Henry would be free to marry whomever he wished.
This plan was destroyed by two problems. First, once she got wind
of what was being planned, Catherine was not prepared to cooperate
and immediately began to make plans to appeal to Rome. Second,
Charles V sacked Rome in May 1527 and the Pope became the
prisoner of the emperor.
Catherine had no intention of allowing the case to be settled in
England. She wrote immediately to her nephew, Charles V, and
informed him of what her husband was up to. Henry, with staggering
ineptitude, failed to prevent this news from reaching Charles even
though he knew that the letter was written and who was to carry it.
Once Charles understood what was happening he made his
displeasure very clear to Henry. Even so, this did not necessarily
mean that Henry’s cause could not get a favourable hearing at Rome.
After the sack of Rome, the Pope was in desperate need of friends
and welcomed English interest in his plight. English support for the
Pope might, therefore, be traded for the Pope’s compliance in the
‘King’s Great Matter’. Plans were laid to allow Wolsey to set up a
kind of papal court in exile at Avignon while the Pope was in
captivity and there exercise near-papal powers by proxy while Pope
Clement was unable to act. It was a good plan, but Wolsey was
stymied; the plan relied on the cooperation of the College of
Cardinals, which, for a variety of reasons, refused to go along with
Wolsey’s idea. The final blow was the release of Pope Clement VII
in December 1527 which rendered the plan unviable. Failing in this,
Wolsey and Henry attempted to get the Pope to grant the power to
decide the case in England without the right of appeal.
By the end of 1527, the situation in Italy was fluid again. The
French were back in strength and the Pope, although no longer
resident in Rome, was not under the emperor’s direct control.
English ambassadors were sent to the Pope to urge him to grant
Wolsey the power to decide the case without referral to Rome, but
Clement was not disposed openly to support Henry’s case. His
position was tenuous. He knew the power of the emperor only too
34
well and was afraid that French control in northern Italy was only
temporary: he hedged his bets. In the summer of 1528, he sent
Cardinal Campeggio to England with the necessary powers to
resolve the annulment. However, these powers were to be kept secret
and Campeggio was instructed to delay until the political situation
in Italy became clearer. Campeggio found enough reasons to put off
hearing Henry’s case until May 1529, by which time it was apparent
that the emperor was not going to allow the French to dominate Italy.
In June the battle of Landriano decided the issue. The French were
defeated and the Pope signed the treaty of Barcelona, swearing his
support for the emperor and the empire. In England, Campeggio
adjourned the hearing of Henry’s case, ostensibly for the summer: in
fact, it was apparent to all observers that the case would never be
heard. Wolsey had failed, and there were those who were poised to
take advantage of his failure. The supporters of Anne Boleyn now
moved against Wolsey in strength.
The king was no closer to his annulment. He became increasingly
frustrated by the cardinal’s lack of success and began to look
elsewhere for solutions. Suggestions were made as early as July
1529 which were designed to deal with the king’s problems and, not
incidentally, destroy the power of the cardinal. Lord Darcy
submitted a variety of complaints against Wolsey, and proposed a
Parliament to deal with both the cardinal and a number of perceived
evils in the Church. Anne Boleyn’s supporters had even begun to
suggest that the entire matter ought to be dealt with in England and
that the solution might be found in the destruction of papal authority
in the realm.9 Although not entirely persuaded, Henry was moved
not only to dismiss Wolsey but to call a Parliament to meet in
November 1529. In doing so Henry ‘let slip the dogs of war’ against
Rome and took the first step down the road to Reformation.

35
3
The break with Rome

By the late summer of 1529, all the king’s plans were in tatters. He
had hoped, of course, to achieve his annulment with a minimum of
fuss, but an uncooperative Catherine of Aragon and an ever-
changing political situation in Europe had made a nonsense of such
efforts. Henry could count on no help from Catherine herself; the
idea that she would willingly go along with the divorce or that she
would simply roll over without an appeal to Rome if presented with
a fait accompli was always far-fetched.
Henry was furious. While Wolsey might be punished for his
failures, this still left the king no closer to his goal. Realistically,
there was little Henry could do. Few good ideas suggested
themselves immediately, and those that were put forward were
rather too radical for a king who, despite his injured pride, was not
yet prepared to defy the Pope and the Church to the point of schism.
In so far as there was a policy after the disastrous summer of 1529, it
was to try to convince the Pope to bend to the king’s will. However,
the methods to achieve that policy were unclear. The government
began to drift, and important factions struggled to dominate the
court.
The most important of these factions was in the Privy Council.
Led by the duke of Norfolk and including Lord Darcy and Stephen
36
Gardiner (now bishop of Winchester), its members were religious
conservatives and had all played an important part in the downfall of
Cardinal Wolsey. Although they were intent on pleasing the king,
they had few constructive contributions to make on the matter of the
divorce. A second faction was made up of supporters of Anne
Boleyn, who was herself a powerful and manipulative influence on
the king. The members of this faction were prepared to suggest far
more radical solutions to the king’s problems. Including such men as
Thomas Cranmer and Thomas Cromwell, they tended to be
influenced by radical religious opinions and were therefore ‘not
afraid to extend royal power in Church and state at the clergy’s
expense’.1 To these men, the simplest way to deal with the Gordian
knot of the divorce was to cut it in two, to act independently, and if
that meant a clean break with the Church of Rome (as it most
assuredly did), then so be it. The third important faction at court was
composed of those who supported the queen. Including such
prelates as Bishops John Fisher and Cuthbert Tunstall, and the
lawyer Thomas More, they were committed to the defence of the
Church and Catherine. They could not be ignored. Fisher, in
particular, proved an eloquent and tenacious opponent of the divorce
as well as standing firmly against the inroads made by the Protestant
heresy. Thomas More soon became valuable to the faction for
reasons beyond his obvious intellectual skills.
The immediate result of such a faction-ridden court was to create
a kind of paralysis of policy. Henry’s appointment of More as
chancellor in Wolsey’s place had been intended to break the political
stalemate: initially the king was unaware of More’s support for
Catherine. A brilliant common lawyer and a humanist who was
concerned about the state of the Church but committed to it, More
may have appeared acceptable to all parties and capable of bringing
about some kind of consensus. But his appointment proved to be a
mistake. His much-vaunted and valued integrity would not allow
him to accept the post unless Henry was aware that he could not
support the divorce. While this disappointed the king, More was still
given the post as he was the best man available and on the
understanding that he would not be asked to involve himself in the
matter of the divorce. More’s position as chancellor necessarily
made him privy to the king’s plan, an awkward position for one who
supported the queen, but one which he may have used to her
37
advantage.2 The situation was uncertain. From the summer of 1529
until the ascendancy of Thomas Cromwell in 1532, Henry cast about
for a clear way forward.

The Reformation Parliament

It might be attractive to see Henry’s call for a Parliament as part of a


cunning master-plan to deal with his domestic troubles without
recourse to Rome and, in the process, to take to himself the power
and wealth of the Church. This has, of course, been suggested and
there were those about him who saw much to be gained were the king
to use Parliament to break the power of the Church in England.
However, there is little evidence to suggest that this was ever in
Henry’s mind when he issued the summons in August 1529.3
In fact, Henry’s reasons for calling Parliament when he did are
not immediately apparent. It may have been his original intention to
use the Parliament as a platform to deal with Wolsey. Indeed, Lord
Darcy’s articles (see p. 35 above) amounted to a compilation of
charges to be made against the cardinal in Parliament, effectively
accusing him of treason. By the time Parliament actually sat, Wolsey
had been dealt with by other means: Henry had not forgotten his
good and faithful servant and moved to protect him from the mortal
danger that a Parliament would have exposed him to. Wolsey might
be disgraced but he would not be destroyed.
But Wolsey had made many enemies in his time and they were by
no means finished with him. If Wolsey were not permanently
removed from the scene, there was always the chance of a recovery.
Those who had particular reasons for hating the former chancellor,
such as Anne Boleyn, who blamed him for the failure of the divorce
effort, might see a Parliament as a way of attacking the cardinal
indirectly. There was sufficient animosity in all quarters to suggest
that much of the action taken against the Church in the first session
of the Reformation Parliament far from being designed to challenge
papal jurisdiction in England, was aimed at preventing Wolsey from
making any kind of political come-back.4 Yet Henry does not appear
to have had any intention of punishing his former chancellor any
further by the time it met.

38
The sequence of events leading up to the Reformation Parliament
may be helpful in understanding the king’s decision to call
Parliament. All through July 1529, it was increasingly apparent that
the plans to resolve the divorce in England were doomed. On 23 July,
Cardinal Campeggio adjourned the hearings for the summer on the
thinnest of pretexts, and in the light of political events in Italy it
seemed unlikely that anything further was to be gained by travelling
down this route. Unable to secure his divorce in the relatively safe
courts of England, and with Rome hostile to his intentions, Henry
had very few options left open to him. On 9 August, Henry issued the
necessary summonses for a Parliament. On the same day, he took
steps to bring Wolsey before the court of King’s Bench on charges of
violating the Statutes of Provisors and Praemunire, in essence
protecting Wolsey from Parliament. By September it was clear that
the king had softened towards his former counsellor, despite the
pressure he was coming under from Wolsey’s enemies. He made a
number of gestures which were conciliatory. He granted the cardinal
an interview (over the strenuous objections of Anne Boleyn); he sent
a gift; more importantly, he threw Wolsey a lifeline. Although
indicted at the King’s Bench and stripped of his power and most of
his wealth, Wolsey was not thrown into prison and was permitted to
keep some of his property. It was not beyond the bounds of
possibility that Wolsey might recover power, and the cardinal’s
enemies knew it. This point was hammered home soon after
Parliament met in November, when Henry remitted part of Wolsey’s
sentence.
But if the king did not intend to summon a Parliament to destroy
Wolsey, what other reason could he have had? Faced with the fact
that he had run into a dead-end in trying to pursue his divorce down
a more or less usual road, with a divided and faction-ridden court,
and with an increasingly uncertain diplomatic scene, it may very
well be that the king considered that summoning Parliament was the
only constructive move that he could make. And so on 3 November,
amid great pomp and ceremony, the Parliament convened at
Blackfriars with only the vaguest of purposes. Thomas More’s
opening address did not make matters any clearer. The crimes
alleged against his predecessor were enumerated but it was made
clear that deciding the penalties for those crimes was out of the hands
of the Parliament, as Henry wished it to be. The only reasons that
39
More could summon up for the gathering of the Lords and Commons
were that certain laws were in need of bringing up to date, and that
new laws were needed to deal with problems that had only recently
been discovered among the people. While there is no surviving copy
of this speech, all reports of it are similar; what is striking is that it
was no more specific than it was. Which were the laws that needed
reworking? What new problems had arisen? It was all very vague.
The Parliament met without any clear direction from the
government and without any clear idea of what it was expected to do.
Once the Parliament met, however, there were those who were
able to use it for their own ends. The Mercers’ Company of London
presented a list of grievances to do with trade but included one article
which was extremely critical of the clergy. This anticlerical article
found supporters in the Commons and, after a discussion in the
House, a committee was assembled to draw up legislation to deal
with the abuses that had been raised. Three bills emerged. They did
not reflect the full extent of the abuses discussed – the debate in
committee had been far-ranging – and the Commons may have been
uncertain of just how far they could go, but they touched on several
sensitive matters.
The first bill to be presented dealt with the practice of mortuary
fees.* In practice there was no set fee, and the clergy usually
demanded what they thought could be paid. Often fees were waived
entirely, but some felt that the practice was offensive and had been
abused. It was the refusal to pay the mortuary fee, for instance, that
had been the flashpoint for the Hunne case (see p.16 above), and
there were those in the House who would have remembered that case
very well. The Commons passed the bill regulating mortuary fees
without difficulty and there was little or no objection made in the
Lords when the bill first came up for debate.
Probate fees* had been another bone of contention identified by
the Commons. In drawing up the second bill, the Commons alleged
that the Church courts charged excessive fees for probate, that the
process was delayed unnecessarily in order to extract further fees
and that bribery was common practice. Whereas there had been
general agreement in the Lords that mortuary fees were in need of
regulation, the bishops in the Lords did not concede the necessity to
regulate probate fees. The bill had also been written in language that
some of the bishops in the Lords found offensive. Their reaction was
40
predictable: they were loudly opposed to the bill. The leading voice
in opposition was that of John Fisher, bishop of Rochester, who
openly accused the framers of this bill of a lack of faith and hinted at
heresy. It was an intemperate outburst and led to an angry riposte
from the Commons and an interview with the king, who was
displeased. Despite the ill-feeling all around, committees with
members from both Houses were set up to consider both the bills
before them. When the Lords Spiritual would not be moved from
their opposition, a long and acrimonious debate followed which saw
the sympathies of the temporal Lords begin to swing towards the
Commons.
The clergy were sufficiently well represented in the Lords to be
able to prevent the bills from being enacted. In order to break the
deadlock, Henry used a subtle threat. Probate and mortuary fees
were not the only issues facing Parliament and so Henry used other
legislation to demonstrate his displeasure with the clergy blocking
the anticlerical bills. In exchange for the passage of a bill which
relieved him of some £350,000 of debt incurred through forced
loans, the king offered a general pardon. General pardons were
nothing new and included the usual exceptions for capital offences,
but this pardon, pointedly, did not extend to clergy guilty of
violations of the Statutes of Praemunire or Provisors. Both of these
statutes had served as willows with which to whip the clergy into line
in the past, and excluding them from the general pardon suggested
that the king might wish to use them again. The clergy took the point,
and the bills regulating probate and mortuary fees were passed into
law, albeit in a somewhat revised form.
If the clergy had taken the hint with regards to mortuary and
probate fees, they still offered stiff resistance to the third bill aimed
at clerical reform, that emerged from the Commons during this
session. This bill was intended to limit the practice of pluralism and
non-residence, as well as restricting the kinds of businesses – usually
agricultural – the clergy might hold in addition to their cures. The
justification of pluralism and non-residence had always been that it
provided necessary income for clergy whose talents could be used
best outside the parochial ministry as chaplains to bishops or
nobility, as diplomats or as civil servants. While there had been
abuses (Thomas Wolsey was always pointed to as the arch-abuser),
the practice, if regulated, was seen as necessary. The Church felt that
41
the regulations imposed on pluralism and non-residence were
already adequate and it was here that the bishops in the Lords drew
the line at lay interference in the governance of the Church. The king
was again prevailed upon to find a solution and he did so with
another joint committee. The lay members of the committee were
not persuaded by the arguments put forward by the bishops, and
positions hardened. Pressure was brought to bear and a compromise
was reached. The bill that emerged was diluted with innumerable
exceptions and qualifications in order to make it acceptable to the
bishops, but one proviso remained particularly disturbing for some:
applications for papal dispensations for non-residence were
prohibited. In an uncertain and halting way the attack on papal
jurisdiction had begun, even if most of those who passed this bill
were unaware of its full import.
A precedent had been set. Now the Reformation of the Church no
longer seemed to be a matter for the Church itself but one for the laity
and, in particular, for Parliament. The Convocation of Canterbury,
the ecclesiastical equivalent of Parliament which traditionally met at
the same time, manifestly failed to enact any significant internal
reforming legislation and by default, then, appeared to be
surrendering the field to the laity. Those who supported Catherine of
Aragon recognised the danger at once. As Professor Guy points out,
‘if Parliament could reform the clergy, perhaps it could instruct the
bishops to pronounce the divorce’.5 Whether Parliament had
overstepped its competence in passing the bills for the reform of the
clergy became a moot point: Parliament clearly felt that it had the
competence to legislate in such matters. When the Parliament broke
up before Christmas it was apparent that the initiative now lay
outside the Church. While this did not make the break with Rome
inevitable, it did provide the king with another avenue to explore in
pursuit of his divorce.

The assault on the clergy

Parliament had originally been prorogued until just after Easter


1530. As it was, it did not meet again until January 1531. The official
reason given for the postponement was that there was plague in
London, which there most assuredly was. However, there were other
42
good reasons why Henry was content to leave the Parliament
suspended for the time being.
All through 1530, the king was concentrating primarily on
resolving the divorce issue. Nevertheless, no sense of a coherent
plan emerges and it may very well be that Henry had no clear idea of
what to do. He was certainly not planning to break with Rome at this
point. He solicited the favourable opinions of the major universities
in Europe, but this would do little to persuade the Pope of the justice
of his cause and, in any case, most of these opinions were hardly
unequivocal in his favour. In March 1530, as part of the process set
in motion by Catherine’s appeal, the Pope ordered Henry to Rome so
that the case might be settled. Although urged to take some kind of
action, the king chose delaying tactics. In June he sent to the Pope a
letter signed by eighty-three of the king’s supporters, ingenuously
wondering why his case had not been acted upon favourably and
issuing the veiled threat of schism. The Pope was neither impressed
nor worried by this, and his reply was patronising and calm. At
Rome, Henry’s ambassadors were appealing for a postponement in
the proceedings at the very least. Hopes that the divorce could be
settled without drastic measures being taken were receding even
further.
However, in the late summer of 1530, Henry received a massive
work put together by Thomas Cranmer and Edward Foxe entitled
Collectanea satis copiosa. The document was a collection of
historical and legal evidence from ancient sources which ‘proved’
that the divorce desired by Henry was justified and, more
importantly, established that the king of England had always
enjoyed sovereignty over the Church within his realm. Drawing
heavily on the Holy Scriptures, some dubious historical traditions
and the work of the fifteenth-century supporters of the Conciliarist
movement (who argued for the supremacy of General Councils over
the authority of the Pope), the evidence as presented suggested that
Henry could act on his divorce unilaterally and that Rome had no
right to interfere.
Even so, Henry was not ready yet to break with Rome. The
opinions of the European universities and the Collectanea were seen
as tools with which the Pope might be persuaded to grant the divorce,
not as the theoretical foundation for schism. As there was little else
Henry could do by the autumn of 1530 other than attempt to put some
43
kind of pressure on the Pope, he did this by attacking the clergy with
the powers he already had in law.
His first moves were hesitant. He identified fifteen clergy, most
of whom were found among Catherine’s supporters, and accused
them of Praemunire in that they had accepted Wolsey’s authority as
a papal legate. The charge was based on a technicality – as we have
seen, kings always felt at liberty to ignore this statute – but it was,
nevertheless, intimidating. These cases were never pursued
because, as early as October 1530, a new plan was devised which
would charge all the clergy with Praemunire.
Originally, Henry may have been persuaded to expand on this
theme by councillors fearful of a recovery of power by Wolsey. In
1530 the cardinal was stirring again and plotting against his enemies.
This was taken as an ill omen by those who still feared him. A blanket
charge of Praemunire against the clergy for accepting Wolsey’s
authority would clearly discredit the cardinal and cut away any
support he might still command. The first move was to arrest Wolsey
and neutralise him in the autumn of 1530. This policy proved all the
more effective when the cardinal died late in November 1530,
ending his bid to regain power for ever. But the idea of applying
pressure on all the clergy still seemed a good way of pressurising the
Pope even though Wolsey was gone. When Parliament reconvened
on 16 January 1531, the Convocation of Canterbury was already in
session and already worried about what the king might do.
What Henry intended became clear very early in the session. He
offered the clergy a pardon for their crimes if they would pay an
enormous sum of over £118,000 by way of a subsidy to protect the
realm from either rebellion or invasion.6 The clergy did not see the
imminence of invasion quite as clearly as Henry claimed to see it but
after some initial resistance, while the clergy still thought they had
some room to manoeuvre, it became apparent that the king was in an
uncompromising mood. When it was pointed out that under the
Statute of Praemunire all clerical property could be forfeit to the
Crown, the clergy agreed to Henry’s demands. The financial
exactions that Henry demanded were bad enough, but when it
became apparent in the prologue to the articles (which were the
instrument of the subsidy) that Henry was claiming more than the
clergy’s cash, the reaction in Convocation was furious. Henry was
now demanding that the clergy recognise him as supreme head of the
44
Church and clergy, a demand that the clergy could not agree to in the
slightest. By some hard bargaining Archbishop Warham was able to
find a compromise solution whereby Henry might be entitled
‘singular protector, only and supreme lord, and as far as the law of
Christ allows even supreme head’: as the law of Christ (by this the
clergy understood canon law) would not allow Henry to be supreme
head in the place of the Pope, this effectively negated his claim. But
the political reality, that the king might effectively extort money and
other concessions from the Church, left the clergy in a state of shock.
The silence that greeted the announcement of this compromise in
February 1531 was taken as assent, but it was hardly unambiguous.
In effect the clergy were watching their independence being taken
away and there was little they could do about it, despite the fact that
they had managed to deflate the king’s claims to supreme headship
with a qualifying clause that made a nonsense of them. The damage
was done. Parliament had already invaded areas that the Church was
responsible for by legislating on ecclesiastical reforms. Now the
king was claiming for himself the authority over the Church which
had always belonged to the Pope. The pardon that Henry had
promised to the clergy passed through Parliament just before the
session closed at Easter, and some among both the clergy and the
laity must have wondered just how far the king was willing to go to
secure his divorce.
Despite the pressure Henry was bringing to bear on the clergy in
his own realm, he made little headway at Rome. The Pope had
forbidden Henry to remarry, and if he had not specifically ruled on
the validity of the first marriage as he was being encouraged to do by
Charles V, this was hardly seen as a hopeful sign. Henry’s patience
was wearing thin. The third session of Parliament met in January
1532 and would prove to be critical. Whereas in 1531 he had made
demands with menaces and seen modest results, in 1532 he would
take firm action. In this he was assisted by Thomas Cromwell.

Cromwell

Thomas Cromwell was born sometime around 1485 and had a


chequered career. A mercenary, a merchant and, finally, a common
lawyer, he was a man of both experience and great gifts. In many
ways he was a chameleon – sympathetic to Protestantism and the
45
anticlerical temper of the times, he nevertheless served Wolsey
faithfully as an attorney and rose to importance in the cardinal’s
service. When Wolsey fell, Cromwell did not desert him but
continued to manage the cardinal’s business and to communicate
with him, even though, as a Member of Parliament in 1529,
Cromwell was actively working against the clergy by taking a
leading role in the framing of anticlerical legislation.
In the vacuum created by the fall of Wolsey, Cromwell’s
organisational and administrative gifts stood out. He was a man of
intelligence and vision and if he was later criticised for ruthlessness,
he was without rancour or vindictiveness. Cromwell was purposeful
and directed. It has been argued that he was the architect of a
‘revolution’ in Tudor government in that he took what was
essentially the medieval household system and transformed it into a
modern bureaucratic state.7 He has also been credited with putting
the concept of an ‘Imperial kingship’ into practice, whereby the king
commanded not only temporal but spiritual affairs in his realm in
much the same way as the first Christian emperor, Constantine, was
thought to have done. While this analysis has been challenged since
it was first put forward, there can be little doubt that Cromwell was
responsible for significant changes made in Tudor government.
What is more, if these ideas did not originate with Cromwell and
were very much a collaborative effort on the part of theologians,
lawyers and political theorists of the day as well as the king,
Cromwell was nonetheless pivotal in the development of legislation
which established the theory and practice of Tudor government
throughout the rest of the sixteenth century.8 In 1532, Cromwell
brought forward a solution to the king’s problems. Having proved
useful to the king, he now became the ‘principal manager of
parliamentary affairs’.9
Cromwell had been at the centre of the anticlerical debates of
1529 and, although only three reform bills had been introduced, the
discussion of clerical abuses had been wide-ranging. Cromwell had
been deeply involved in the framing of two petitions in 1529 which
were never presented to the king. Both were highly critical of Church
policy but the second made the point that the ordinances passed by
the Convocations were outside the authority of the king. This
petition was revived by Cromwell in 1532 as the ‘Supplication
46
against the Ordinaries’,* and presented to the king in March. Henry
passed this docu ment on to the Convocation of Canterbury. For
centuries the Church had existed as a kind of state within the state.
Responsible for making its own laws and enforcing them, it had
preserved a useful, if largely theoretical, independence. Now a new
message was being sent: the government was threatening to invade
the traditional prerogatives of the Church and deprive the clergy of
their right to govern themselves. Despite a spirited defence, drawn
up principally by Stephen Gardiner, the king was not moved and
publicly declared that he was displeased that the clergy appeared to
be divided in their loyalties between king and Pope.
While the king was pursuing this train of thought, he made the
first direct attack on the Church of Rome with the First Act of
Annates. Annates were a payment that all bishops made to Rome
before they were confirmed in their sees, and they represented a
significant portion of a bishop’s yearly income. They also
represented one of the more important sources of papal revenue from
England. Objected to by Wyclif in the late fourteenth century, they
were a long-standing grievance as most bishops were forced to
borrow heavily to meet the cost. Henry now moved to end the
payment of annates on the grounds that they represented too heavy a
burden on the bishops and that they took too much money out of the
realm. In anticipation of the Pope’s response to this, which would
have been to withhold his permission to create new bishops in
England, the bill provided for the consecration of bishops without
papal authority. This radical move, which amounted to ignoring
papal authority, was not easily passed in Parliament. The bishops in
the Lords, even though the bill would relieve them of the obligation
to pay annates, were opposed because of its assault on papal
jurisdiction and, possibly, saw opposition as a way of registering
their disapproval of the ‘Supplication’. Many of the lay members of
Parliament were also unsure, forcing the king to take the unusual
(perhaps innovative) step of calling for a division in the House.10
The stiff opposition to the bill forced Henry to include a clause which
made the bill subject to confirmation by the king by letters patent.
Although not part of his original plan, the clause was useful not only
in allowing the passage of the bill but in adding another dimension
to it. Having succeeded in bullying the clergy earlier, now Henry
could try the same tactic with the Pope: if the Pope acceded to
47
Henry’s wishes in the matter of the divorce, the bill would be
forgotten; if not, the bill would be enforced.
When this bill had passed through Parliament, Henry turned his
attention to the Convocation of Canterbury and to the earlier theme
of the independence of the clergy within his realm. In May 1532,
Henry sent the clergy meeting in Convocation a list of demands
which clearly restricted their rights to legislate for the Church
independently of royal authority. The articles he submitted to the
clergy required that a royal licence be granted before any canons or
ordinances were enacted by Convocation; that Convocation itself
should not meet without the express permission of the king; and that
a review of canon law should to be undertaken by a committee (half
lay, half clerical) appointed by the king. Having already established
the competence of Parliament to legislate for the reform of the
Church, Henry summoned a deputation from the Commons and
asked them to consider what ought to be done about the ambiguous
position of the clergy. This was a clear threat designed to intimidate
the clergy into taking action on the articles Henry had submitted to
them. It worked. On 15 May, the formal submission of the clergy was
approved by the Convocation, although it is evident that this
represented more of a surrender than of actual approval. While the
submission of the clergy had a devastating effect on them, it had one
other important consequence: Thomas More resigned the
chancellorship. With More gone, the radical faction under Thomas
Cromwell now held the king’s confidence.
Despite all this, Henry was still no closer to his divorce. By the
end of 1532, however, the diplomatic situation had improved to the
extent that Henry believed that he could see the light at the end of the
tunnel. Any peace treaty between the two major continental powers,
France and the Holy Roman Empire, was always going to be fragile,
and the most recent treaty, agreed at Cambrai in 1529, proved to be
so as well. While there were no immediate hostilities, Francis I was
seeking some diplomatic advantage and gained it by announcing the
betrothal of his son Henry Valois to Catherine de Medici, one of the
Pope’s relatives. Henry VIII revived the French alliance in the hope
that with the support of Francis I, who now had some influence with
the Pope, the divorce might be settled. It was not to be, but the
possibility that Henry might finally achieve his annulment must
have seemed real. Anne Boleyn, who had refused adamantly to share
48
the king’s bed before she was queen, was now apparently so
confident of success that she finally relented, and she was pregnant
before the end of 1532. This, of course, put things in a new light.
Anne, who was able to manipulate the situation effectively, used her
pregnancy to pressurise the king into taking some kind of firm
action. One major block to progress had always been the refusal of
Archbishop Warham to defy the Pope. In August 1532, however,
Warham died and Henry was free to appoint anyone he chose to fill
the highest of ecclesiastical offices in England. He selected Thomas
Cranmer. A little-known scholar without ambition, Cranmer had
been part of the Cambridge group that gathered in the White Horse
Tavern. He had first come to Henry’s notice when he helped to put
together the Collectanea, and the gathering of opinions from the
European universities had been his idea. He was certainly not a
strong candidate for the position of archbishop but he was known to
be a supporter of the faction of Anne Boleyn and Thomas Cromwell.
His appointment, no doubt, owed much to their suggestion. Cranmer
was willing to do what the king wished in a way that Warham never
had been. Now, with an archbishop who would not thwart him, and
convinced that Anne was bearing him the son and heir he desired,
Henry married her on 24 January 1533.

The royal supremacy

For the time being, however, the marriage remained secret.


Although Henry had finally taken the step that he had desired, the
legal machinery had not yet been set up to give this marriage even
the appearance of legality. The Pope had not annulled the king’s first
marriage and had expressly forbidden Henry to marry again. The
answer to this problem was already being prepared. Using the
evidence provided by the Collectanea and his own ideas, Cromwell
devised the statute which would free the king from the Pope’s
jurisdiction. The Act in Restraint of Appeals became law in April
1533 and radically changed the relationship between the king and
the Church in England. It did so by making claims about the nature
of kingship in England which had not been articulated previously.
The Act in Restraint of Appeals, in simplest terms, ended the
practice of removing cases from English courts to Rome on appeal.
The act claimed that all legal issues, whether ecclesiastical or
49
secular, were to be settled in English courts deriving their authority
only from the king. Catherine of Aragon, therefore, could not legally
take her case to Rome. While this may appear to be only a simple
extension or readaption of the Statutes of Praemunire and Provisors
already on the books, the true importance of the act was to be found
not in the articles which forbade appeals but, rather, in the theory of
royal supremacy that Cromwell, its composer, outlined in the
preamble.
The preamble to the Act in Restraint of Appeals made a number
of claims about the nature of the kingship in England which, if not
entirely new, were argued with a new and different emphasis. The
claim that the Crown was imperial was not new, but Cromwell’s
emphasis on England as ‘an empire’ was. An empire was different
from a kingdom in that it stood as a sovereign state and neither
required nor allowed any interference from the outside. No matters,
spiritual or temporal, were outside the competence of the state or its
courts, and these had their authority from the king, who in turn had
his authority from God. The Pope, then, was an irrelevance: his
jurisdiction was unnecessary, his interference unwelcome. The
preamble to the bill was much more radical than the articles
themselves, which were really rather restrained.
While the bill was debated in Parliament, the Convocation of
Canterbury met to consider the validity of the king’s marriage.
Having been granted the power to make a decision on the matter, and
with Warham dead, the bishops were not slow to render an opinion
favourable to the king. With the agreement of his Convocation,
Cranmer had no trouble in making the necessary declarations to
annul the king’s first marriage and regularise the second. In July
1533, the Pope took the only action left open to him and threatened
to excommunicate Henry. For his part, Henry issued the necessary
letters patent to make the Act of Annates effective and withdrew his
ambassadors at Rome. He also called for a General Council of the
Church to settle the dispute between himself and the Pope, but this
outcome was not seen as a serious possibility by any involved. In
September, when it became apparent that Henry would not be
shifted, the Pope excommunicated the king of England. At last, the
issue of the divorce was settled, and in the process the most
significant ties with Rome had been severed.
50
There was, of course, still much to be done after the Act in
Restraint of Appeals to complete the break with Rome. Parliament
had to turn its hand to dealing with the ramifications of royal
supremacy. A second Act of Annates refined the first and set up
systems for the election of bishops and abbots. Peter’s Pence, a papal
tax unique to England from the time of the Anglo-Saxon kings, was
outlawed. The submission which had been extorted from the clergy
in 1532 was now made official in statute, with the major alteration
that ecclesiastical cases would now find their final appeal in
chancery rather than in the archiepiscopal courts. Next, all licences
and dispensations formerly sought from Rome would henceforth be
acquired in England. Another statute made the clergy liable to pay to
the king first-fruits (one year’s income upon assuming a position)
and tenths (an annual 10 per cent tax on income). The Succession Act
of 1534 officially recognised that the marriage to Catherine was void
and that the marriage to Anne was valid. It also made it treason to
utter slander against the king’s new marriage and, most importantly,
called for an oath to be administered throughout the realm declaring
the legality of Henry’s marriage to Anne. Finally, late in 1534, the
Act of Supremacy served as a kind of omnibus statute which put all
Henry’s claims, and particularly his claim to be ‘Supreme Head of
the Church of England’, on the record in one place.
The break with Rome was now complete. Although initially this
break did not involve a radical transformation of the theology of the
Church, the jurisdictional issues had been settled. Those powers
which had once been seen as belonging exclusively to the Pope now
rested in the king. But the transition was not as easy as it might
appear: there were important opponents to the course Henry had
chosen, and as Henry and Cromwell moved forward through the
1530s some of this opposition became very dangerous indeed.

51
4
The progress of the Reformation

In 1525 a 16-year-old woman from Kent named Elizabeth Barton


fell victim to some kind of hysterical illness. In the midst of one
dramatic seizure she had a vision of the Virgin Mary who promised
to heal the young woman. When a crowd witnessed the miraculous
cure, a star was born. Many were convinced that Barton was a
genuine mystic, but when she began to receive and pass on messages
from the Virgin Mary which were critical of the king’s determination
to secure an annulment, she became more than a curiosity. Her
celebrity gained her access to the powerful. On one occasion she
even spoke directly to the king claiming that he would be dead inside
a month if he were to divorce Catherine and marry Anne.
After he had broken with Rome and proclaimed Anne to be the
queen, it was vitally important to Henry that Anne’s queenship be
accepted. The new queen was never very popular, and Barton and
those who surrounded her were stirring up public sentiment against
Anne. It was his recognition of this which led Henry to crack down
on Elizabeth Barton and make an example of her. In September
1533, Henry had the so-called ‘Nun of Kent’ and a handful of her
supporters arrested. Under interrogation Elizabeth admitted that she
was a fraud and then made this confession at Paul’s Cross where she
52
was publicly humiliated. She and four others were burned in April
1534.
Whether Elizabeth Barton was a prophetess or a misguided and
pathetic innocent used by men with a political axe to grind is really
beside the point. The Nun of Kent exposed a number of problems
that faced Henry after the break with Rome. She had become a focus
for those who opposed the king. Warham protected her while he
lived. John Fisher seems to have believed that she was what she
claimed to be. However, both Thomas More and Catherine of
Aragon recognised the danger in becoming involved with the Nun of
Kent and stayed well clear. Stories (mostly spurious) were spread by
her supporters about her miracles, and her prophecies were used as
direct evidence of God’s displeasure with the king and his new
queen. This kind of talk could be dangerous and it is not surprising
that when the Treason Act was passed in 1534 it included clauses
which made it an offence to speak against the king’s second marriage
or to call either the king or the queen a schismatic, a heretic or any
other slanderous name.
Henry saw the danger of the opposition and acted to discredit and
destroy its focal point. He would have gone further if he had been
able. Not satisfied with the execution of Barton and the ring-leaders,
he accused Fisher, and tried to accuse More, of complicity. Fisher
was found guilty and forced to pay £300 to buy his way out of a life-
sentence. More was left out of the final bill of attainder for the simple
reason that he had never been deceived: although Henry was all for
proceeding against his former chancellor, the Council found no
evidence against More and persuaded the king to wait until a more
opportune moment.

The opposition

From the first, there had been those who opposed the king’s plans for
a divorce and supported Catherine of Aragon. As the king’s
campaign was stepped up after 1529, their resistance also mounted.
Throughout 1532 and 1533, for instance, a preaching mission in the
north sought to defend the Church from the dangers of heresy that the
king appeared to be bringing into his realm. In Bristol there was
virtual war in the pulpits as opposition found its voice against the
53
reforming ideas of Hugh Latimer. Much of the resistance came from
monks, especially from the heads of some of the stricter orders such
as the Observant Franciscans and the Carthusians, and was to have
dire consequences for the religious houses later.
But opposition was not only to be found among the clergy. As we
have seen, some of the nobility were not entirely comfortable with
the way the government was proceeding. Some went so far as to open
lines of communication with the imperial ambassador to assure him
that there would be adequate support in England were the emperor
to decide to invade in support of his aunt. A few sabres were quietly
rattled, but the idea of a rebellion at this time was a nonsense, and
Charles V was not fooled by the talk of a few of the English nobility
and their exaggerated notions of how much support they could
command. This is not to say that the fact that there were those who
were willing to enter into treasonous conversations with the imperial
ambassador is not significant. It is indicative of misgivings about the
king’s policies, but those misgivings were never sufficiently serious
among enough of the nobility to lead to general rebellion.
In addition, there was reluctance on the part of some of the lay
members of Parliament to stand against the Pope: some, no doubt,
were motivated by principle, others were worried that the Pope’s
retaliation might not be restricted to the excommunication of the
monarch but would also include economic sanctions against the
English cloth trade, which, after all, relied heavily on its markets
within the Empire. This opposition was especially evident in the
Commons debate on the Bill in Restraint of Appeals. Parliamentary
opposition, however, could be and was dealt with effectively by
political means – reason, persuasion and, if those failed,
intimidation.
There was little the government could do directly to stop those
who opposed the divorce from talking until the Treason Act came
into effect. However, there were indirect means that might be used
to muzzle the opposition. The Act of Succession of 1534 had
required that all adult males in the realm swear an oath to the effect
that the second marriage of the king was his only lawful marriage
and that the succession should pass to any offspring of that union.
Very few refused to comply when the oath began to be administered
in the spring of 1534, even though the oath itself implied a denial of
54
papal jurisdiction and authority. The inmates of most religious
houses who had been so opposed to the king’s policies were
persuaded to swear acceptance, but a few resisted. The Carthusian
monks of the Charterhouse in London refused and six of their
number were seriously mistreated and eventually put to death.
Several other clerics also perished for refusal to take the oath.
However, by far the most notable of those who refused and suffered
were Thomas More and John Fisher. Both were summoned to
London to take the oath in April 1534. Both found themselves
confined to the Tower soon thereafter.
Initially, Henry probably intended to try to intimidate both More
and Fisher into swearing the oath. Both were men of eminence and
both were known and respected widely throughout Europe – it
would not do to treat them as roughly as he had the Carthusian
monks. Henry hoped that a stay in the Tower might shake their
resolve or, failing that, might at least isolate them from others who
resisted and deprive the opposition of two of its most important
leaders. The problem was that this strategy did not work. Henry had
not reckoned on the strength of the principles of these two men. More
and Fisher were not intimidated by the Tower, and those who
continued to resist drew strength from their example. This proved
extremely irritating and when in May 1535 the Pope made the
entirely empty gesture of elevating Fisher to the office of cardinal,
Henry flew into a blind rage.
As must be clear by now, Henry VIII was a man of intelligence
and great passions. Sometimes his passion held sway over his
intelligence, and so it did in the spring of 1535. Although he had tried
to avoid making his enemies martyrs and had been advised to
caution by Cromwell and Cranmer, the Pope’s futile action seemed
an insult, and the intransigence of More and Fisher was insufferable.
Cromwell did make a real effort to save More, whom he admired (he
was less interested in Fisher), but the king was determined to destroy
both men.
It was not hard to find evidence against Fisher. He had never
made a secret of his opinions in the matter of the divorce and had
fiercely defended the Church when Henry began his assault on its
liberties. John Fisher was particularly eloquent and effective in the
House of Lords, where he was the principal spokesman against the
55
king’s policies. He had strenuously objected to the three anticlerical
bills of 1529 and continued to obstruct the government’s plans
whenever he could. But the bishop of Rochester’s dedication to the
cause of Catherine of Aragon had led him to go too far. Although the
government did not know it at the time, Fisher had been in
correspondence with the emperor for some time, urging invasion.
But this evidence was not necessary to convict him of treason, for his
opinions on the royal supremacy, the divorce and the succession
were well known and admitted to freely. In June 1535, he died on the
scaffold, a martyr to his cause and his Church.
The case of Thomas More was entirely different. More was a
common lawyer and a very good one at that. He had known since his
resignation as chancellor that he was in jeopardy and had thought to
retire quietly into private life, where he could keep his opinions to
himself and save his conscience. The basis of his defence against the
charges brought against him in the summer of 1535 was his silence
when asked to take the oath (the legal interpretation of silence was
acceptance, a principle invoked by Warham when he was greeted by
the stony silence of Convocation after presenting the king’s terms for
the clerical pardon of 1531). He had steadfastly refused to discuss
the issues surrounding the royal supremacy and the divorce. He had
avoided becoming entangled with Elizabeth Barton and her
supporters. But his scrupulous silence when called upon to take the
oath did not save him. In the end the testimony of Sir Richard Rich,
often supposed to be false, sealed More’s fate. Rich claimed that
More had spoken treason in his hearing, and this was enough to allow
the judges to convict. Only after his conviction did More openly
speak on the supremacy and reveal that his opinions were pretty
much what everyone suspected them to be. More was executed in
July.
The executions of More and Fisher effectively ended the
opposition. While Henry VIII and Cromwell have been condemned,
rightly, for the way in which they ruthlessly destroyed their enemies,
their methods did achieve the ends intended. More and Fisher were
martyrs to their cause; subsequently they were canonised. But they
were dead and, for the time being, no longer any trouble. Europe was
shocked but no action was taken. While there was general regret at
their deaths, even among those who could not support their stand, no
56
rebellion was sparked off and the opposition evaporated for the
moment.

The dissolution of the monasteries and


the Pilgrimage of Grace

It is difficult to know just how much land belonged to the Church in


the sixteenth century. Estimates put it somewhere between one-fifth
and one-third of all the land in England. It was from this land, granted
to the Church over a long period of time, that the Church derived its
income – bishops’ stipends depended on episcopal lands, a vicar’s
income was determined by the lands with which his parish was
endowed, and a monastery’s lands provided the income for the
maintenance of the house. The Church was generously provided for
and the land that it held had been coveted by the laity for quite some
time. The resumption of Church lands was not a new idea in the
1530s and had been in circulation since the fourteenth century.
However, the Church as a whole was vulnerable now and, in
particular, the monasteries were at risk.
There are several reasons for the increased vulnerability of the
Church at this moment. We have seen that Henry had already
assaulted the independent jurisdiction of the Church, and that the
success of that attack weakened the Church. When threatening the
clergy with a blanket accusation of Praemunire, Henry had made
much of the split loyalties of the clergy, and this was especially true
of the monastic orders, most of which were directly answerable only
to the Pope. The monasteries were in a very ambiguous position after
the momentous legislation of 1533–4. This ambiguity only served to
strengthen the arguments which were being put forward by
reforming preachers and writers, who were highly critical of the
state of England’s monastic houses and the perceived drift away
from their founding principles. What is more, it was in the monastic
orders that most of the resistance was found when the government
was forcing acceptance of royal supremacy.
More to the point, the government was in a difficult financial
position. Revenues had not been keeping pace with expenditure –
unlike his father, Henry VIII was not reluctant to spend money, and
his warlike impulses earlier in his reign had been expensive. Added
57
to this, the threat of an invasion from the continent in support of
Catherine of Aragon had induced the government to embark on a
major project to shore up England’s defences which was also a
significant drain on resources. Demands for parliamentary taxation
were out of the question as long as the government needed
Parliament to support it in its effort to end papal jurisdiction in
England and secure the divorce. But traditional Crown customs
revenues had fallen off because of changes in trade patterns, and the
feudal prerogative of the king, so brilliantly exploited by Henry VII,
was not producing the kind of income the Crown needed. Indeed, the
Crown’s increased claims to feudal revenue only engendered
resentment, as evidenced in the difficult passage of the Statute of
Uses in 1536 (which finally closed the legal loopholes which
allowed evasion of feudal taxes due to the king). Cromwell even
tried a revolutionary peacetime tax, but he saw clearly that the most
fertile source of new revenue for the Crown would be the newly
‘liberated’ Church of England.
He began his efforts to increase Crown revenue at the expense of
the Church by securing the payment of first-fruits and tenths to the
government by statute in 1534. If the bishops thought that the Act of
Annates (revised by a second Act of Annates in 1534) relieved them
of the crushing burden of these payments, they were wrong. What
the Pope would not be allowed to have, the Crown would now take.
While the cash raised through this tax and other clerical taxes was
important, amounting to some £400,000 over the next five years,1
the real money was to be made by the assumption of Church
property. Land, if managed properly, had the advantage of providing
a regular income in the long term. It was clearly Cromwell’s plan to
put the Crown on a firm financial footing by transferring the wealth
of the Church to the government.
In addition to the financial benefits, political advantage could be
gained from taking Church lands. Cromwell was aware that the laity
had always coveted the Church lands and he was also aware that
there were many among the nobility and the gentry who were
decidedly lukewarm in their support for royal supremacy. The sale
of Church lands to the laity might be an inducement to them to
become enthusiastic supporters of the government’s policies,
because, in order to protect their new landed interests, they would be
58
less inclined to support threats to the new order which the
government had instituted and which had benefited them in real
terms.
To achieve this goal, the government needed to know what it had
to work with. In January of 1535, Cromwell was appointed vicar-
general of the Church and moved immediately to discover the worth
of all Church property in England. In only six months his
investigators put together the Valor ecclesiasticus, which was a
comprehensive valuation of all that the Church owned. He now
knew exactly what he had to gain and proceeded to launch his attack
on monastic property. Commissioners were sent out to conduct a
visitation of the monasteries in order to discover problems and,
supposedly, rectify them. However, the exercise was cynical in its
conception: Cromwell had no intention of solving problems but was
intent on finding (or inventing) evidence which would prove that the
monasteries were sufficiently corrupt to merit dissolution. Scandals
were discovered. The evidence collected by Cromwell’s
commissioners was sufficient to allow the introduction of a bill into
Parliament in 1536 which called for the dissolution of all
monasteries in England with an income of £200 or less. As one
historian has noted, it is remarkable how that level of income should
have been so firm a dividing-line between virtue and depravity.2
About 300 houses were involved. The actual process of dissolution
was not complicated. Cromwell’s commissioners visited the
doomed houses, dissolved them formally, made an inventory of any
movable wealth they possessed, and made provisions for the monks
themselves. Some houses were permitted to buy their way out of the
dissolution, but their reprieve was only temporary. By and large, the
government dealt with the situation fairly. Monks were either moved
to larger houses where they could continue in their vocation if they
wished, moved to a parish ministry of some kind if they were
qualified, or pensioned off. All outstanding debts that the house may
have had were paid.
The dissolution of the monasteries met with a mixed reaction. In
some areas, the houses gave up quietly and without any public
outcry. In other places, particularly in the north, where monasticism
retained some of its earlier strength and popularity, the
commissioners met with stiff resistance. Here the immediate result
59
of dissolving the monasteries was to bring the hitherto simmering
opposition to the king’s policies and the changes he had imposed to
a hard boil which, for a time, appeared to threaten the Crown itself.
However, the trouble began not in the north but in Lincolnshire.
Whipped up by rumour and anti-government preaching, riots broke
out in Louth in October 1536 and spread throughout the shire. In fact,
this was not the beginning of a concerted rebellion against the Crown
and its policies; there were actually three separate risings. The
Lincolnshire rebellion lasted from 1 October until 18 October 1536;
the rising in Yorkshire, known as the Pilgrimage of Grace, lasted
from October to December 1536; and a further set of risings in the
north-west took place sporadically in January and February 1537.
Of the three the Pilgrimage was the most dangerous.
The revolts had much common ground. The issues at stake were
complicated. Bad harvests, objections to the peacetime tax imposed
by Cromwell, and dislike of the Statute of Uses and of Henry’s
revival of his feudal prerogatives all played a part. While all these
were included in the complaints of the rebels, religious issues
dominated the minds of those who rose. In Yorkshire, the rebels
chose to think of themselves as Pilgrims and marched under the
banner of the Five Wounds of Christ. The north was conservative
and distrusted the innovations that it saw creeping into its religion.
The dissolution of the smaller monasteries was the final blow.
The Lincolnshire rebellion ended as quickly as it had started.
Having outlined their demands, which included not only their
objections to taxation, the Statute of Uses, innovations in religion
and the dissolution of the monasteries but also demands for the
dismissal of Cromwell, Cranmer and other reforming bishops, the
rebels waited for the king to respond. When it became apparent that
the king would not negotiate with rebels, the resolve of the gentry
leadership crumbled. They were not inclined to risk all and
persuaded the rank and file to disband.
A far more serious revolt began in Yorkshire only days after
Lincolnshire’s abortive rebellion had begun. Under the leadership of
the lawyer Robert Aske, some 30,000 men moved on York. Their
demands were virtually identical to those of the men of Lincolnshire.
The difference was that there was a great deal more support for this
rising among the nobility, including Lord Darcy, the old foe of
60
Wolsey, who was nevertheless not a supporter of the royal
supremacy. A rising of this nature was dangerous indeed. Henry had
only a small army under the duke of Norfolk at his disposal and could
not hope to defeat the rebels in the field at this time. Had the rebels
wished to press home their advantage, a defeat of the duke would
have left the way clear to London. However, the rebels felt that
negotiation was the best way to secure their demands and entered
into an ill-fated discussion with Norfolk, who never had any
intention of keeping the terms that he agreed to at the time. The
Crown was buying time. Aske was in a very strong position at York,
where he had taken over the government of the north, and may have
felt confident that he could negotiate in good faith with the king’s
representative. The rebels’ council met to finalise the Pilgrims’
demands in early December, and when Norfolk offered a free pardon
and appeared to agree to some of the rebels’ demands Aske
disbanded his army, sure of success.
When in January 1537 further disturbances took place in the
north, the king and Norfolk moved swiftly. The new risings were
used as an excuse for reneging on all that had been promised to Aske.
Norfolk, now in a much stronger military position, moved to crush
any signs of rebellion with brutal efficiency. Aske was arrested, as
was Darcy, and both were executed. The north was impressed by the
ruthlessness that the king had displayed and did not rise in force
again during Henry’s reign.
The defeat of the northern rebels left the way open for the
continuation of Cromwell’s policy for the dissolution of the
monasteries. The larger monasteries had been exempted from the
1536 Act, but now the government moved to persuade them to
dissolve themselves and turn their land over to the Crown. By 1540
the process was complete; monasticism was ended in England, and
the Crown was enriched in the process. Much of the land that the
Crown received from the monasteries was subsequently sold off. By
far the bulk of this was bought by the gentry, whose importance in
English society grew as a result. In all, the Crown would see a profit
of about £1.3 million in proceeds from sales of lands, from goods and
from rents.3 An entirely new financial office, the Court of
Augmentations, was set up by Cromwell to deal with the money
which now came to the Crown as a result of the dissolution.
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Important though the dissolution of the monasteries was to the
government financially, it was also indicative of the changes taking
place in religion in England. Most of the monasteries were reduced
to ruins quickly. Of course, any valuables that the monasteries
possessed found new homes with the wealthy. Lead, a valuable
commodity, was taken from the roofs and sold. Builders removed the
stones from the walls for other constructions. Glass was removed
from windows. Some old monastic houses were preserved as homes
for their new owners; others were altered and used as barns or farm
buildings. The changes in the face of the countryside were symbolic,
perhaps, of changes in the spiritual landscape. The edifice of the
Church as it had been known in England was crumbling as surely as
the monasteries fell into ruin.

The endgame

The real engine that drove the Reformation in England was political
not religious. Canon law and, more to the point, those who
interpreted and enforced it had stood in the way of the king’s
dynastic imperatives. This was a terrible shock to a king who was
used to getting his way and who expected an amenable Pope to grant
his wishes without complaint. In the end, none of the arguments that
he offered to the Pope made any difference at all. The Pope was not
impressed by Henry’s fury but may have been surprised by the
lengths to which Henry was finally prepared to go to resolve the
issue. The only way to secure the divorce and the succession was to
overthrow the Pope in England and replace his centuries-old
jurisdiction with an authority more agreeable to the king’s wishes.
That authority was Henry himself. As Supreme Head, Henry made
the decisions of consequence and, despite the fact that he always
remained true to his understanding of orthodoxy, he rather liked the
power his new circumstances opened to him.
It would be a mistake, however, to see the Henrician Reformation
as an exclusively political affair, for politics and religion were
inextricably wedded during this period in a way which may be
difficult to understand in our own pluralistic and essentially secular
society. Henry and Cromwell were not entirely secular men,
cynically using religious language to hide a jurisdictional
62
revolution. The changes in the Church of England in the 1530s had
spiritual as well as legal significance. To be sure, in 1536 the English
Church to a large extent maintained the outward appearance it had
always had, despite the fundamental changes that the government
had made in law. Yet the theology of the Reformers did have an
impact on this ‘official’ Reformation and provided much of the
philosophical and theological grounding for the moves that the
government made. The Collectanea had been instrumental in
providing an ideological framework for the royal supremacy and
had attacked the Roman theological edifice as well as papal
supremacy. It served as a good starting-place for those who argued
for a more Protestant reformation.
But because politics and religion were so intermingled, the
fallout from political events could prove critical one way or the
other. The year 1536 was a busy one for Thomas Cromwell. Not only
did it see the beginnings of the dissolution of the monasteries and the
trouble that caused, but it also saw the fall of Anne Boleyn and
Cromwell’s attempts to define the Church which had been created by
the break with Rome. It is singular that the man most responsible for
the dissemination of Protestant ideas during the early days after the
break with Rome was not the archbishop of Canterbury or any other
divine but Thomas Cromwell. We know little of his personal
spiritual life, and one always suspects that his religious proclivities
were determined more by his assessment of political reality than by
any deep spiritual convictions. The fact remains, however, that the
spread of Protestant ideology owed more than a little to Cromwell’s
position of power in the 1530s. Whatever Cromwell’s personal
religious feelings were, we do know that the diplomatic situation in
Europe made him look to an alliance with the Lutheran princes in
Germany. In 1532, English friendship with France had given Henry
the confidence to go ahead with his marriage to Anne Boleyn. But
European diplomacy in this period was always volatile and by 1535
France and the Empire had moved closer together. For England, at
least in Cromwell’s opinion, this meant a resumption of isolation
unless he could forge some kind of alliance with the Lutheran
princes of Germany.
Cromwell began his campaign to seek an alliance with the
Lutherans as early as 1533, but it came to nothing. This was partly
63
because of the king’s reluctance to enter into any alliance (he never
believed that there was any real threat to England at this time) but
also because of his essential orthodoxy. For Cromwell, who felt that
the threat from an alliance of Catholic nations on the continent was
real, the only sensible alliance would be with the Protestant states in
Germany. As a result he used his position to promote Protestant ideas
and to elevate reformers to positions of authority in the Church. This
would give the impression at least that England was Protestant.
Cranmer, of course, was already in place. In 1535, Cromwell
succeeded in having clearly identified reformers such as Hugh
Latimer, Edward Foxe and Nicholas Shaxton appointed to the
episcopacy. He also encouraged and supported the work of
reformers such as Robert Barnes, as well as providing financial
backing for major publishing projects in support of reform. It was
Cromwell, for instance, who personally provided important funding
for the publication of the English translation of the Bible known as
the ‘Matthew Bible’.
The king himself was always lukewarm towards Protestant
ideas, even though he had used them while seeking his annulment.
When Luther’s writings first began to turn up in England, Henry had
moved to refute them. He had little hesitation in rooting out heresy
and punishing offenders, but the situation now demanded a different
attitude. Without the superstructure of Rome, the Church in England
lacked definition. What was it? What did it believe? In answer to
these questions the government moved in 1536 to provide some
shape and form. The Ten Articles, in July, were the work of the
Convocation of Canterbury but were motivated by Cromwell. These
essentially orthodox articles left the door open to Protestant
interpretation, especially in the matter of the number of the
sacraments. While the Articles made specific mention of baptism,
penance and the Eucharist, they remained silent on confirmation,
ordination, marriage and extreme unction (the last rights). As a basic
text or formulary of faith, the Ten Articles were ambiguous and far
from complete, but they were enforced by Cromwell’s ‘Injunctions’
published a month later. Moderate stands were taken against images
in churches and against pilgrimages, and some holy days and saints’
days were proscribed. Transubstantiation was not specifically
mentioned, although a fledgeling doctrine of the ‘real presence’ was
64
(which, presumably, could be taken to mean any of a variety of
things), and the Lutheran concept of justification by faith alone was
watered down in an attempt to make it acceptable to more
conservative churchmen. These articles were hardly revolutionary
and, although they pointed towards reform, travelled down that road
only a short way. The ambiguity was by design – consensus and unity
were being sought, as was an alliance with the Lutheran states in
Germany. And if the framers of the Ten Articles appeared to be
walking on theological eggshells, the process was hardly reversed in
1537 when a second attempt at a formulary, the Institution of a
Christian Man (more commonly known as the ‘Bishop’s Book’),
made some attempt to deal with the vexed questions of purgatory,
justification and the status of the four sacraments missing in the Ten
Articles (now found to be somehow ‘lesser sacraments’).
A much greater success for the Protestants was the production of
an approved vernacular version of the Bible. There had been
unofficial versions of the Bible in English before. In 1407, as we saw
above (p. 18), the Council of Oxford had outlawed the publication of
the complete Bible in translation. Now the agitation for that policy
to change had a sympathetic ear in the government. The first
officially recognised version of the Bible in the vernacular appeared
in 1537, when royal permission was given for the Matthew Bible to
be sold. In 1538, Cromwell’s Injunctions required that all churches
acquire a copy. By 1540 there were editions of the Bible which were
both available to and affordable by individuals. The central position
of Scripture in the Protestant argument made it imperative to make
the actual text available, and an official version gave the vernacular
Bible the stamp of authority, even though the king’s policy was far
from Protestant. There were certainly those who opposed the new
translation, and there is no question that many churches took their
time in complying with the Injunctions. So the Protestants did not
have an unmitigated success in 1539, and such success as they did
have would be short-lived: it would be some time before the Bible in
English was freely available.
These halting steps towards a reformed Church were a frustration
to those who had a more radical agenda and certainly did little to
enhance the prospects of a diplomatic entente with the Lutheran
states in Germany. At the same time, conservatives were alarmed at
65
some of the changes. Men like Stephen Gardiner saw a vast
difference between support for royal supremacy and Protestantism
– a distinction that was not always made by the reformers4 – and
resisted the changes that were being made by Cromwell and
Cranmer.
If the situation was not pleasing to everyone, this was partly
because the government needed to strike a middle ground between
conservatives and radicals in order to preserve some kind of unity.
The king’s commitment to orthodoxy and his reluctance to commit
himself wholeheartedly to a Protestant Church were further reasons
for the hedging of bets in the English formularies of faith. For these
reasons the crisis which struck the king’s marriage in 1536 was of the
utmost concern to those who supported a reformed Church. Anne
Boleyn and her family, who had become increasingly important at
court once she had the favour of the king, actively supported the
Protestant cause. Anne used her influence and power to advance
those with apparently reforming ideas – among them both Cromwell
and Cranmer. Her fall could have drastic consequences for the
reformers.
In the midst of the project for the dissolution of the monasteries
and the redefinition of the English Church, the king’s second
marriage began to fall apart. When Anne Boleyn was delivered of a
girl, Elizabeth, in September 1533, Henry did not hide his
disappointment. When, in January 1536, another pregnancy ended
in the miscarriage of a deformed foetus, the king was horrified and
was easily persuaded that the child was not his. Never shy about
expressing his feelings, the king was clearly displeased. The death
of Catherine of Aragon in the same month further weakened Anne’s
position.
Anne had been very skilful in the years leading up to her
marriage, but her tactics thereafter, often overbearing and tactless,
had made her enemies at court. By 1536 it was evident that Anne
Boleyn had overplayed her hand. As long as she could convince
Henry that she would bear him the son he desired, she could hold on
to power. The king, however, was beginning to doubt whether he
would ever have a suitable heir by Anne Boleyn and was
increasingly irritated by her attempts to manipulate him. The
deformed foetus appears to have convinced the king that his second
66
marriage, like his first, was not approved of by the Almighty.
However, as long as Catherine was alive Anne’s position was safe –
Henry could not end his marriage to Anne without raising further
questions about the validity of his first marriage. Once Catherine
was dead this was no longer a problem.
When Anne fell in 1536, a serious blow might have been struck
against the reformers had it not been for the fancy footwork of
Thomas Cromwell. Cromwell, who had been one of Anne’s faction
at court, recognised the danger to reform and to himself if Anne were
to fall. He knew that her enemies had a plan which included her
overthrow, a restoration of Princess Mary to the succession and the
marriage of Henry to Jane Seymour. They also desired the reversal
of much that had changed under Cromwell. As the author of many of
the changes that had been wrought in the Church and government,
he was also initially identified as a target. But Cromwell acted first
and quickest. Allying himself with those opposed to Anne in order
to protect himself and his achievements, he accused the queen of
adultery and incest. Whatever the truth of the accusations, they were
enough to destroy Anne Boleyn and her party at court. She was
executed on 19 May 1536. Henry married Jane Seymour only eleven
days later. If there were those who thought the haste with which the
king remarried undue, no one said so.
As Cromwell had been in control of the coup d’état against Anne,
the basic policy of reform was not immediately damaged. It was after
Anne’s execution that the Ten Articles and the Injunctions of 1536
were issued, and it was in 1537 that the ‘Bishop’s Book’ was
published. By September 1538, Cromwell felt strong enough to
issue another set of Injunctions which not only made the purchase of
a Bible in English mandatory but took a strong line against images,
and centres of pilgrimage. As Christopher Haigh has pointed out,
many parishes managed to save their images, and compliance with
the Injunctions of 1538 was hardly universal. But some of the most
significant shrines in England perished at this time; most notably, the
shrine of St Thomas Becket at Canterbury was destroyed.5
September 1538 may have been the Protestant high-water mark
during the reign of Henry VIII. By November 1538 it was clear that
the king was growing increasingly uncomfortable with the changes
that were being made in religion by Cromwell and Cranmer. The
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participation of the king in the trial of John Lambert, and Lambert’s
subsequent execution for heresy, sent out a signal to the Protestants
which was reinforced in the summer of 1539. Cromwell’s enemies,
led by the duke of Norfolk and Stephen Gardiner, took advantage of
the king’s displeasure to sow the seeds of discord between the king
and his most important minister. In 1539 the Act of Six Articles
returned the Church to an unambiguous orthodoxy (excluding papal
supremacy) and enforced this orthodoxy with prescribed
punishments. Among other things, transubstantiation and auricular
confession were reaffirmed. Clerical marriage, a practice which had
crept in, was condemned. Vows of chastity were held now to be
inviolable (an article which caused some distress to Archbishop
Thomas Cranmer, whose marriage was an open secret). Laws
against heresy were now enforced with vigour in some places.
Cromwell’s consensus disappeared and many radicals fled to the
continental Protestant strongholds in Switzerland and along the
Rhine.
The political situation in Europe had been partly responsible for
a more conservative policy being adopted after September 1538.
Both France and the Empire were now taking significant action
against Protestants, and they had agreed between themselves not to
join in any alliance with England. In November 1538, the Pope sent
out envoys to preach a crusade against the English, and, although
with hindsight we see that there was little hope of this attracting any
real interest, the English were sufficiently alarmed by this
development to make preparations for invasion throughout 1539.
Cromwell’s failure to deal with the crisis diplomatically
ultimately meant his downfall. His efforts to secure an alliance with
the Protestant states in Germany met with failure: the king was
unwilling to make any religious concessions to the Lutherans. When
Jane Seymour died after bearing the son that Henry wanted in
October 1537, Cromwell had seen an opportunity to seal an alliance
with the German Protestants through another marriage. Nothing
came of this plan initially but Cromwell persisted. However, the
eventual union between Henry VIII and the Protestant Anne of
Cleves in January 1540 was a disaster. Henry was not pleased with
this marriage either in principle or in practice. Henry’s tactless
reference to Anne of Cleves as a ‘Flanders mare’ told only part of the
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story. Cromwell’s enemies had been busy. Throughout the winter
and spring of 1540 both Norfolk and Gardiner actively worked
against Cromwell. Norfolk, on a mission to France, sent back reports
which seriously undermined Cromwell. Gardiner attacked
indirectly by accusing Robert Barnes, a known associate of
Cromwell, of heresy.
By May 1540, Cromwell’s position had deteriorated
significantly. He had lost the confidence of the king. Henry was
unhappy with the wife that Cromwell had secured for him; an
unhappiness made all the more profound when the duke of Norfolk
(a man of conservative and Catholic leanings) introduced Henry to
his young and seductive niece, Catherine Howard. In addition, the
reasons for the fourth marriage were rapidly disappearing. The
amity between France and the Empire was breaking down and
Cromwell’s policy of an alliance with Protestant Germany appeared
to have real drawbacks. The French were looking for new friends,
and, as Norfolk pointed out, Cromwell was the man who stood in the
way of any Anglo-French alliance. It also came to light in the spring
of 1540 that Cromwell not only had been lax in enforcing the Act of
Six Articles but was actively protecting those who did not subscribe
to it. With Cromwell’s enemies marshalling against him and the king
wishing another divorce which would undo most of Cromwell’s
foreign policy, his days were numbered. Arrested under the watchful
eye of Norfolk in the council chamber in June 1540, he was executed
in July, having provided, as a last service to the Crown, the evidence
necessary to secure the end of the king’s marriage to Anne of Cleves.
Cromwell’s fall from power meant that any significant moves
toward a reformed Church were forced to wait until a more friendly
environment towards Protestantism was created by the accession of
Edward VI in 1547. To be sure, Cranmer was still archbishop of
Canterbury and remained friendly with Henry VIII, who, to his
credit, never turned against him. But Cranmer was isolated: the Act
of Six Articles had seen the resignation of two of his allies among the
bishops, Latimer and Shaxton. Always more a scholar than a
politician, and although he continued throughout the remaining
years of Henry’s reign to work on reforms within the Church (and in
particular in his own diocese of Canterbury), he was never
successful in persuading either the monarch or the Convocation to
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take the Reformation any further than it had already come. In fact, a
number of steps were taken to reverse the progress the Protestants
had made. The ‘Bishop’s Book’ was revised, emerging in 1543 as A
Necessary Doctrine and Erudition for any Christian Man, or the
‘King’s Book’. This was an entirely conservative document and
written in the spirit of the Act of Six Articles. The English Church
was a peculiar entity – it was out of obedience with Rome but
maintained what was essentially an orthodox theology and structure
of belief.
This did not mean that the conservatives who had conspired to
bring down Cromwell had it all their own way. The conservatives
under Norfolk and Gardiner had gained influence with the king but
not control over him. Henry VIII always had his own vision. Grim
testimony to this vision was given soon after the execution of
Cromwell in 1540, when Henry had three Protestants (including
Robert Barnes) burned for heresy but also executed three ‘papists’
for treason. The macabre symmetry of these executions does not
indicate a policy of neutrality as has sometimes been suggested.6
While Henry could not abide heresy and punished those who
deviated from his orthodoxy, he was equally insistent that those who
agitated for a return to Roman obedience would be punished as well,
because both were threats to the royal supremacy.
The marriage of Henry to Catherine Howard in August 1540
served as a symbol of the conservatives’ influence, but only for a
short time. The liveliness and youth that inspired the king to believe
himself young again also led the new queen, barely more than a child
herself, down the dangerous path of indiscretion. In the autumn of
1541 she was accused of adultery and executed for treason in
February 1542. There appears to have been substance to the charges
made against her, and the king was devastated. Norfolk and the
conservative faction scrambled to dissociate themselves from her
disgrace. This did not help the conservative cause.
The last years of the reign of Henry VIII were characterised by
factionalism, war and religious ambiguity. The conservatives never
succeeded in rooting out Thomas Cranmer, try as they might.
Gardiner made a serious effort to destroy the archbishop in 1543, but
the king protected his old friend. What is more, after the passing of
the Act of Six Articles, it became clear that Henry himself was
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interested in establishing a consensus somewhere in between the
Protestants and the conservatives. Throughout the latter years of his
reign the pattern established in the summer of 1540 after Cromwell’s
fall was repeated – while Protestants were punished for violating the
Act of Six Articles, papists were also executed for denying the royal
supremacy. But if a policy of moderation is laudable, it also tends to
send out mixed messages. English was maintained as the language
in which the faith was taught, and the Lord’s Prayer, the Creed and
the formularies of faith were all learned in the common tongue. The
English Bible was retained, but this did not mean that it was any
more available to the average person (the whole point of a vernacular
Bible) for access to it was severely restricted by the Act for the
Advancement of True Religion in 1543. Essentially, this allowed
only upper-class men and women to read the Bible (women being
allowed to read it only privately, however). Keeping the
interpretation of the Bible under control had always been the reason
that the Church had resisted vernacular editions, and the restrictions
now imposed on the English Bible would seem to be a blow against
Protestantism. Yet the very same Act which limited access to the
Bible also mitigated the penalties for violations of the Act of Six
Articles, and by 1544 legal procedures were introduced to protect
those accused of heresy in the Church courts, making it more
difficult to convict.
Henry remained essentially orthodox but rejected some of the
elements of medieval religion. It became clear that while he would
not be shaken from his essentially orthodox beliefs, he was not
opposed to reform where he felt it was needed. The fact that he did
not sweep away all the changes that the Protestants had introduced
may have been because he realised that there were forces at work
which he could, or would, no longer control: in some areas, such as
Kent, Protestantism was too strong to be rooted out.7 On the other
hand, Henry was at war with Scotland (from 1542 until the end of his
reign) and with France (from 1543 to 1546), and may have seen the
importance of consensus and unity at home. Whatever Henry’s
motives were, the result was that the conservative faction was unable
utterly to defeat the Protestants but that the Protestants were kept
firmly in check. Ironically, we find Henry himself, never the most
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tolerant of men, making a plea for forbearance in 1545 and
condemning extremists on both sides of the debate.
The old order was rapidly changing in the mid-1540s, and new
alliances were forged. Though Gardiner and Norfolk held on to the
king’s favour for a time, by the end of the reign they were no longer
in a position of influence or power, partly through their own error
and partly through the efforts of a revitalised Protestant faction.
New, younger, men were growing in importance. Edward Seymour,
earl of Hertford and uncle to the young Prince Edward, was
influential not only because of his relationship to the heir to the
throne but also because of his proven military ability. John Dudley,
Viscount Lisle and later the infamous duke of Northumberland, was
also proving himself an able commander and councillor. Both these
men were ambitious, and both leaned towards the reformed religion.
It is no surprise, then, to find them in alliance with Cranmer and
attempting to take power from Norfolk and Gardiner. In 1544, this
new Protestant faction attempted to remove Gardiner from the
king’s favour, but Henry protected the bishop of Winchester even as
he had protected his archbishop a year earlier.
There were other worrying signs for the conservative faction.
Henry’s sixth wife, Catherine Parr, whom he married in 1543,
appeared to have Protestant sympathies, and it was to Protestant
divines belonging to Catherine’s circle that the education of the heir
apparent was entrusted. In response the conservatives attempted to
destroy the Protestant faction in a vigorous persecution under the
Act of Six Articles in the spring of 1546. Those arrested included
both Latimer and Shaxton, but attempts to link Catherine Parr to
heretical beliefs failed. Nevertheless, the conservatives were in a
strong position and managed to undermine the Protestants further by
having Protestant books banned and burned.
Despite the strength of the conservative position, there was one
thing that they did not have: control of the heir to the throne. By the
autumn of 1546, it was apparent that Henry’s health was rapidly
failing. The heir to the throne was under age, and a regency
government would be necessary. Both sides realised that control of
Edward would be crucial to their political survival. In the faction
fighting that took place from the autumn of 1546 until Henry’s death
at the end of January 1547, it was Hertford who emerged as a clear
72
winner. Taking advantage of his position as uncle to the heir,
Hertford was able to place himself near the king. Strong political
alliances with members of the king’s Privy Council allowed him to
out-manoeuvre his conservative rivals and exclude them from
power after the king died. Gardiner fell out of favour because he was
reluctant to exchange some of his lands with the king. But it was
Hertford’s allies who conducted the negotiations and they may have
misrepresented the deal both to the bishop and to the king. Norfolk
spent the last part of the reign in the Tower with the threat of
execution hanging over his head after his attempts to secure control
of the regency were interpreted as treason. Hertford and his allies
had successfully removed the leaders of the conservative faction
from play. When Henry died in the early hours of 28 January 1547,
it was the new men who were at his bedside and who controlled, and
may have altered, the king’s will. Gardiner, Norfolk and most of the
conservative faction were effectively excluded from power in the
next reign. Had the old king wished otherwise, he was no longer in a
position to do anything about it.
To his own way of thinking, Henry had always remained
orthodox in his religious beliefs. Apart from the exclusion of papal
jurisdiction and supremacy in the Church, the theological changes
that were made were not staggering. The disappearance of the
monasteries and some other religious foundations certainly altered
the appearance of the Church and seriously undermined its wealth,
but there was no such shift to a Protestant theology as was
characteristic of the Reformation on the continent. The Church of
England that Henry left behind may have been schismatic but it was
not Protestant. But more radical change was certainly in the wind.
By the end of Henry’s reign the stars that were rising were all
inclined towards Protestantism and they would be the most
influential voices on the council of the boy king Edward.

The Reformation at the grassroots

If the political situation by the end of the reign was complicated, the
religious situation was ambiguous. The Protestants, who had been
on the retreat since the fall of Cromwell, now had a government
which was sympathetic but an ecclesiastical edifice that was
73
orthodox. Although they were in a strong position to take over the
administration of the Church and effect the changes that they
thought necessary, there remains a serious question as to the strength
of the support that the Protestants had at the grassroots. Were the
people of England ready and willing to be Protestants, or were they
content with orthodoxy?
There is no clear answer. It is difficult to assess the extent to
which Protestant ideas made any headway in England during the
reign of Henry VIII. Part of the difficulty we have in assessing what
the people believed is a lack of evidence. Some of the evidence that
we do have is fragmentary, often anecdotal, while other evidence
needs to be treated with caution. The way men and women made out
their wills, for instance, can sometimes indicate their religious
feelings, but the surviving wills from the end of the reign of Henry
VIII do not give us an unequivocal picture of how influential
Protestantism was among those who wrote them. In addition, we are
never really sure lust whose views a will reflects – does it reflect the
faith of the dying person or the views of the one (usually a priest) who
copied it down? It is very difficult to draw any solid conclusions
from such problematical evidence.
If we look into the reigns of Edward and Mary, we do find that
some aspects of the Protestant reforms during the reign of Henry
VIII must have had an impact on the lives of ordinary people. A man
in Gloucester was familiar enough with the Bible to defend his
multiple marriages with Old Testament texts, while the number of
humble men and women able to cite Scripture accurately to their
examiners during the Marian persecutions indicates that the English
translation of the Bible was read and learned by more than the
educated and the clergy. On the other hand, we find that some aspects
of the Protestant programme for reform were not so successful.
Pluralism continued to be a problem (as did non-residence), and the
ignorance of the clergy continued to be noted. The reforming bishop
John Hooper’s visitation of the diocese of Gloucester in 1551
revealed a number of pluralists and non-residents, at least one case
of simony, and ten clergy who could not even recite the Lord’s Prayer
– surely the most basic of requirements for a priest. Some twenty
years after the anticlerical debates in the Reformation Parliament,
these problems still existed.
74
It seems clear, however, that by the end of Henry’s reign
Protestantism had made some gains. Some areas in England were
more receptive to Protestant ideas than others: Protestantism
appears to have been strong in the south and the east, while the north
and west were conservative. This broad generalisation takes into
account the closer contacts that the south and the east had with the
continent but is useful only if we take into account the notable
exceptions. While the counties of Essex and Kent were receptive to
Protestantism, Sussex and Hampshire were strongly conservative.
Lancashire was generally conservative, but northern cities such as
Hull and Leeds are now known to have had important Protestant
communities. Even here we must speak in general terms, for all
communities, whether counties or villages, were divided on
religious issues to some degree or another. The picture is further
complicated when one considers that there is often a correlation
between religious belief and social or economic divisions and
disputes – as we have seen, the Pilgrimage of Grace was not simply
a religious uprising but involved a number of other factors.8
The advance of Protestantism in England during the reign of
Henry VIII, then, was patchy. Some areas accepted it with alacrity,
while others resisted. This pattern continued into the reign of
Edward VI, when efforts to recapture ground lost to the
conservatives during the last years of Henry’s reign and to expand
the extent of the reform met with stiff resistance on the ground in
some areas. Indeed, it is hard to see the Reformation in England as
secure until well into the reign of Elizabeth. In 1547, the Church had
seen some reforms but was far from being ‘reformed’ in any sense
meaningful to Protestants. Protestant ideas were abroad but as yet
represented only a minority opinion. But when Henry VIII died
those who controlled Edward VI were either Protestant or
sympathetic to Protestantism, and they controlled the destiny of the
English Church.

75
Notes

Introduction
1 M. Powicke, The Reformation in England (Oxford, 1941), p. 1;
J. Foxe, The Acts and Monuments of the Christian Church, ed. G.
Townsend (London, 1843–9), vol. V, p. 697.
2 There is neither time nor space in this format to go into any depth
in discussing the various approaches to the Reformation which
have been taken by historians. Sometimes the differences are
extremely subtle and beyond the scope of an introductory text. I
stress the very general nature of my remarks here and urge
students who are interested in the historiography of the period to
consult the following texts: C. Haigh, ‘The recent historiography
of the English Reformation’, in C. Haigh (ed.), The English
Reformation Revised (Cambridge, 1987), pp. 19–33; and R.
O’Day, The Debate on the English Reformation (London, 1986).
3 C. Haigh, English Reformations (Oxford, 1993), p. 14.

1 Why a Reformation?
1 The term was first used in relation to the ‘protest’ of the German
Protestant princes when they formed the defensive organisation
known as the Schmalkaldic League.
2 J. Guy, Tudor England (Oxford, 1988), p. 122.

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3 Erasmus, born in Rotterdam and living in England for a time, was
the guiding light of north European humanism. His witty, subtle
but biting criticisms of the Church were an influence on
reformers and orthodox churchmen alike.
4 G. R. Elton, England under the Tudors (London, 1974), p. 112.
5 The Avignon Papacy lasted from 1309 until 1377.
6 The period 1378–1417 is known as the Great Schism. During this
forty-year period there were a number of popes and ‘anti-popes’.
Things got particularly complicated towards the end of the
Schism with a pope in Avignon, one in Rome and a third in Pisa.
7 Guy, pp. 26–7.
8 J. F. Davis, Heresy and Reformation in the South-East of England
(London, 1983), p. 5; Haigh, English Reformations, pp. 25–39.
9 Winter was also ordained while under age – another abuse
sometimes cited by reformers.
10 Haigh, English Reformations, pp. 25–8.

2 The ‘King’s Great Matter’


1 It should always be remembered that the annulment was not
referred to as a divorce at the time. There should be no
misunderstanding on this point. In the sixteenth century, apart
from the views of a very few advanced thinkers (such as the
reformer Martin Bucer), the concept of divorce did not exist as it
does today. While one might admit in the twentieth century that
a marriage had in fact taken place and was now, for one reason or
another, ended, in the sixteenth century nothing of the kind would
be accepted. There might be any number of reasons to dissolve a
marriage. If the marriage was never consummated, for instance,
this might be sufficient grounds for annulment, as in the case of
Emperor Maximilian I and Anne of Brittany. If that could not be
claimed, it was necessary to show that there was some good
reason why a lawful marriage had never really taken place. It
would be claimed that, outward appearances to the contrary
aside, the participants had been knowingly or unknowingly
living in a state of sin, and no marital state had ever existed.
2 G. R. Elton, Reform and Reformation (Cambridge, 1977), p. 103.

77
3 Henry was related to all of his wives. Anne Boleyn, for instance,
was a seventh cousin and traced a common blood-tie back to
Edward I.
4 The reasons for this outburst are obscure. It may very well have
been part of a diplomatic ploy by Henry VII to squeeze further
concessions out of Ferdinand of Spain. Prince Henry never
seems to have had any doubt about the desirability of a marriage
to Catherine at this time.
5 Leviticus xviii. 16 and xx.21.
6 Deuteronomy xxv.5.
7 Guy, p. 82.
8 He was appointed dean of both Hereford and Lincoln cathedrals.
9 E. W. Ives, Anne Boleyn (Oxford, 1986), pp. 141–50.

3 The break with Rome


1 Guy, p. 126.
2 Ibid., p. 125.
3 S. Lehmberg, The Reformation Parliament (Cambridge, 1970),
p. 3.
4 Haigh, English Reformations, pp. 94–6.
5 Guy, p. 126.
6 £100,000 from the Convocation of Canterbury, and £18,000
from the Convocation of York.
7 This is the argument of Elton, first articulated in his The Tudor
Revolution in Government (Cambridge, 1953).
8 Guy, pp. 154–64.
9 Lehmberg, p. 132.
10 Ibid., pp. 137–8.

4 The progress of the Reformation


1 Guy, p. 144.
2 Elton, England under the Tudors, p. 144.
3 Ibid., p. 145.
4 Robert Barnes, when executed in 1540 for heresy, failed to see
this distinction.
5 Haigh, English Reformations, pp. 152–67.

78
6 Elton, England under the Tudors, p. 194.
7 Guy, p. 195.
8 See D. M. Palliser, ‘Popular Reactions to the Reformation during
the Years of Uncertainty 1530–1570’, in F. Heal and R. O’Day
(eds), Church and Society in England: Henry VIII to James I
(London, 1977), pp. 35–56; and W. J. Shiels, The English
Reformation 1530–1570 (London, 1989), pp. 68–78.

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Further reading

There are innumerable books of worth written on the Reformation in the


time of Henry VIII. I have listed just a few here that may be of help to those
wishing to pursue the subject further.

Collinson, P. Godly People: Essays on English Protestantism and


Puritanism. London, 1983. An excellent account of the progress of
Reformation and its development in the sixteenth century.
Collinson, P. The Religion of Protestants. Oxford, 1982. A very good book
describing what the Protestants believed, although it concentrates on
the Elizabethan period.
Cross, C. Church and People, 1450–1660. London, 1976. A good general
introduction.
Dickens, A. G. The English Reformation. London, 1964. A landmark. While
many of Dickens’s conclusions have been shown to be inaccurate, there
is much here of worth when studying this period.
Duffy, E. The Stripping of the Altars. New Haven, Conn., 1992. A
complicated and detailed account of the changes in the Church from the
late fifteenth century through the Reformation. Not for beginners.
Elton, G. R. England under the Tudors, second edition. London, 1974. The
classic textbook on the period. Somewhat out of date now, but much of
his argument is still debated.

80
Elton, G. R. Reform and Reformation: England, 1509–1558. London, 1977.
Detailed but readable; an important discussion of the period.
Elton, G. R. Reform and Renewal: Thomas Cromwell and the Common
Weal. Cambridge, 1973.
Elton, G. R. Policy and Police: The Enforcement of the Reformation in the
Age of Thomas Cromwell. Cambridge, 1972. Perhaps Elton’s most
important book. If the student is interested in how the Reformation was
enforced, this is the book to read.
Guy, J. A. The Public Career of Thomas More. Brighton, 1980. One of the
better biographies of More.
Guy, J. A. Tudor England. Oxford, 1988.
Haigh, C. English Reformations. Oxford, 1993. A revisionist view of the
Reformation. There are some problems with Haigh’s arguments, but this
is a very useful book, and students should take note of it.
Haigh, C., ed. The English Reformation Revised. Cambridge, 1987. A good
collection of essays; they are detailed and scholarly but very useful.
Heal, F. and O’Day, R., eds. Church and Society in England: Henry VIII to
James I. London, 1977. Another useful collection of essays.
Heal, F. and O’Day, R., eds. Princes and Paupers in the English Church
1500–1800. Leicester, 1981.
Heath, P. The English Parish Clergy on the Eve of the Reformation.
London, 1969. A scholarly study of the state of the Church just before
the Reformation.
Ives, E. W. Anne Boleyn. Oxford, 1986. Everything you always wanted to
know about Anne Boleyn – a good read.
Lehmberg, S. E. The Reformation Parliament, 1529–1536. Cambridge,
1970. ‘The’ work on the Reformation Parliament. It is detailed and
scholarly but accessible.
Lehmberg, S. E. The Later Parliaments of the Reign of Henry VIII.
Cambridge, 1980.
Marius, R. Thomas More. New York, 1984. Another biography of More.
McConica, J. K. English Humanists and Reformation Politics under Henry
VIII and Edward VI. Oxford, 1965. A much-maligned look at English
humanism. Flawed but still useful.
Muller, J. A. Stephen Gardiner and the Tudor Reaction. New York, 1926.
The best book on Stephen Gardiner.

81
Palmer, M. D. Henry VIII. London, 1971. A study guide: very worthwhile.
Parmiter, G. The King’s Great Matter. London, 1967.
Pollard, A. E Wolsey. London, 1929. Dated but still to be recommended.
Rex, R. Henry VIII and the English Reformation. London, 1993. A study
guide with a Catholic point of view.
Ridley, J. Thomas Cranmer. Oxford, 1962.
Scarisbrick, J. J. Henry VIII. London, 1968. Groundbreaking study of Henry
VIII. Thorough, scholarly and important.
Scarisbrick, J. J. The Reformation and the English People. London, 1984. A
broad look at the Reformation.
Shiels, W. J. The English Reformation 1530–1570. London, 1989 Another
study guide, and a very good one.
Wilkie, W. E. The Cardinal Protectors of England: Rome and the Tudors
before the Reformation. Cambridge, 1974. A scholarly book on pre-
Reformation relations between England and Rome.
Youings, J. The Dissolution of the Monasteries. London, 1971. An important
account of the dissolution, but not for a student new to the period.

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