130 likes | 147 Views
Introduction and overview. Paper 2 The Church in England: the Struggle for Supremacy, 1529-47 1 hour 30 minutes. Structure of paper. Answer Question 1 and either Question 2 or 3 Question 1 is a (secondary) source based question in two parts worth 12 and 24 marks.
E N D
Introduction and overview Paper 2 The Church in England: the Struggle for Supremacy, 1529-47 1 hour 30 minutes
Structure of paper • Answer Question 1 and either Question 2 or 3 • Question 1 is a (secondary) source based question in two parts worth 12 and 24 marks. • Questions 2 and 3 are in two parts, worth 12 and 24 marks. • So there are 72 raw marks available altogether, 36 for each question. • You would spend 45 minutes on each question – roughly 15 minutes on a 12 mark question and 30 minutes on 24 marker. • We will look at technique for this paper in depth as we go through the course, with lots of opportunities for practice.
5 key topic areas • The Church in England on the eve of the Reformation, 1529 • The role of the state: the King’s Great Matter and the break from Rome, 1529–1535 • The Dissolution of the Monasteries, 1535–1541 • The Impact of the Reformation on Church and State, 1535–1541 • Henry’s final years: consolidation and court intrigue, 1542–1547
Key topics • The Church in England on the eve of the Reformation, 1529 • Church fabric and wealth; religious doctrine and practice; ecclesiastical organisation; anticlerical criticisms of the state of the Church and monasteries; popular Catholicism • Religious reformers including humanists, Lutherans and believers in Royal Supremacy • Religious conservatives and the Aragonese faction
The role of the state: the King’s Great Matter and the break from Rome, 1529–1535 • The King’s need for a divorce from Catherine of Aragon • Measures taken to prepare for the divorce, 1529–1532 • The Acts of the Reformation, 1533–1534 • Opposition to the Royal Supremacy
The Dissolution of the Monasteries, 1535–1541 • The motives behind the dissolutions • The enforcement of the dissolutions and the role of Thomas Cromwell • Reactions against the dissolutions: the Lincolnshire Rising and the Pilgrimage of Grace • The impact of the dissolutions on society, culture and the Church
The Impact of the Reformation on Church and State, 1535–1541 • Parliamentary legislation and Government actions to reform the Church: the relationship between the King and Parliament • The consequences of the Reformation for state finances • The impact of the Reformation on English foreign policy • Conservative reactions against the Reformation: the Six Articles, the role of the Conservative faction at court and the significance of the fall of Cromwell and of the Howard marriage
Henry’s final years: consolidation and court intrigue, 1542–1547 • The influence of Catherine Parr; faction and the position of Cranmer • The King’s Book and debates and arguments on the Eucharist, liturgy and Bible and their effect by 1547 • The foreign policy of later years • The influence of the Seymour faction, the demise of the Howards and signs of change by 1547 policy of later years
The role of the state: the King’s Great Matter and the break from Rome, 1529–1535 • This is the key topic – everything begins with this. • It has enormous religious, economic and social consequences but it would be mistake to see it as primarily a religious event. It was politically motivated. • It was about the succession – not really about religion... but it became a religious matter later. • If we are to understand Henry’s motives we need to look at him against the background of the 15th century.
The Wars of the Roses • Battle of Towton – 1461 – 28,000 killed in one day (worse in fact that the first day of the Somme)… • It was in the interests of the nobility as well as the king, therefore, to secure the succession.
The royal sex life is not a personal matter… • Henry VI and Edward V were child kings… • Arthur died in 1502, and a couple of years after that Henry VII fell ill; • Throughout his reign, Henry is suspicious of anyone with royal blood – Duke of Buckingham executed in 1521; the de la Pole’s (except Reginald) are wiped out in 1538.
Now, what’s significant about this image of Henry (and so many others)?