Edward VI & Somerset Historiography

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  • Created by: Susy
  • Created on: 21-12-13 19:48
What did A.F. Pollard say about government?
“No mean or selfish motives”
1 of 11
Loach (goverment)
“corrupt and greedy”
2 of 11
Brigden (religion)
Roughly 20% of Londoners were Protestant by 1547
3 of 11
Duffy (religion)
1547 Injunctions – A “charter for revolution” - Evidence from wills (********* of the Altars) shows that by 1549, only 27% of lay wills in Suffolk had Protestant preamble
4 of 11
Haigh (religion)
“Somerset had blundered into a total ban on images in London, and he got away with it” - The more important motive of the Chantries Act in 1547 was to raise money for war with Scotland, rather than getting rid of them because they were not necessary
5 of 11
McCulloch (religion)
Somerset and Northumberland’s commitments to Protestantism were not their first preoccupation - A ‘religious revolution’ was in Edward’s favour as he was a committed Protestant reformer
6 of 11
Loades (economy)
There was ‘simmering discontent’ in the countryside, but this can be seen as being the result of political and religious discontent rather than economic
7 of 11
Guy (military/economy)
“Somerset shrunk naval capacity which cost him dear”
8 of 11
Guy (social)
The rebellions were “the closest thing Tudor England came to a class war”
9 of 11
McCulloch (economic/social)
Kett’s rebellion was full of resentment of the abuse by landowners of the Norfolk foldcourse system
10 of 11
Duffy (social - Western Rebellion)
The economic grievances in the Western Rebellion exhibited “class antagonism”
11 of 11

Other cards in this set

Card 2

Front

Loach (goverment)

Back

“corrupt and greedy”

Card 3

Front

Brigden (religion)

Back

Preview of the front of card 3

Card 4

Front

Duffy (religion)

Back

Preview of the front of card 4

Card 5

Front

Haigh (religion)

Back

Preview of the front of card 5
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