How serious were the 1549 rebellions? Flashcards

1
Q

Why did the majority of riots in this period involve the destruction of hedges?

A
  • exclusion of commons from traditional sources of food came at time when inflation made purchasing commodities extremely high (wheat prices quadrupled)
  • state of alarm was felt throughout England and these riots did have the potential to escalate to that of Kett’s or the Prayer Book Rebellion
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2
Q

What reveals the extent to which Somerset was prepared to make concessions to the protestors and to encouraged those involved that the ‘Good Duke’ would redress their grievances?

A
  • Somerset wrote directly to the protestors (either in own name or that of the king)
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3
Q

Whose views did the Kett’s rebels reflect?

A
  • evangelical thinker John Hales
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4
Q

What was the very radical idea that the Kett’s rebels underlyingly believed?

A
  • Protestant commonwealth

- property should be used for benefit of all rather than exclusive use of few wealthy people

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5
Q

What was the motivation for the minor disturbances in Oxfordshire, Hampshire and Yorkshire?

A
  • resentment of the changes brought in by the Prayer Book
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6
Q

What is a key theme linking the two rebellions?

A
  • looking back to a previous age (although some of Kett’s rebels did accept the new prayer book unlike those in the Western rebellion)
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7
Q

What summarises how the rebellions were different?

A
  • Western rebels wanted religious settlement of Henry to be respected until Edward came of age
  • Kett’s rebels sought a return to the economic relationship of 1485
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8
Q

What do the two rebellions really emphasise?

A
  • Western - how far religious reforms were accepted in the south-west
  • Kett’s - how in the rest of England there seems to have been little resistance and there were other issues of more immediate concern
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9
Q

Most historians agree that the coup which removed Protector Somerset was made directly possible by the rebellions and Somerset’s handling of them. Why?

A
  • his support of anti-enclosure measures disastrously earned him the widespread reputation of being a friend of the commons
  • failure to crush the rebellions quickly sealed his fate
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10
Q

How did North’s role in the rebellion benefit him?

A
  • his successful military suppression of Kett’s rebellion added to his own political credibility and status
  • able to use this to gain extra support when he became ruler in January 1550
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11
Q

How did the rebellion impact foreign policy?

A
  • desperate need for troops required Somerset to drastically scale down his favoured policy of garrisoning the border with Scotland
  • French also took advantage of England’s internal domestic turmoil by declaring war and besieging Boulogne in summer 1549
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