the english reformation
On February 18th, 1516 at the Palace of Placentia in Greenwich, London a baby girl is born. She will be called Mary and she has been born unto King Henry VIII and his Spanish wife, Queen Catherine of Aragon. Ordinarily, you may think this would be an occasion of great celebration but these are not ordinary times. These are the times of the fragile Tudor Dynasty and the Queen of England must supply heirs.
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Catherine had been pregnant four times since their marriage in 1509 and had delivered one girl and three boys but none had survived longer than a couple of months.
Henry was not only desperate for healthy children but he was especially desperate for healthy boys. In the early 16th century it was far more desirable to have a King than a Queen and so this new girl Mary, although welcome, gave Henry further disappointment.
Henry was not only desperate for healthy children but he was especially desperate for healthy boys. In the early 16th century it was far more desirable to have a King than a Queen and so this new girl Mary, although welcome, gave Henry further disappointment.
Not to worry, Catherine is still young and they can try again. So two years later she becomes pregnant again… another girl… who again dies after only a few hours. To say Henry was becoming impatient would be putting it mildly.
That was the last time Catherine would become pregnant and so Henry needs to come up with a plan. |
In 1525, he spots a new girl amongst Catherine’s ladies in waiting, she is called Anne Boleyn. He quite likes Anne and so he starts an amorous relationship with her and by 1527, he has decided he’d like to get shot of Catherine and marry Anne. Perhaps Anne is the one who can give him his male heirs.
There’s just a little bit of a problem with this plan. |
This is 16th Century Europe and if there is one thing you can say about 16th Century Europe is that it is very, very catholic and nothing happens in catholic Europe without the big man, Pope Clement VII giving his papal approval.
So Henry gets his top man, Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, to have a word with the Pope and get a divorce sorted out. Now you might think, job done! Except divorce at this time was very much frowned upon and you’re going to need a pretty good excuse. Henry’s brilliant excuse is that because Catherine had been married before to a guy named Arthur that Henry’s marriage was invalid.
So Henry gets his top man, Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, to have a word with the Pope and get a divorce sorted out. Now you might think, job done! Except divorce at this time was very much frowned upon and you’re going to need a pretty good excuse. Henry’s brilliant excuse is that because Catherine had been married before to a guy named Arthur that Henry’s marriage was invalid.
Catherine’s parents are Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabella I of Castille. They were very powerful in Europe at this time and of course, very catholic. Henry’s Dad, Henry VII really wanted to be best pals with the Spanish and so it was agreed for Prince Arthur to marry Princess Catherine, which they did in 1501. England would have a Spanish Queen of England sitting next to King Arthur and all would be well.
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Except...
Prince Arthur only went and fell ill and died in 1502.
So to keep Ferdinand and Isabella happy, Henry VII thought, ‘I know! Catherine can marry young Henry’, problem solved. So they did, in 1509.
Prince Arthur only went and fell ill and died in 1502.
So to keep Ferdinand and Isabella happy, Henry VII thought, ‘I know! Catherine can marry young Henry’, problem solved. So they did, in 1509.
The most powerful man in Europe at this time is Charles V, The Holy Roman Emperor and he doesn’t exactly get on well with the Pope and he does have a liking for the odd war here and there.
What’s that got to do with Henry’s divorce? Well it turns out that Charles V is the nephew of Catherine and because Catherine really likes being Queen of England, he takes her side and threatens the Pope not to grant the divorce. So the Pope says ‘No Divorce!’ |
This does not please Henry.
However, it has not gone unnoticed by the King that across Europe there has been growing displeasure with the practices of the catholic church and protest movements by the likes of Martin Luther were gathering pace. The demands for a Protestant Reformation would seem to come at an ideal time for Henry as he now comes up with another brilliant plan.
However, it has not gone unnoticed by the King that across Europe there has been growing displeasure with the practices of the catholic church and protest movements by the likes of Martin Luther were gathering pace. The demands for a Protestant Reformation would seem to come at an ideal time for Henry as he now comes up with another brilliant plan.
If the catholic church won’t grant him a divorce, he’ll simply set up his own church, make himself the supreme head, grant his own divorce, marry Anne Boleyn and all will be well in the land.
So this he did. The series of Acts of Parliament began in 1532 and he married Anne in 1533. The whole break from Rome was completed in 1534 with The Act of Supremacy where Henry granted himself the rather spectacular title of ‘Supreme Head on Earth of the Church of England’. So you’d think Henry was happy now, right? |
Well…he’s enjoying his new role as head of a new church but he needs to make sure it sticks. So he sets about removing all signs of Catholicism from the land. All of the catholic monasteries in England were dissolved and their riches plundered to swell the royal coffers and the entire population was ordered to convert from Catholicism to the new protestant Church of England. Most did, but those who refused to recognise Henry as the new head of a new church, well they lost their heads!
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So, Henry got his divorce, he created his new church, he married his new queen, he got rid of Catholics, now all he needs for the full set…..is a son and all will be well in the land.
Except...
Except...
Queen Anne finds it difficult to provide him with a son and only gives birth to a daughter, Elizabeth in 1533. Henry, loses patience with Anne and through some shifty skulduggery, enough for a whole other video, she somehow manages to fall foul of the law and is beheaded for treason.
No problems with divorce then for Henry, so he is free to marry again, and does. He falls for Jane Seymour and marries her in 1536. Surely, this time a son will follow. |
Well he doesn’t have any children but he does have an older sister, Mary, remember her? The one with the very Spanish, very catholic mother? Well guess what!
She now becomes Queen Mary and immediately sets about undoing all that protestant carry-on and tells England that although they had all just made the switch from Catholicism to Anglicanism, would they mind awfully switching back….or be executed! To strengthen her catholic mission she even goes as far as to marry Phillip II of Spain who just happens to be the son of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, remember him?
She now becomes Queen Mary and immediately sets about undoing all that protestant carry-on and tells England that although they had all just made the switch from Catholicism to Anglicanism, would they mind awfully switching back….or be executed! To strengthen her catholic mission she even goes as far as to marry Phillip II of Spain who just happens to be the son of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, remember him?
However, Mary dies in 1558 having never giving birth to an heir. It would seem that along with the end of her reign was also the ending of the newfound English Catholicism because Mary’s successor was her younger half-sister, Elizabeth.
Elizabeth, remember was the daughter of Anne Boleyn who was the whole reason for the switch to Protestantism in the first place. So guess what, it’s time to again switch the English faith, this time back to the Church of England. |
Queen Elizabeth reinstates the Act of Supremacy, after her sister Mary had done away with it, gives herself the title of Supreme Governor and now once again, all will be well in the land.
Except, all this to and froing between religions has caused a great deal of upset throughout England and people are understandably tired of being threatened with losing their heads for reading the wrong bible. So she came up with the Act of Uniformity in 1559 which meant that although England remained protestant and all holders of official office had to toe the line, she wasn’t going to come chasing after people who quietly stayed catholic and so now all was well in the land. |
Except, after Elizabeth died in 1603 having no heirs, the English throne was taken by the Stuarts of Scotland. The following century would see skirmishes such as the Gunpowder Plot looking to restore Catholicism and it could be argued that the English Reformation lasted until 1688 when the English Civil wars saw the deposing of the last Catholic Monarch of England, James II.
James was replaced by William III and Mary II who ruled in conjunction and every British Monarch since has been a Protestant. Furthermore, as a result of Henry VIII’s creation of the Church of England, every British Monarch to this day has been head of the Church of England.
James was replaced by William III and Mary II who ruled in conjunction and every British Monarch since has been a Protestant. Furthermore, as a result of Henry VIII’s creation of the Church of England, every British Monarch to this day has been head of the Church of England.
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Further Reading
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