tudor rebellions! 2

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TUDOR REBELLIONS By Kenisha Browning Tudor Rebellions By Kenisha Browning

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Page 1: Tudor rebellions! 2

TUDOR REBELLIONSBy Kenisha Browning

Tudor Rebellions

By Kenisha Browning

Page 2: Tudor rebellions! 2

SIMILARITIES AND DIFFERENCES

Similarities Differences

Dynastic Rebellions across the Tudor Period

•Factions seem to be one of the main causes for the rebellions•Most failed because the reinforcements they anticipated failed them. •Issues with succession seem to be one of the main causes for the rebellions.

•The numbers involved.•The status of the rebellion leader (gentry or not)•The length of the rebellion•The causes of the rebellions. •Some had foreign support( Warbeck) as some had none (Wyatt)

Page 3: Tudor rebellions! 2

WHY DID MORE DYNASTIC REBELLIONS HAPPEN IN SOME PERIODS OF THE TUDOR PERIOD THAN OTHERS?

The last decade of Henry VIII’s reign had not seen a further outbreak of major rebellion. In part this was because of the strong punishments that had taken place against the Pilgrimage of Grace and it was also because Henry retreated from further attacks on the church.

The issue of royal succession dominated politics in the 1550s. As Edwards VI’s health deteriorated, it looked increasingly likely that his Catholic sister, Mary, would soon be inheriting the throne. For those who had worked hard to encourage Protestantism, including Edward himself, this was a bitter prospect. The rebellions in 1549 (Kett Rebellion) had shaken confidence in the Tudor regime and the prospect of a Catholic monarch after a child-king did not do much to restore faith that there would be a stable government in future. Therefore, rebellion was inevitable.

Page 4: Tudor rebellions! 2

Despite making very controversial changes to the structure and beliefs of the church, Elizabeth faced only one serious rebellion in her 40 or so years as queens. It was only at the very end of her reign when disastrous economic conditions provoked localised rioting that the prospect of the rebellion resurfaced, but even then it never really troubled the government.

The unrest in 1549, which contained a noticeable element of criticism of the wealthy, might have shocked nobility and gentry into greater loyalty to the crown. While they had been prepared to dabble in rebellion in the first half of the century, the possibility that they could lose control and protest turned directly against them was a sobering thought. Finally, the government had become more prepared against protest. The expansion of treason laws gave greater powers to nip problems in the bud and Elizabethan governments showed a steely determination to punish disobedience.

Page 5: Tudor rebellions! 2

OVERALL WHICH WERE THE MORE SERIOUS AND WHY, WHICH WERE THE LESS SERIOUS AND WHY.