The Reformation and the English People.BOOKS IN BRIEF The Reformation and the English People Noun 1. English people - the people of England English nation, country, land - the people who live in a nation or country; "a statement that sums up the nation's mood"; "the news was announced to the nation"; "the whole country worshipped him" There can be little doubt that the Reformation in England received much of its support from ambitious men who took it as an opportunity to acquire wealth or power for themselves. What is more difficult to determine is how the general run of Englishmen viewed the new order of things introduced by Henry VIII and his successors. Drawing on various types of evidence--individual wills, confraternity con·fra·ter·ni·ty n. pl. con·fra·ter·ni·ties An association of persons united in a common purpose or profession. [Middle English confraternite registers, local town records--Professor Scarisbrick concludes that, for the most part, people were quite content with the Catholic way of life. Up to and even after Henry's suppression of the monasteries, individuals regularly left bequests in their wills for memorial Masses; there was widespread involvement in the building of churches; lay confraternities and guilds organized largely for pious purposes continued to enroll new members; pilgrimages remained popular as ever. The response of many people to the revival of the Faith under Mary Tudor Mary Tudor: see Mary I, Queen of England; Mary of England. is also quite telling. Churches that had been despoiled de·spoil tr.v. de·spoiled, de·spoil·ing, de·spoils 1. To sack; plunder. 2. To deprive of something valuable by force; rob: were restored. Property that had been alienated al·ien·ate tr.v. al·ien·at·ed, al·ien·at·ing, al·ien·ates 1. To cause to become unfriendly or hostile; estrange: alienate a friend; alienate potential supporters by taking extreme positions. was purchased by local towns. Altar stones, sacred vessels, and priestly priest·ly adj. priest·li·er, priest·li·est 1. Of or relating to a priest or the priesthood. 2. Characteristic of or suitable for a priest. vestments that had disappeared during the reign of Edward gradually reappeared. And this was the work not of the government but, rather, of laymen devoted to the old order. The question naturally arises: Why then did the Reformation succeed if so many people were opposed to it? Professor Scarisbrick credits Henry and Cromwell with keeping their opponents off guard by a policy of attacking isolated targets (e.g., smaller monastic communities) while avoiding an open commitment to radical change. Furthermore the English Reformation The English Reformation refers to the series of events in sixteenth-century England by which the church in England broke away from the authority of the Pope and the Roman Catholic Church. had, at its inception, the advantage of not being linked with Protestantism. As a result very few Englishmen expected a "next step" even after several steps had already been taken. This work, in addition to being a fine study of the period, will also be useful to those interested in the techniques of "revolution from above." |
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