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What you need to know - Elizabeth I's reign began in 1558 amidst significant religious challenges. The Elizabethan Religious Settlement, through the Acts of Supremacy and Uniformity, aimed to stabilise religion but faced resistance, particularly from Puritans seeking further reforms. The Catholic threat grew after 1568, leading to events like the Northern Rebellion (1569) and Papal excommunication (1570), intensifying pressures on Catholics from 1558 to 1589.
A major rebellion in the North, Pilgrimage of Grace, broke out after Henry VIII closed down monasteries.
The Prayer Book Rebellion broke out in 1549 after the theology of the English Reformation was published and enforced.
Catholic persecution characterised Mary's reign, killing over 300 martyrs. Committed resistance to Catholicism grew.
Elizabeth depicted in the pages of the Bishops' Bible, 1569
Religious crises affected various countries in Europe beginning in the fourteenth century when scholars found and pushed for another way of practising Christianity. By the sixteenth century, the Protestant Reformation had spread across Europe which threatened the Catholic powers. Consequently, conflicts abroad influenced religious developments in England.
Inheriting a predominantly Catholic nation, Elizabeth needed to tread carefully and take a cautious approach early in her reign.
Considering the foreign situations and the consequences of leaning completely towards one religion, the Queen steered a 'middle way'. Elizabeth I's Religious Settlement of 1559 aimed to provide religious stability by finding a middle ground for both Catholics and Protestants. She faced considerable Catholic opposition to the Settlement, particularly from nobles in the House of Lords. As such, Catholicism was tolerated provided it was practised in private, Catholics outwardly conformed to the new religion, and loyalty was promised.
The implementation of the Middle Way came in three parts in 1559.
Elizabeth aspired for two outcomes from her religious settlement:
Uniformity: Elizabeth wanted to establish a national Church that would be acceptable to all.
Conformity: Elizabeth wanted her subjects to conform to the demands of her religious settlement.
This act replaced the Pope as the head of the English Church, with the monarch. It gave legal sovereignty of civil laws over the laws of the Church of England.
It was previously passed and revoked by past Tudor monarchs:
1534: Henry VIII designated himself head of the Church of England through the Act of Supremacy
1553: Mary took the throne, revoked the Act of Supremacy and reinstated Catholicism
1559: Elizabeth acceded to the throne and reinstated the Act of Supremacy
Elizabeth made some changes when reinstating this act. She declared herself the Supreme Governor of the Church of England, rather than the divisive title of Supreme Head like her father and brother. The aim was to pacify Catholics who believed the Pope to be the Head of the Church.
Elizabeth instituted an Oath of Supremacy.
This required anyone taking public or church office to swear allegiance to the monarch as Governor of the Church and State. Refusing was treason. She did, however, keep the pre-Reformation episcopal structure of two archbishops. Under the Act of Supremacy 1559:
All clergy and members of the government had to swear an oath of allegiance to Elizabeth.
This was important as it meant the clergy were first and foremost responsible to her and not the Pope.
The Ecclesiastic High Commission was set up to ensure everyone was doing as they were told.
Since Elizabeth was not a radical, some viewed the changes brought about by the religious settlement to be insufficient, while others believed them to be extreme. Catholics and Protestants responded differently to the changes.
Book of Common Prayer wording is ambiguous / deliberately vague.
E.g. Communion sacrament. Catholic transubstantiation meant bread and wine were the body and blood of Christ.
E.g. Communion sacrament. Protestants could regard communion as an act of remembrance.
Elizabeth banned pilgrimages to and monuments of fake miracles.
Catholics were pleased because it still meant there were real miracles.
Protestants were pleased because it stopped money-makers from duping people with fake miracles.
Use of Catholic elements allowed in the Church.
Catholics were pleased.
Protestants wanted much less but could deal with elements. Puritans were very unhappy.
The Religious Settlement of 1559 brought a degree of stability to England compared to the radical Protestantism and Catholicism of her predecessors.
Some extreme Protestants, called Puritans, emerged and demanded further reform, believing that the Church of England needed 'purifying' of Catholic elements.
Belief: They believed Catholic rituals, ceremonies and teachings went against God's intentions.
Simplicity: Puritans wanted a simple, uncomplicated worship and way of life.
More reform: Protestants who fled Mary I returned to England with radical ideas. Church of England was still too Catholic.
Modesty: Things such as dancing, theatre and enjoyment were sinful and people should dress modestly. Sundays were for devout religious study.
No order: Puritans felt that church hierarchy wasn't needed and congregations could organise themselves.
Whilst the religious settlement had effectively made England a Protestant nation, it still allowed elements of Catholicism and traditions of Catholic worship to remain. Initially, this was not too big an issue but as more and more Puritans exiled to Protestant European countries under Mary I returned to England, they soon started applying pressure to make the Church of England more radical.
The English Church and State should be further reformed by the Word of God and the faithful preaching of the Gospel, as in the continental reformed churches.
Puritanism had been effective in challenging Elizabeth and her religious settlement due to the fact that many of the top advisers and court officials had close ties with Puritan leaders and were partial to the Puritan views themselves. Many problematic Puritans were MPs.
In 1571, he introduced a bill into the Commons to change the Prayer Book along Puritan lines. Elizabeth closed Parliament and banned bills which had to do with religion.
Along with other Puritans, he challenged Elizabeth over freedom of speech in order to discuss religious policy. He was imprisoned a number of times for raising the issue.
In 1586, he was imprisoned with Wentworth after introducing a bill to change the Religious Settlement. This forced Puritans to find other ways to gain influence.
Elizabeth also faced a challenge from the Puritans in the Privy Council. Unlike the radical MPs and priests, they were relatively moderate and hoped to introduce more reforms by taking a softer approach with Elizabeth.
It was not long before objections to the terms of the religious settlement began, especially the use of the Prayer Book. Throughout Elizabeth's reign, she attempted to block Parliament and the bishops from introducing further religious reforms. The bishops were faced with the dilemma of enforcing conformity while supporting reforms.
Bishops were regarded loyal administrators and civil servants who could be depended on to enforce the royal will. They were in charge of inspecting parishes to ensure that the Injunctions were properly enforced.
Elizabeth I relied heavily on her advisers who were also Puritan leaders but she never allowed them to make more changes to her religious settlement. This led to Puritan separatism.
Henry Barrowe and John Greenwood, stained glass windows at a church in Cambridge
The Archbishopric of Canterbury was the most important office in the Church of England, especially in the enforcement of the religious settlement. Its archbishop was the senior bishop and leader of the Church of England and answered to the Supreme Governor, the Queen.
Elizabeth had three Archbishops of Canterbury throughout her long reign.
Parker previously became the chaplain of Anne Boleyn and Henry VIII. He was a moderate reformer and worked well with Elizabeth, putting the Church of England on a firm foothold. He had a few different views from the Queen including the issue of clerical marriage. Whilst he was blamed for not being able to properly enforce the Injunctions, the strength of his partnership with the Queen resulted in the relative success of the Church in early Elizabethan England.
Grindal assumed the Archbishopric of Canterbury after Parker died in 1575. Unlike Parker, he had a disastrous working relationship with the Queen due to his Puritan sympathies. He clashed with the Queen, especially on the issue of prophesying, the unauthorised meetings for prayer and preaching. This led to Grindal's suspension from office in 1577 until he died in 1583.
Whitgift was Elizabeth's favourite of all her Archbishops of Canterbury. He shared the same views as the Queen. He was suspicious of the Puritans and also protected the Church from the Catholics. He thoroughly carried out the Queen's religious policy of uniformity. It was during his administration that Puritan separatism was made a crime. He was at the Queen's side until she died in 1603.
Whilst the Puritans presented challenges to the religious settlement, the majority of the Catholics in England complied with most of the settlement, most of the time. Nevertheless, Catholics were involved in plans that targeted not only the settlement but also Elizabeth herself.
The Catholics in England found significant backing abroad. The papacy was engaged in persecuting Protestants while the Counter-Reformation was spreading across Europe. It was clear that the Catholic Church was not in favour of other doctrines.
Consequently, in 1568, a school for training English Catholic missionaries was established in the Netherlands by William Allen, an English Cardinal.
Apart from the opposition to the papacy and the Catholic rejection of the settlement, Philip II of Spain, who had been angered by Elizabeth's support for Protestants abroad, was a Catholic threat to England. This threat became more apparent in 1568 with the arrival of Mary, Queen of Scots, in England.
Figurehead: Mary, QoS, became an influential Catholic figurehead in England.
Immediate Threat: Elizabeth's refusal to marry and bear children meant Mary, QoS, was next in line to the throne.
Catholic Queen: The counter-reformation to Protestantism aimed to restore nations to Catholicism. This resulted in several assassination plots against Elizabeth.
Foreign Friends: Mary, QoS, had the support of powerful Catholic nations like France and Spain, and the Catholic Church in Rome.
Centre of Plots: Mary, QoS, was at the centre of several plots to overthrow Elizabeth, most notably the Rebellion of the Northern Earl, which she instigated. Other plots included: the Ridolfi Plot, 1571; Throckmorton Plot, 1583; and finally, Babington Plot, 1586 - which directly led to Mary, QoS', execution.
In Tudor England, the Catholic Northern Earls were wealthy and powerful, particularly during Mary I's reign. Being so far away from the centre of power, they governed somewhat independently of the Crown and had the manpower to do so. When Elizabeth acceded, their influence was reduced and southern lords were put in charge of some northern land. They resented the Crown's interference. When Mary, QoS, showed up in 1568 and with Pope Pius V stoking their dissent, a rebellion broke out in 1569. Thomas Percy and Charles Neville led this rebellion.
Thomas Percy, 7th Earl of Northumberland
Charles Neville, 6th Earl of Westmorland
Thomas Radclyffe, Earl of Sussex, (known as the Lord President of the North), loyal to Elizabeth, rallied and prevented the capture of York. The rebellion instead captured Barnard Castle further north.
Lord President of the North
In 1570, Pope Pius V excommunicated Elizabeth I, declaring her a heretic. His papal bull released Catholics from any loyalty to Elizabeth, which conflicted with her Supremacy Act, and called upon them to remove her from the throne.
"But the number of the ungodly has so much grown in power that there is no place left in the world which they have not tried to corrupt with their most wicked doctrines; and among others, Elizabeth, the pretended queen of England and the servant of crime, has assisted in this, with whom as in a sanctuary the most pernicious of all have found refuge." Pope Pius V, 1570
From 1558 to 1570, there was relative leniency towards Catholics who were willing to keep their religion to themselves as long as they would follow the religious laws. However, Pope Pius V's 1570 bull, Regnans in Excelsis, conflicted with the English Catholics.
By 1580, the Catholics reacted differently to Elizabethan religious laws:
The 1580s saw the passage of anti-Catholic laws in response to the discovery of plots and threats against the Church of England and the Queen.
In 1581, the Religion Act or the Act to Retain the Queen's Majesty's subjects in their due obedience was passed to discourage the English Catholics from obeying the papal bull. The act made it high treason to reconcile anyone or to be reconciled to Catholicism, or to procure or publish any papal bull or writing whatsoever. Furthermore, punishment for non-compliance to the settlement became harsher and the celebration of Catholic mass, even privately, was strictly prohibited.
The persecution of Catholics climaxed in 1585 with the passage of the act against Jesuits, seminary priests and other such like disobedient persons. Some of the English Catholics executed under Elizabeth were Edmund Campion, Robert Southwell and Margaret Clitherow.
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