The Reformation was a culmination of events
and circumstances, both here and abroad, which led to a seismic shift in the
religious framework of Britain. Its roots, certainly in England, can be traced
back to the previous centuries and the rise in the influence of the mass
populace engendered by the plague, as discussed in the previous section. The
Reformation was a by-product of the infant capitalism: wealth, urbanisation and
education. Whilst still a minority, the literate laity were no longer confined
to those in on the game, and were better educated than many priests who claimed
to be the path to salvation (while taking their money in taxes). It rankled
somewhat.
It was a German cleric, Martin Luther, who lit the fuse for the first, European,
Reformation. Provided no comfort by Catholic ritual and horrified by abuses in
Italy, he concluded that salvation was a personal matter between God and man:
traditional church ceremonial was irrelevant at best and at its worst - the sale
of indulgences, for example - fraudulent. Nailing his 95 Theses to a church door
in Wittenberg, Germany, he prompted massive theological debate and was condemned
as a heretic and an outlaw.
It is one of history's great ironies that the man who publicly refuted him was
none other than Henry VIII, rewarded with the title of Fidei Defensor - Defender
of the Faith - in 1521. But it was too late. Luther's ideas were white hot and
they spread fast. They soon reached England and were discussed by academics
here.
So England by the mid 1520s was hearing grumbles of lay dissatisfaction,
grumbles that remained. Catholicism addressed many important needs and enjoyed
general popular support. Even though the grumblers could point to Europe as a
lead, the same situation existed in France, yet that remained Catholic. What
France didn't have was a Defender of the Faith; it didn't have a Henry. King
since 1509, England's Renaissance Man lacked but one thing in his life - a son.
Catherine of Aragon had produced six children but only a daughter, Mary,
survived. Henry had become convinced that God was punishing him for marrying the
wife of his dead elder brother, Arthur. He had also become infatuated with Anne
Boleyn, daughter of a well-connected London merchant whose family he knew well:
her sister had been a mistress. No beauty but no fool, Anne insisted that she be
Queen or nothing. Henry was keen. He was also married. It was his search for a
solution that triggered the break from Rome.
In 1527 he asked Pope Clement VII for a divorce on Scriptural grounds. But
unfortunately for both Clement and Henry, Rome was surrounded by the Emperor
Charles V of Spain, Catherine's nephew. Unsurprisingly, Charles was
unsympathetic to Henry's requests, which meant the Pope had to be as well. Henry
had to find another way.
It was Thomas Cranmer, one of the White Horse Group, who in 1530 suggested a
legal approach. The Collectanea argued that Kings of England enjoyed Imperial
Power similar to that of the first Christian Roman Emperors. This meant that the
Pope's jurisdiction was illegal: if Henry wanted a divorce, he could have it, as
long as the Archbishop of Canterbury agreed. But William Warham didn't. Henry
applied some pressure, charging the clergy with Praemunire, the unlawful
exercise of spiritual jurisdiction. In 1532 they had capitulated, and the next
year a new Act asserted England's judicial independence. By now, matters were
pressing: Anne was pregnant. Henry had to marry for the child to be legitimate.
Luckily, Warham had just died. Henry replaced him with Cranmer and the divorce
came through within months.
The Act of Supremacy (1534) confirmed the break from Rome,
declaring Henry to be the Supreme Head of the Church of England. But the
Reformation was far from over. The Protestant Anne Boleyn had the motivation,
the power and the intelligence to push reform as far as it would go. She also
had the means: Cranmer and Cromwell. In the Orwellian atmosphere of the Tudor
state, Cranmer was the thought, Cromwell the police. Thomas Cromwell combined
managerial genius with Machiavellian ruthlessness. The years to 1540 saw his
henchmen travel the country, assessing the church's wealth. Once he knew how
much to take, he took.
The Dissolution of the Monasteries lasted four years to 1540. Two thirds of all
the land was sold to the laity and the money squandered in vanity wars against
France. With the destruction of priceless ecclesiastical treasures it was
possibly the greatest act of vandalism in English history but also an act of
political genius, creating a vested interest in the Reformation: those now
owning monastic lands were unlikely to embrace a return to Catholicism.
But for all the work carried out in his name, Henry was never a Protestant.
Further doctrinal reform was halted by the Act of Six Articles in 1539 and
following Cromwell's sudden fall the next year the court hung between religious
conservatives and radical reformers with the Reformation stuck in the mud. But
on the quiet, Henry's young son, born to Jane Seymour (wife number three), was
being educated by Protestants. Edward was only ten when he became king in 1547
but his two regents accelerated the pace of Protestant reform considerably. The
1539 Act was repealed, priests were permitted to marry - creating another vested
interest - and more land was confiscated. Altars and shrines were all removed
from churches and the stained glass was smashed.
Becoming Queen in 1553 Mary, Edward's devoutly Catholic sister, was always going
to have a tough time undoing twenty years' work. Although Protestantism remained
patchy and its followers a minority, this minority was entrenched and
substantial, at least in London and the South East. Mary did her best,
reinstating Catholic doctrines and rites, and replacing altars and images, but
she handicapped herself by martyring almost 300 ordinary men and women, as well
as bigger names like Cranmer.
The burnings were unpopular and immensely counter-productive, and she compounded
her errors by marrying Philip II of Spain, son of Charles V who had so
successfully thwarted Henry in 1527. Burning bodies, Spanish courtiers and
Philip's awful English all fuelled further Protestant propaganda and confirmed
fears of the Catholic menace that had been threatened since 1534. Fighting
France for Philip, Mary's loss of Calais in 1558 - England's last territory in
France - helped turn distrust into hatred and xenophobia. Tension mounted,
Thomas Wyatt was rebelling in Kent, and religious civil war seemed not too far
away.
However, chance rolled the dice once more. After two phantom pregnancies Mary
died childless in November 1558: the only heir was Elizabeth, Anne Boleyn's
daughter. A moderate Protestant, she inherited a nervous kingdom where
Catholicism dominated everywhere but the major cities, the South East and East
Anglia. She had to inject some stability. The religious settlement of 1559 was
intended to be inclusive. It restored Royal Supremacy and the Act of Uniformity
but, in a conciliatory gesture, reintroduced clerical vestments and a more
Catholic Eucharist. Altars were allowed, and clergy had to get permission to
marry.
In reality, however, the settlement was very Protestant: it reissued Cranmer's
Prayer Book of 1552 and its 39 Articles were closely modelled on his work in
1553. All but one of Mary's Bishops were removed from office after refusing to
take the Oath of Supremacy, replaced by men hand-picked by Elizabeth's chief
minister, Robert Cecil. Most were far more radical than their Queen, as were the
clergy who filled the parishes vacated by resigning Catholic priests. While
altars were theoretically allowed, in practice they were removed by church
commissions that toured the country to check compliance.
The church was further bolstered in 1563 when another Act of Uniformity made
refusal to take the oath, or the defence of papal authority, a treasonable
offence. But this time the foreign threat was real: a revolt in 1569, the papal
invasion of Ireland, Elizabeth's excommunication and the arrival of priests from
France all underlined the insecurity of the Anglican Church. The severity of the
Treason Laws increased alongside anti-Catholic sentiment, effectively killing it
as any real force by driving it underground for the rest of her reign.
And it was the length of her reign that secured Anglicanism and established it
as Protestant. After the stop-start policies of Edward and Mary, it had 45 years
of Elizabethan rule to bed down. Had she succumbed to smallpox in 1562, a
religious civil war might easily have followed. But luck struck again, and by
her death in 1603 the country was united as had not been possible in the
previous century, both by a common religion and a common enemy. Patriotism and
Protestantism were two halves of the same coin, a coin baring Henry's title, 'Fidei
Defensor'. They still do.
So why is the Reformation important? It established in English minds the image
of an island nation, separate and supreme, still resonant today. English policy
became increasingly repressive in Ireland, importing Protestant landowners to
oppress the locals who resisted conversion. That legacy still lingers, and the
abiding sense of anti-Catholicism remained potent enough to be a cause of the
Civil War a century later.