source: other-projects/nightly-tasks/diffcol/trunk/gs3-model-collect/Tudor-Basic/archives/HASH6815.dir/doc.xml@ 28241

Last change on this file since 28241 was 28241, checked in by ak19, 11 years ago

Rebuilt the GS3 model collection after the change over to using placeholders for standard GS path prefixes in the two archiveinf gdb files

File size: 84.5 KB
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1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" standalone="no"?>
2<!DOCTYPE Archive SYSTEM "http://greenstone.org/dtd/Archive/1.0/Archive.dtd">
3<Archive>
4<Section>
5 <Description>
6 <Metadata name="gsdlsourcefilename">import/englishhistory.net/tudor/monarchs/edward6.html</Metadata>
7 <Metadata name="gsdldoctype">indexed_doc</Metadata>
8 <Metadata name="Plugin">HTMLPlugin</Metadata>
9 <Metadata name="FileSize">74662</Metadata>
10 <Metadata name="Source">edward6.html</Metadata>
11 <Metadata name="SourceFile">edward6.html</Metadata>
12 <Metadata name="Language">en</Metadata>
13 <Metadata name="Encoding">utf8</Metadata>
14 <Metadata name="Author">Marilee</Metadata>
15 <Metadata name="Title">Tudor Monarchs: King Edward VI</Metadata>
16 <Metadata name="FileFormat">HTML</Metadata>
17 <Metadata name="URL">http://englishhistory.net/tudor/monarchs/edward6.html</Metadata>
18 <Metadata name="UTF8URL">http://englishhistory.net/tudor/monarchs/edward6.html</Metadata>
19 <Metadata name="Identifier">HASH6815ffdac32a15841e2fff</Metadata>
20 <Metadata name="lastmodified">1378708193</Metadata>
21 <Metadata name="lastmodifieddate">20130909</Metadata>
22 <Metadata name="oailastmodified">1378708652</Metadata>
23 <Metadata name="oailastmodifieddate">20130909</Metadata>
24 <Metadata name="assocfilepath">HASH6815.dir</Metadata>
25 <Metadata name="gsdlassocfile">seymour-cr.jpg:image/jpeg:</Metadata>
26 <Metadata name="gsdlassocfile">seymour-min.jpg:image/jpeg:</Metadata>
27 <Metadata name="gsdlassocfile">ed6baby-crop.jpg:image/jpeg:</Metadata>
28 <Metadata name="gsdlassocfile">ed1543-crop.jpg:image/jpeg:</Metadata>
29 <Metadata name="gsdlassocfile">parr-cr.jpg:image/jpeg:</Metadata>
30 <Metadata name="gsdlassocfile">edward4-cr.jpg:image/jpeg:</Metadata>
31 <Metadata name="gsdlassocfile">ed6main-cr.jpg:image/jpeg:</Metadata>
32 <Metadata name="gsdlassocfile">edward6.gif:image/gif:</Metadata>
33 <Metadata name="gsdlassocfile">loseley.jpg:image/jpeg:</Metadata>
34 </Description>
35 <Content>
36&amp;nbsp;
37&lt;center&gt;&lt;table BORDER=0 CELLSPACING=8 CELLPADDING=0 WIDTH=&quot;98%&quot; &gt;
38&lt;tr&gt;
39&lt;td ALIGN=RIGHT VALIGN=TOP WIDTH=&quot;20%&quot;&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/td&gt;
40
41&lt;td WIDTH=&quot;15&quot;&gt;&lt;/td&gt;
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43&lt;td VALIGN=BOTTOM WIDTH=&quot;80%&quot;&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/td&gt;
44&lt;/tr&gt;
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46&lt;tr&gt;
47&lt;td VALIGN=TOP WIDTH=&quot;20%&quot;&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;/b&gt;
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112&lt;img SRC=&quot;_httpdocimg_/seymour-cr.jpg&quot; ALT=&quot;etching of Edward's mother, Jane Seymour&quot; BORDER=1 height=169 width=150&gt;&lt;p&gt;
113&lt;font size=&quot;2&quot;&gt;engraving of Jane Seymour, mother of Edward VI&lt;/font&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;br&gt;
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166&lt;img SRC=&quot;_httpdocimg_/seymour-min.jpg&quot; ALT=&quot;miniature portrait of Jane Seymour by Horenbout&quot; height=165 width=166&gt;
167&lt;br&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;2&quot;&gt;&amp;nbsp; miniature portrait of Jane Seymour, painted by Lucas
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230&lt;p&gt;&lt;img SRC=&quot;_httpdocimg_/ed6baby-crop.jpg&quot; ALT=&quot;Holbein's famous portrait of Edward as a toddler&quot; BORDER=2 height=194 width=150&gt;&lt;p&gt;
231&lt;font size=&quot;2&quot;&gt;Edward as a young prince, painted by Hans Holbein&lt;/font&gt;&lt;p&gt;
232&lt;font size=&quot;2&quot;&gt;to learn more about this portrait, &lt;/font&gt;
233&lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fnga.gov%2fcgi-bin%2fpinfo%3fObject%3d74%2b0%2bnone&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;2&quot;&gt;click
234here&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;br&gt;
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284&lt;p&gt;&lt;img SRC=&quot;_httpdocimg_/ed1543-crop.jpg&quot; ALT=&quot;portrait of Prince Edward in 1543&quot; BORDER=2 height=194 width=137&gt;
285&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;font size=&quot;2&quot;&gt; portrait of Edward VI, c1546, by an unknown artist&lt;/font&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;
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334&lt;img SRC=&quot;_httpdocimg_/parr-cr.jpg&quot; ALT=&quot;Edward's beloved stepmother, Katharine Parr&quot; BORDER=2 height=191 width=150&gt;&lt;p&gt;
335&lt;font size=&quot;2&quot;&gt;Edward VI's beloved stepmother, Katharine Parr, painted by
336William Scrots, c1543 &lt;/font&gt;
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392&lt;p&gt;&lt;img SRC=&quot;_httpdocimg_/edward4-cr.jpg&quot; ALT=&quot;profile portrait of Edward VI&quot; BORDER=2 height=228 width=150&gt;
393&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;font size=&quot;2&quot;&gt; Edward VI, c1546, perhaps painted by William Scrots&lt;/font&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;
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445&lt;p&gt;&lt;img SRC=&quot;_httpdocimg_/ed6main-cr.jpg&quot; ALT=&quot;Edward VI, once more in a Henrician pose&quot; BORDER=2 height=214 width=150&gt;&lt;/center&gt;
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447&lt;p align=&quot;center&quot;&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;2&quot;&gt;Edward VI in a pose reminiscent of his father,
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606&lt;img SRC=&quot;_httpdocimg_/edward6.gif&quot; ALT=&quot;King Edward VI&quot; height=48 width=315&gt;
607&lt;br&gt;
608&lt;img SRC=&quot;_httpdocimg_/loseley.jpg&quot; ALT=&quot;portrait of Edward VI in 1547, in a pose reminiscent of his father&quot; BORDER=2 height=311 width=226 align=LEFT&gt;&lt;b&gt;Henry
609VIII had just one legitimate son, Prince Edward.&amp;nbsp; Born in October
6101537, Edward was the fulfillment of his father's tangled marital history.&amp;nbsp;
611Henry had ended his marriages to Katharine of Aragon and Anne Boleyn when
612they failed at the most important queenly duty, each woman bearing a healthy
613princess but no surviving prince.&amp;nbsp; Jane Seymour, the king's third
614wife, was luckier.&amp;nbsp; She ensured the king's lasting affection when
615she gave birth to Edward, but she died soon afterwards of puerperal sepsis.&amp;nbsp;
616The infant prince was the only male Tudor heir of his generation; he had
617two sisters and Henry VIII's sisters Mary and Margaret had several daughters.&amp;nbsp;
618If Edward died, the throne would pass to a woman and the Tudor dynasty
619would end.&amp;nbsp; Accordingly, King Henry did all he could to protect his
620son's health; the infant prince lived in safe seclusion until his father
621wed Katharine Parr.&amp;nbsp; Henry's last wife became a beloved mother to
622Edward and he adopted the zealous Protestantism which she championed.&amp;nbsp;
623He also grew close to his half-sister Elizabeth, with whom he shared a
624household for some years.&amp;nbsp; His older half-sister, Mary, was an equally
625zealous Catholic; her religion and the vast difference in their ages prevented
626a close relationship.&amp;nbsp; Edward became king at the age of 10, but he
627was a mere figurehead.&amp;nbsp; His Seymour uncles battled with and ultimately
628lost the Protectorship to the ambitious John Dudley, duke of Northumberland.&amp;nbsp;
629During his brief reign, Edward demonstrated impressive piety and intelligence.&amp;nbsp;
630But his potential would never be realized.&amp;nbsp; He died an agonizing death
631at 15, possibly from a combination of tuberculosis and the measles.&amp;nbsp;
632Northumberland had persuaded him to leave the throne to his Protestant
633cousin, Lady Jane Grey.&amp;nbsp; This decision begat one of the most tragic
634tales of Tudor England.&lt;/b&gt;
635&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;
636&lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs%2fedward6.html#Biography&quot;&gt;Read
637a more detailed biography of King Edward VI&lt;/a&gt;.
638&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Primary Sources&lt;/b&gt;
639&lt;br&gt;Read &lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fprimary.html&quot;&gt;Edward's
640journal entries&lt;/a&gt;.
641&lt;br&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fed6birth.html&quot;&gt;Jane Seymour's
642pregnancy is announced&lt;/a&gt;, 1537&lt;/blockquote&gt;
643
644&lt;blockquote&gt;Visit &lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fwww.geocities.com%2fmarilee-cody%2fimages.html&quot;&gt;Tudor
645England: Images&lt;/a&gt; to view portraits of Edward.
646&lt;br&gt;Visit the &lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs%2fseymour.html&quot;&gt;Jane
647Seymour site&lt;/a&gt; to learn more about Edward's mother.
648&lt;br&gt;Visit the &lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2frelative%2fjanegrey.html&quot;&gt;Lady
649Jane Grey site&lt;/a&gt; to learn more about Edward's cousin and heiress.
650&lt;p&gt;Test your knowledge of King Edward's life at &lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2ftudor1.html&quot;&gt;Tudor
651Quizzes&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;p&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;2&quot;&gt;The above portrait is of King Edward VI, c1547, by
652 an unknown artist.&amp;nbsp;
653 &lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fwww.geocities.com%2fmarilee-cody%2fnewpics.html&quot;&gt;Click here&lt;/a&gt; to
654 learn more.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
655
656&lt;br&gt;&amp;nbsp;
657&lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;a NAME=&quot;Biography&quot;&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;b&gt;Biography&lt;/b&gt;
658&lt;br&gt;Henry VIII married Jane Seymour in shocking haste and, when she died
659less than two years later, he sought another wife immediately afterwards.&amp;nbsp;
660This evident dislike of bachelorhood was a cornerstone of Henry's adult
661life.&amp;nbsp; But it shouldn't imply that he didn't grieve for Jane.&amp;nbsp;
662Indeed, unlike his other wives, she was the only one he always spoke of
663with affection.&amp;nbsp; The cynic may argue this was because she died before
664Henry could turn on her.&amp;nbsp; Whatever the case, when his own life came
665to an end, Henry envisioned a grand tomb to hold him and his 'entirely
666beloved' Jane.&amp;nbsp; This did not come to pass; instead, Henry's body was
667interred with Jane's at her burial site, St George's Chapel.
668&lt;p&gt;It is indicative of Henry's contradictory character that, ten years
669and three wives after her death, he still held Jane in such sentimental
670regard.&amp;nbsp; Though he is notorious for his six marriages, one could easily
671argue that only his union with Jane Seymour - brief though it was - completely
672satisfied him, as man &lt;i&gt;and&lt;/i&gt; king.&amp;nbsp; Unlike her immediate predecessor
673Anne Boleyn (whose motto was &lt;i&gt;le plus heureuse &lt;/i&gt;- 'the most happy'),
674Jane chose as her motto, 'Bound to obey and serve.'&amp;nbsp; A more striking
675contrast to the witty, flirtatious and passionate Anne Boleyn could not
676be imagined.&amp;nbsp; While Anne had been almost exotic in her attractiveness,
677stylish, and educated at the notorious French court, Jane was the pious
678and dutiful daughter of an old English family.&amp;nbsp; Certainly she had
679as many ambitious relatives (including two brothers executed by her son),
680but she never imposed upon the king.&amp;nbsp; When she argued for Henry to
681reinstate his daughter Mary, the king replied that she would do well to
682think of herself and the children they would have; Jane replied, with typical
683tact and submissiveness, that she was thinking only of the king's happiness.&amp;nbsp;
684She had the most pleasing feminine habit of showing disinterested concern
685for others.&amp;nbsp; Again, a contrast to her predecessor who had despised
686- and been despised by - Princess Mary.
687&lt;p&gt;But Jane's quiet, pliant nature should not be mistaken for shyness or
688ignorance.&amp;nbsp; Indeed, she was intelligent enough to manage Henry Tudor,
689a feat at which even great men like Wolsey, Cromwell, and More struggled.&amp;nbsp;
690She also managed to capture and maintain a king's interest while he was
691married to another woman.&amp;nbsp; Certainly Henry was increasingly weary
692of Anne and the lack of a male heir but his desire for Jane also urged
693on Anne's execution.&amp;nbsp; And before the execution, Henry was careful
694to obtain a divorce from Anne as well; this meant that his marriage to
695Jane was the first legal union of his life.&amp;nbsp; At forty-five, well into
696middle-age, the king declared he was finally entering a legally and spiritually
697pure marriage.
698&lt;p&gt;If Jane would have maintained Henry's interest and affection forever
699cannot, of course, be known.&amp;nbsp; She lived just eighteen months after
700their marriage, long enough to deliver a prince and short enough to enshrine
701her memory.&amp;nbsp; Beyond Henry, she also impressed others as the perfect
702epitome of a quiet, obedient and kind wife - various ambassadors and contemporaries
703agree on this.&amp;nbsp; But one musn't forget that she knowingly - if quietly
704- carried on an affair with a married man while ostensibly serving his
705wife.&amp;nbsp; Many vilified Anne Boleyn for the very same behavior; however,
706Jane's behavior is rarely portrayed in a negative manner.
707&lt;p&gt;The exact date she met the king is not known.&amp;nbsp; But before he dallied
708with her, he had made another of Anne Boleyn's ladies-in-waiting his mistress.&amp;nbsp;
709This was Margaret (or Madge) Shelton, Anne Boleyn's first cousin, a girl
710'very gentle of countenance' and 'soft of speech.'&amp;nbsp; She was governess
711to Princess Elizabeth and her husband was captain of the child's guard.&amp;nbsp;
712The affair with Madge lasted about six months in early 1535; Chapuys, the
713Imperial ambassador, also mentions another affair in autumn 1534 but the
714woman's name is not known.&amp;nbsp; In autumn 1535, the king's fancy turned
715to Jane Seymour.&amp;nbsp; Henry was on progress to Southampton and stayed
716at her father's home, Wolf Hall in Wiltshire, with the traveling court.&amp;nbsp;
717This meeting at Wolf Hall was not their first (it simply couldn't have
718been since she had been in royal service since 1529).&amp;nbsp; But Henry VIII
719was rarely one for passion at first sight and, for one reason or another,
720Jane attracted his &lt;i&gt;amorous&lt;/i&gt; attentions at Wolf Hall.
721&lt;p&gt;He had not deserted his relationship with Anne, however; there was still
722a chance she would provide a male heir and Henry was loathe to end a marriage
723he had fought so hard to secure.&amp;nbsp; Still, in the back of all minds,
724the precedent of repudiated Katharine existed.&amp;nbsp; If the aunt of the
725Holy Roman Emperor could be divorced, why not 'Nan Bullen'?&amp;nbsp; But such
726speculation was dormant until Anne suffered a stillbirth during the summer
727of 1534.
728&lt;p&gt;Before this, Chapuys and other enemies commented that she was growing
729old, her dark good looks were fading; she was in her mid-thirties, no longer
730young and leaving her safest reproductive years behind.&amp;nbsp; She still
731could manage Henry though she lacked Jane Seymour's delicate touch.&amp;nbsp;
732But she would have been a fool to think her position was completely secure.&amp;nbsp;
733Each new dalliance, each sharp word reinforced her tenuous position.&amp;nbsp;
734Above all else, she must produce a male heir - Henry would never repudiate
735the mother of his son.&amp;nbsp; So when she miscarried late in her pregnancy,
736she naturally worried.&amp;nbsp; It did not help her disposition or relations
737with the king.
738&lt;p&gt;Shortly thereafter, Henry began the dalliance mentioned above.&amp;nbsp;
739Anne drove her rival from court, Chapuys relates, Henry was angry and threatening
740- he told Anne that she &quot;had good reason tto be content with what he had
741done for her, which he would not do now if the thing were to begin and
742that she should consider from what she had come and other things.&quot;&amp;nbsp;
743One can imagine the effect of such words on Anne.&amp;nbsp; She became terminally
744insecure and anxious even as she struggled to conceive and deliver a healthy
745child.&amp;nbsp; And Henry, sensitive as always, remarked that he believed
746she had never been pregnant at all.&amp;nbsp; (This was untrue - Anne's advancing
747pregnancy had been noted by several contemporaries.)
748&lt;p&gt;From the fall of 1534 and most of 1535, Anne sought security in the
749only way possible.&amp;nbsp; But Henry was occasionally impotent, a not uncommon
750occurrence for an overweight man of forty-five.&amp;nbsp; Like most men of
751his age (and many of ours), he didn't blame himself; after all, he was
752still attracted to other women.&amp;nbsp; Ironically enough, it was after his
753visit to Wolf Hall, when he returned to London in October 1535, that he
754and Anne conceived a child.&amp;nbsp; The fancy for Jane Seymour, only a few
755weeks old, would be overlooked.
756&lt;p&gt;Furthermore, Katharine of Aragon had finally passed away on 7 January
7571536.&amp;nbsp; The great rival vanquished and she herself pregnant, Anne lived
758as her motto decreed - 'the most happy.'&amp;nbsp; But Katharine's death was
759not the happy event it may have seemed.&amp;nbsp; After all, in the eyes of
760Catholic Europe, Katharine had always been Henry's wife.&amp;nbsp; With her
761death, the king of England was officially widowed.&amp;nbsp; In other words,
762he was free to marry again.&amp;nbsp; The union with Anne was not recognized.&amp;nbsp;
763And just a few weeks after Katharine's death, Anne miscarried the child.&amp;nbsp;
764It was a male fetus, about fifteen weeks old.&amp;nbsp; Her own sorrow as a
765mother was undoubtedly overwhelmed by the realization that she was doomed.
766&lt;p&gt;She told Henry she had miscarried because he had suffered a serious
767fall and the news, related by her uncle Norfolk, had distressed her terribly.&amp;nbsp;
768Henry was uninterested.&amp;nbsp; According to Anne's attendants, he said to
769her, &quot;I see God will not give me male children&quot; and that he would have
770&quot;no more boys by &lt;i&gt;her&lt;/i&gt;.&quot;&amp;nbsp; Perhaps two miscarriages was not uncommon
771in Tudor England but, in light of Katharine of Aragon's many miscarriages,
772Anne's were magnified.
773&lt;p&gt;With Anne now widely believed to be incapable of delivering a male heir,
774Henry's relationship with Jane Seymour assumed a new importance.&amp;nbsp;
775There are stories which cannot be confirmed as true - Anne discovered Jane
776sitting on the king's lap, Anne discovered gifts Henry had bought for 'Mistress
777Seymour' - but they are disquieting.&amp;nbsp; In any case, Jane was bewitching
778the king in her own quiet way much as Anne herself had done.&amp;nbsp; She
779denied the king just enough to ensure a chaste reputation and certainly
780Henry was like many men - the forbidden fruit was all the more attractive.&amp;nbsp;
781And she also came from a respectable noble family which passionately pounced
782upon the Boleyn's declining fortunes.
783&lt;p&gt;The Seymours had old antecedents though their claim of Norman ancestry
784was dubious.&amp;nbsp; Their name was originally St Maur and a Sir Wido de
785Saint Maur was supposed to have come over with the conquest.&amp;nbsp; Prosperous
786marriages enriched the family and extended their holdings.&amp;nbsp; Jane's
787father was born in 1474 and knighted in the field by Henry VII at a battle
788called Blackheath.&amp;nbsp; He continued to enjoy royal favor into Henry VIII's
789reign, accompanying the king on his French campaign in 1513 and also the
790infamous Field of Cloth of Gold in 1532.&amp;nbsp; He was a Gentleman of the
791Bedchamber and sheriff of his home county but never especially prominent
792or ambitious.&amp;nbsp; What was important was his reputation as a pious and
793courteous man; also, he was often in close contact with the king.&amp;nbsp;
794And, even more important, he came from a large family with many healthy
795children.&amp;nbsp; Jane herself was one of ten children; her own mother had
796six sons, though two of died of the sweating sickness in 1528.
797&lt;p&gt;Jane's father was over 60 when the king's fancy turned to her; it was
798her older brothers Edward and Thomas who stood to profit most from her
799ascendancy.&amp;nbsp; They seized - and relished - this unexpected opportunity
800to advance their fortunes.&amp;nbsp; Their sister, in her mid-twenties, was
801not particularly beautiful; her most pleasing feature was her fair, unblemished
802skin.&amp;nbsp; Chapuys, who had no cause to denigrate her, described her as
803'of middle stature and no great beauty.'&amp;nbsp; But she was calm, courteous,
804and kindly.&amp;nbsp; Such characteristics were important, especially to a
805monarch like Henry who felt himself surrounded by devious and temperamental
806women.&amp;nbsp; She was also virtuous.&amp;nbsp; She may have responded to Henry's
807flirtations (who would deny the king?) but she responded to no others -
808this despite service under two queens.&amp;nbsp; But when Henry sent her gifts
809with a letter, she returned them, saying, &quot;If the King desired to make
810her a present of money, she prayed that it might be when she made an honorable
811marriage.&quot;&amp;nbsp; Once again, the royal appetite was whetted.&amp;nbsp; And,
812of course, such modest behavior was desirable in a woman Henry increasingly
813wanted to wed.
814&lt;p&gt;Jane's family was joined by supporters who had been slighted by the
815Boleyn faction.&amp;nbsp; In other words, anyone who had not prospered under
816Anne's rule wanted to support Jane.&amp;nbsp; On 18 April 1536, Cromwell (Henry's
817chief minister and confidante) threw in his lot with the Seymours.&amp;nbsp;
818He vacated his apartments at Greenwich Palace so the Seymours could move
819in.&amp;nbsp; This was crucial.&amp;nbsp; Not only could the king visit Jane discreetly,
820without anyone knowing, but Cromwell's opinion carried weight with Henry.&amp;nbsp;
821Anne Boleyn's fall was inevitable; Jane Seymour's rise was unstoppable.
822&lt;p&gt;On Friday, 19 May 1536, Anne Boleyn was executed on various charges,
823the most powerful being that of treason.&amp;nbsp; The secret betrothal of
824King Henry and Jane took place at Hampton Court the next day.&amp;nbsp; During
825Anne's arrest and trial, Henry's sense of decency (never great) had persuaded
826him to send Jane away.&amp;nbsp; She went to Sir Nicholas Carew's house at
827Croydon where she was afforded every respect.&amp;nbsp; But as the date of
828Anne's demise approached, Henry grew more impatient; Jane was moved to
829a closer house just a mile from the king's residence at Whitehall.&amp;nbsp;
830From there she went to Hampton Court for her betrothal; it was back again
831to Whitehall for the marriage on 30 May.&amp;nbsp; Thomas Cranmer performed
832the ceremony.&amp;nbsp; One can imagine it was a happy and triumphant day for
833Jane but confidence would have been foolhardy.&amp;nbsp; After all, the king
834had divorced one wife who had not born a son and executed another.&amp;nbsp;
835She had known both Katharine and Anne quite well.&amp;nbsp; Even if she didn't
836grieve for their fates, she must have realized the instability of her own.
837&lt;p&gt;Once queen, Jane chose a phoenix rising from a castle filled with Tudor
838roses and the panther for her heraldry.&amp;nbsp; It was easy enough to alter
839Anne's leopards and falcons, after all.&amp;nbsp; On their first procession
840through London as husband and wife, they passed the Tower where the late
841queen's body lay stuffed in an arrow chest, the head tucked beneath the
842arm.&amp;nbsp; For 'Jane the Quene,' the Tower was hung with banners and streamers.&amp;nbsp;
843Furthermore, there was the incredible dowry the king had lavished upon
844her - 104 manors, 5 castles and various gardens and forests.&amp;nbsp; Henry
845also planned an equally lavish coronation for his new queen.&amp;nbsp; This,
846however, was stymied by an outbreak of the plague; Henry said that it would
847only be postponed.&amp;nbsp; As soon as it was healthy and safe, Jane would
848be officially crowned.
849&lt;p&gt;Meanwhile, Jane displayed good common sense by ordering her ladies-in-waiting
850to dress conservatively.&amp;nbsp; She wanted no one to tempt the king even
851as she had done.&amp;nbsp; She also became mother to two motherless princesses.&amp;nbsp;
852Both Mary and Elizabeth benefited from Jane's kindness.&amp;nbsp; Mary was
853of marriageable age (seven years younger than Jane) and could be used as
854a tool in Henry's diplomacy.&amp;nbsp; Three-year-old Elizabeth, lacking Mary's
855maternal nobility, was not marriageable yet but Henry was described as
856'very affectionate' toward her.&amp;nbsp; He called her 'his Madame Ysabeau'
857and allowed both Elizabeth and Mary, though bastardized, precedence over
858their cousins.
859&lt;p&gt;Jane's religious opinions should be discussed, if only because history
860has often misread her true feelings.&amp;nbsp; Unlike her brothers and son,
861Jane was not a Protestant.&amp;nbsp; She was conservative in her religion as
862she was in her behavior.&amp;nbsp; The first harsh words Henry was recorded
863as speaking to her were over religion; she mentioned that a rebellion was
864perhaps God's rebuke over Henry's dissolution of the monasteries.&amp;nbsp;
865Henry brusquely reminded her that the late queen had died as a result of
866meddling in his affairs.&amp;nbsp; This implied threat would have been enough
867to frighten any woman.&amp;nbsp; Luckily, Jane became pregnant a few months
868later, in early January 1537.&amp;nbsp; This news undoubtedly helped lessen
869the sadness of her father's death on 21 December 1536.
870&lt;p&gt;Jane's condition was announced in March and the news was officially
871celebrated on Trinity Sunday, 27 May 1537.&amp;nbsp; She was now the king's
872'most dear and most entirely beloved wife', as Henry wrote to the duke
873of Norfolk.&amp;nbsp; Her coronation was now planned to be after the child's
874birth, probably late October.&amp;nbsp; There is no sign that the pregnancy
875was especially difficult; all writings point to Jane's good stature and
876health.&amp;nbsp; Henry canceled a progress to stay with her and certainly
877the entire court - and country - held their breath, wondering if this young
878woman would succeed in her greatest duty.
879&lt;p&gt;Certainly Henry was optimistic and, as usual, the astrologers and doctors
880predicted the birth of a son.&amp;nbsp; They had been wrong with Elizabeth
881but Henry was eager to forget and make preparations.&amp;nbsp; He had a Garter
882stall made for this long-awaited son in St George's Chapel at Windsor;
883the royal apartments at Hampton Court Palace were refurbished in preparation
884for the birth; Jane's brothers were yet again elevated to new positions,
885granted more lands and pensions.&amp;nbsp; And finally, on 9 October, she went
886into labor.
887&lt;p&gt;Her labor was as arduous as any could be in the sixteenth century.&amp;nbsp;
888It lasted three days; after the first two, a procession was mounted in
889London to pray for the Queen.&amp;nbsp; On 12 October, the eve of the Feast
890of St Edward, the child was born.&amp;nbsp; Jane was well enough after the
891birth to receive guests, most touchingly her husband.&amp;nbsp; Henry wept
892when he took this longed-for heir in his arms.&amp;nbsp; The christening was
893held three days later and, wrapped in furs and velvet, she attended.&amp;nbsp;
894Princess Mary acted as godmother to her half-brother and four-year-old
895Elizabeth was carried by Thomas Seymour.
896&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;It would be impossible to list all the celebrations which occurred
897when Prince Edward was born.&amp;nbsp; Suffice to say, 2000 shots were fired
898from the Tower and bells were rung throughout the countryside.&amp;nbsp; On
89918 October, Henry had his son proclaimed Prince of Wales, Duke of Cornwall
900and Earl of Carnarvon.&amp;nbsp; Yet again the Seymour brothers were given
901generous endowments for the king was never more generous or magnanimous.&amp;nbsp;
902But their sister who had made such celebrating possible was not recovering
903from the birth.&amp;nbsp; In modern times, we call her illness puerperal fever.&amp;nbsp;
904In Jane's time, it was the most common cause of death for pregnant women.&amp;nbsp;
905Cleanliness and the proper treatment for infections were not understood.&amp;nbsp;
906Once she became infected, she was doomed.&amp;nbsp; On 19 October, she took
907to her bed again; she recovered somewhat on the 23rd, as her attendants
908reported, but only for a matter of hours.&amp;nbsp; Soon she was delirious
909and, early the next morning, her confessor was sent for.&amp;nbsp; Henry, who
910had planned to go hunting that day, postponed his trip - but only for that
911day, he told a courtier.&amp;nbsp; It was enough; 'Jane the Quene' died near
912midnight on 24 October, living just days after her great triumph.&amp;nbsp;
913For her husband, increasingly obese, bald, and well into middle-age, the
914grief was genuine.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; He planned a sumptuous burial for 12 November
915and the churches that had celebrated Edward's birth now began to pray for
916the soul of the late queen.&amp;nbsp; Hampton Court Palace, scene of her triumph
917and death, was hung with black.
918&lt;p&gt;Princess Mary was chief mourner at her step-mother's funeral but Henry
919did not attend.&amp;nbsp; He wished to be alone with his grief.&amp;nbsp; Jane
920Seymour was buried as a queen - unlike Katharine of Aragon who had died
921as Princess Dowager and Anne Boleyn, who had died divorced and disgraced.&amp;nbsp;
922Her hearse was taken to Windsor and interred in a vault in St George's
923Chapel.&amp;nbsp; Henry was perhaps already planning a sufficient monument
924for the grave he would eventually share with Jane.&amp;nbsp; But he also kept
925track of his late wife's possessions - her jewelry was distributed to her
926ladies, Princess Mary, and her brothers.&amp;nbsp; But her dowry, the 104 manors
927and 5 castles, were given back to the king.&amp;nbsp; And, very soon indeed,
928speculation began -&amp;nbsp; who would receive these favors next?
929&lt;p&gt;Henry VIII turned to the continent for his next wife, the German princess
930Anne of Cleves.&amp;nbsp; The marriage was famously annulled only a few months
931later.&amp;nbsp; His fifth wife was Anne Boleyn's cousin, the young and pretty
932Catherine Howard.&amp;nbsp; She met her cousin's fate not even two years into
933the marriage and then Henry wed the twice-widowed Katharine Parr.&amp;nbsp;
934Pious, intelligent and an accomplished nurse, she would be his last wife.&amp;nbsp;
935By the time of this last marriage, the king was suffering from a variety
936of ailments, most caused by his increasing obesity.&amp;nbsp; He continued
937to take a keen interest in his son's education and Katharine Parr became
938a true mother to the young Elizabeth and Edward.&amp;nbsp; Her passionate Protestantism
939had a great effect on both children; it also nearly caused her death, since
940Henry VIII had become even more tyrannical as the years passed.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;
941&lt;p&gt;The king's own death on 28 January 1547 was the second and final time
942the Tudor throne would pass, easily and without dispute, to a male heir.&amp;nbsp;
943But Edward VI's extreme youth ensured that his reign would not immediately
944be his own.
945&lt;p&gt;
946&lt;hr WIDTH=&quot;100%&quot;&gt;
947&lt;p&gt;Who was this young man, the product of his father's long and desperate
948search for an heir?&amp;nbsp; He died at the age of sixteen, never more than
949a puppet king who had to beg his uncle for pocket money and was beaten
950by his tutors.&amp;nbsp; Edward VI was just a child when crowned at Westminster.&amp;nbsp;
951His father knew the dangers of leaving a child as heir and did his best
952to protect the court from factionalism.&amp;nbsp; However, Henry's will was
953shortsighted and hardly practical; he wanted a regency council of peers,
954each equal to the other.&amp;nbsp; But even as he lay dying, the earl of Hertford
955and Sir William Paget were already planning their coup.&amp;nbsp; Hertford,
956Jane Seymour's brother and Edward's uncle, would be made Lord Protector&amp;nbsp;
957and Paget would be first minister.&amp;nbsp; On 28 January 1547, Hertford rode
958to his nephew and brought him to the security of the Tower of London.&amp;nbsp;
959On 31 January the council met there and agreed to Paget's nomination of
960Hertford as protector.&amp;nbsp; Only then was Henry VIII's demise made public
961and Edward VI proclaimed king.&amp;nbsp; There followed a distribution of titles
962and sinecures, the most notable being Hertford's elevation to the dukedom
963of Somerset.
964&lt;p&gt;However, Somerset's authority was not fully secure; the council's nomination
965of him as Protector was just a verbal agreement.&amp;nbsp; Without letters
966patent authenticated by the Great Seal, he had a title but no legal basis
967for control.&amp;nbsp; But the Great Seal was in the hands of the lord chancellor,
968a conservative named Wriothesley who had been created earl of Southampton
969during the accession honors.&amp;nbsp; But even elevated to an earldom, Wriothesley
970was not happy with what he perceived to be Somerset's usurption of power.&amp;nbsp;
971He refused to affix the seal to Somerset's patent of formal authority.&amp;nbsp;
972Early in March, Somerset was able to rid himself of this nuisance.&amp;nbsp;
973He brought to the council's attention certain irregularities in the chancellor's
974office (notably his neglect of the legal side of his responsibilities),
975and forced Wriothesley's resignation.&amp;nbsp; Somerset's ally Lord Rich was
976quickly appointed lord chancellor and the Great Seal was finally affixed
977to the letters patent.&amp;nbsp; Somerset was now the most powerful man in
978England, with the exception of his young nephew.
979&lt;p&gt;One of the powers Somerset acquired in his patent of office was the
980right to appoint whoever he wanted to the Privy Council.&amp;nbsp; To that
981end, he brought in some of the older, experienced men who had not been
982appointed executors in Henry's will.&amp;nbsp; But he never allowed the council
983to function with any degree of autonomy and rarely consulted its members.&amp;nbsp;
984Instead, he used them to simply endorse his own privately-made decisions.&amp;nbsp;
985On the rare occasions he did meet with them, he demonstrated an appalling
986lack of the attributes all leaders need - tact and cunning.&amp;nbsp; His tongue
987was so savage that he reduced a colleague to tears and, before long, Paget
988was warning him about his arrogance and rudeness.&amp;nbsp; Somerset ignored
989Paget as he ignored most everyone else.&amp;nbsp; He ruled by edict, issuing
990proclamations to a greater extent than any head of government in the Tudor
991age.
992&lt;p&gt;His fall was inevitable.&amp;nbsp; But it did not happen until five years
993into Edward's reign, by which time Somerset had effectively cemented the
994new religion in England and offended virtually every other nobleman.&amp;nbsp;
995What did Edward VI think of his uncle's autocratic use of power?&amp;nbsp;
996The boy king left behind a journal remarkable in its detachment; indeed,
997he recorded the executions of both Somerset and his younger brother with
998no emotion.
999&lt;p&gt;Edward was not completely cold, however.&amp;nbsp; He was always affectionate
1000to his stepmother, Katharine Parr, whose benevolent influence eased his
1001lonely childhood.&amp;nbsp; He also spent time with his half-sister Elizabeth;
1002the two children were just four years apart in age and Elizabeth was a
1003Protestant.&amp;nbsp; He was never particularly close to his other half-sister,
1004Mary.&amp;nbsp; This was understandable for Mary was old enough to be his mother
1005(21 years older) and a devout Catholic who refused to bow to her brother's
1006religious convictions.&amp;nbsp; Certainly she had obeyed their father but
1007Edward was an adolescent who Mary believed was a pawn of Protestant heretics.&amp;nbsp;
1008(Visit the &lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fwww.englishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fprimary.html&quot;&gt;Primary
1009Sources&lt;/a&gt; site to read selections from Edward's journal &amp;amp; other documents)
1010&lt;p&gt;Edward's education was always strict.&amp;nbsp; His earliest tutors were
1011female and he was guarded under the strictest regulations - for example,
1012nobody less than a knight was allowed to visit him.&amp;nbsp; At the age of
1013six, his two principal tutors were appointed - Ricahrd Cox, a committed
1014but moderate reformer, and John Cheke, the most distinguished humanist
1015in the land.&amp;nbsp; There is evidence that he was occasionally beaten. Upon
1016his ascension, he was a precocious and intelligent boy.&amp;nbsp; His elevation
1017to the kingship did not end his courtesy to his tutors.&amp;nbsp; In fact,
1018he now began to share his studies with a handful of contemporaries; one
1019of these, Barnaby Fitzpatrick, was the son of an Irish peer and became
1020a Gentlemen of the Privy Chamber.&amp;nbsp; He was also Edward's closest friend
1021and, away on a mission to France, received letters from the king which
1022betray normal adolescent exuberance.&amp;nbsp; These letters - along with those
1023to Katharine Parr - are the only examples in which Edward exhibits emotion.
1024&lt;p&gt;Edward left behind a reputation for bigoted, extreme Protestantism which
1025he does not deserve.&amp;nbsp; There were many pro-Protestant laws enacted
1026during his reign, with his approval, but at the instigation of his guardians.&amp;nbsp;
1027He was a devout Protestant, the product of the new religion which even
1028his father had not understood.&amp;nbsp; Still, he was by no means as self-righteouslessly
1029intolerant as his older sister; perhaps he would have been - but that is
1030just speculation.
1031&lt;p&gt;Edward's ministers demonstrated passionate self-interest in this religious
1032climate.&amp;nbsp; These Protestant lords had profitted economically from the
1033dissolution of the monasteries and no one - lord or commoner - wanted to
1034reinstate papal taxation.&amp;nbsp; They were determined to keep their land
1035grants, gold plate, and other treasures.&amp;nbsp; In doing so, they appealed
1036to the intellectual vanity of their young king.&amp;nbsp; Edward was raised
1037a Protestant, even as Mary had been raised a Catholic, and there is no
1038reason to doubt he held his faith as deeply.&amp;nbsp; Unlike their sister
1039Elizabeth, who declared she wanted no windows in men's souls, Edward and
1040Mary believed they were guiding their subjects onto the path of righteousness.&amp;nbsp;
1041When Somerset and others altered their beliefs with changing political
1042climates, they were careful to appeal to this sense of self-righteousness.
1043&lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font size=-1&gt;I wrote a more detailed account of Edward's
1044childhood before writing this section; if you would like to read it, &lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fwww.englishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs%2fedward33.html&quot;&gt;please
1045click here&lt;/a&gt;.&amp;nbsp; It will be somewhat repetitious since it contains
1046information found at this page, but there is more detail and might be useful
1047for students researching Edward's life.&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;
1048The essential fact of Edward's brief reign is this - it is more a commentary
1049on Somerset and his successor, Northumberland, than it is on Edward himself.&amp;nbsp;
1050In the early months of his rule, the councilors were more interested in
1051securing the throne and creating a peaceful transition to the new order.&amp;nbsp;
1052As Edward's uncle and a soldier of experience, Somerset was the natural
1053choice as 'Protector of all the realms and domains of the King's Majesty
1054and Governor of his most royal person.'&amp;nbsp; The other fifteen men Henry
1055had selected as councilors were men only recently promoted to high office;
1056twelve of them were Protestant, since the Howards - the leading Catholic
1057faction at court - had fallen from power.&amp;nbsp; Somerset's main rivals
1058for power were John Dudley, earl of Northumberland (soon promoted to earl
1059of Warwick) and his own brother, Thomas Seymour (soon created Baron Seymour
1060of Sudeley and Lord High Admiral.)&amp;nbsp; Seymour was ambitious and angry
1061that he could not wield absolute power; in his opinion, why should one
1062uncle have control and another be fobbed off with consolation prizes?&amp;nbsp;
1063A more temperate man would have been content with his newly ennobled title
1064and position on the council but Seymour was ambitious and jealous - a lethal
1065combination.&amp;nbsp; In the end, he would bring down himself and his brother,
1066thus securing Dudley's ascendancy.
1067&lt;p&gt;Somerset loved his younger brother and, in general, was considered a
1068kind man - but he was unfortunately ill-equipped to manage his squabbling
1069council and had a mean-tempered wife who offended virtually everyone she
1070met.&amp;nbsp; She was his second wife and mother of his nine children; Somserset's
1071first wife had been banished to a convent after having an affair with his
1072father.&amp;nbsp; Anne Stanhope was as proud and quarrelsome as her brother-in-law
1073Seymour.&amp;nbsp; She considered herself the first lady of the realm, claiming
1074precedence over Katharine Parr, Henry VIII's widow.&amp;nbsp; When Seymour
1075married Katharine just four months after Henry's death, Anne and virtually
1076everyone at court saw it as evidence of his vast ambition.&amp;nbsp; It opened
1077yet another rift between the two brothers.
1078&lt;p&gt;There were, of course, reasons for Seymour to be jealous.&amp;nbsp; On 16
1079February 1547, Henry VIII was buried with the Seymour brothers' sister,
1080Jane, at St George's chapel in Windsor, and - the very next day - Edward
1081VI confirmed his uncle as duke of Somerset.&amp;nbsp; Along with the title
1082came an income of 7400 pds a year, a vast sum in those days.&amp;nbsp; By contrast,
1083Henry VIII left Princesses &lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fwww.englishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs%2fmary1.html&quot;&gt;Mary&lt;/a&gt;
1084and Elizabeth 3000 pds each - less than half of Somerset's income but still
1085considered a great sum.&amp;nbsp; Seymour had to content himself with the lands
1086of his baronetcy as well as his wife's fortune - and, soon enough, embezzlement.&amp;nbsp;
1087When his brother made it clear he would not share ultimate authority, Seymour
1088began to plot against him.&amp;nbsp; Already, he had begun flirting with the
1089adolescent Elizabeth, being raised at his wife's home in Chelsea (discussed
1090in greater detail at the &lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fwww.englishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs.html&quot;&gt;Elizabeth
1091I&lt;/a&gt; pages.)&amp;nbsp; He also secured the guardianship of &lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fwww.englishhistory.net%2ftudor%2frelative%2fjanegrey.html&quot;&gt;Jane
1092Grey&lt;/a&gt;, telling her parents he would arrange her marriage to the young
1093king.&amp;nbsp; Thus, he was in control of two of Henry VIII's heirs.&amp;nbsp;
1094He also began visiting his nephew, attempting to gain Edward's affections
1095by giving him presents and money.&amp;nbsp; Since Somerset was strict with
1096his nephew and kept him constantly short of money, the king was grateful
1097for the gifts.
1098&lt;p&gt;But even as Seymour began his ambitious plans, Somerset was careful
1099to court Princess Mary's favor.&amp;nbsp; This was a smart policy since she
1100was her brother's heir, popular with the English people, and cousin to
1101the Holy Roman Emperor.&amp;nbsp; Also, she was content to remain in the countryside
1102since she disliked Edward's Protestant court.&amp;nbsp; Many historians have
1103written that Seymour and others courted Mary's favor with the view that
1104she would one day be queen.&amp;nbsp; However, this is wrong - as is the view
1105that Edward VI was a sickly king, always delicate of health.&amp;nbsp; In fact,
1106until the last eighteen months of his life, Edward was quite healthy and
1107gave every intention of living many years.&amp;nbsp; He was slender and had
1108fair coloring but also enjoyed activity and took a keen - and passionate
1109- interest in learning and religion.&amp;nbsp;; As he grew older, he naturally
1110chafed at his uncle Somerset's absolute control over his life.
1111&lt;p&gt;Somerset - unlike his brother and Dudley - never played to Edward's
1112natural feelings of superiority and authority.&amp;nbsp; He treated the king
1113as he treated his children - with firmness, discipline, and a strict regimen.&amp;nbsp;
1114Seymour and Dudley spoke to the young king
1115&lt;i&gt;as a king&lt;/i&gt;, pretending
1116to defer to his naturally superior wisdom.&amp;nbsp; For a while, though, Somerset
1117kept near-absolute control over the council.&amp;nbsp; He became popular with
1118the poor - and unpopular with his fellow nobles - by promoting reform of
1119agricultural laws (creating fixed rents and the abolition of enclosures)and
1120he attempted to reform the judicial system in favor of equality for all.&amp;nbsp;
1121In fact, he established a court of pleas at his own home in London.&amp;nbsp;
1122This earned him the nickname 'the Good Duke' but to his councilors he was
1123too moderate to satisfy any faction and too headstrong to listen to anyone.&amp;nbsp;
1124To this perception of arrogance and class-betrayal was added a spiritual
1125weakness - Somerset would not allow anyone to be tortured or burned over
1126religious matters.&amp;nbsp; This tolerance was unexpected and unwelcome by
1127his peers.
1128&lt;p&gt;But along with idealistic plans for social reform, Somerset was also
1129grasping and greedy.&amp;nbsp; The combination of such traits was considered
1130hypocritical and inconsistent.&amp;nbsp; After all, his councilors muttered,
1131who was Somerset to criticize their rents when he spent the government's
1132money with little regard for moderation?&amp;nbsp; They pointed to his London
1133residence, Somerset House, built&amp;nbsp; at the exorbinant cost of 10000
1134pds; there were other homes, too, equally grand and all designed to emphasize
1135his stature as Lord Protector.&amp;nbsp; It may be that Somerset was uneasy
1136in his role since, before his sister's ascendancy, his family was only
1137moderately successful.&amp;nbsp; In just ten years, they had become the pre-eminent
1138family in the land and he may have been insecure about such a rapid rise.&amp;nbsp;
1139In any case, he was encouraged in such spending by his wife.
1140&lt;p&gt;Somerset's main problem was that he lacked the charisma and will-power
1141of Henry VIII, a man who had blustered and bullied his council into action.&amp;nbsp;
1142The sheer intimidating force of his personality had awed everyone - and
1143Somerset lacked that bravura, a natural ability to inspire and lead.&amp;nbsp;
1144Instead, he was forced to shout and insult his peers into action, at one
1145time driving a man to tears.&amp;nbsp; Meanwhile, his brother was proving an
1146embarrassment.&amp;nbsp; Right after Henry's death, Seymour had sought permission
1147to marry Elizabeth; when that was denied, he renewed a former attachment
1148to Katharine Parr and married her.&amp;nbsp; In any case, in the four months
1149after Henry's death before he married Katharine, his nephew King Edward
1150had suggested he marry Anne of Cleves or Princess Mary.&amp;nbsp; But Seymour's
1151own brother squashed both those plans, the union with Mary in particular;
1152Seymour was not 'born to be king, nor to marry a king's daughter.'&amp;nbsp;
1153So when he married the queen dowager, people naturally assumed it was a
1154union of ambition and not affection.
1155&lt;p&gt;Seymour further angered the council and his brother by flirting with
1156Princess Elizabeth; she was sent from he and Katharine's Chelsea home after
1157Katharine became pregnant.&amp;nbsp; When Katharine died in childbirth, Seymour
1158was soon engaged in pressing his suit to Elizabeth again as well as arguing
1159with the council - and his brother in particular - over Katharine's possessions.&amp;nbsp;
1160He was also ingratiating himself with King Edward by bribing a man called
1161John Fowler, one of the king's closest servants.&amp;nbsp; Fowler and Edward
1162were close and shared conversations; they revealed the young king's increasing
1163frustration with Somerset's actions.&amp;nbsp; Edward wanted more pocket money,
1164less severe tutors, more time for leisure pursuits - he wanted to be treated
1165as king and not a child.&amp;nbsp; Fowler, paid by Seymour, was happy to pass
1166these complaints on.&amp;nbsp; So Seymour smuggled in some money and small
1167presents and, though these pleased the king, they didn't personally endear
1168his uncle to him.&amp;nbsp; Perhaps even the young Edward could sense his uncle's
1169calculating ambition.
1170&lt;p&gt;But Edward did publicly support and bless his uncle and stepmother's
1171marriage.&amp;nbsp; And, in a fit of anger, he once told Seymour that - if
1172Somerset should die - he would appoint his 'favorite' uncle Lord Protector.&amp;nbsp;
1173Such statements only encouraged Seymour.&amp;nbsp; Soon enough, in November
11741547, Seymour had urged Edward to sign a document which would be placed
1175before Parliament in its new session; it would officially divide the office
1176of Lord Protector between the king's two uncles.&amp;nbsp; Edward was naturally
1177cautious and asked his tutor, John Cheke, for guidance.&amp;nbsp; Cheke was
1178a learned man obsessed with otherwordly concerns but he also understood
1179the intrigues of the Tudor court.&amp;nbsp; His advice was for Edward to not
1180sign and distance himself from both uncles.&amp;nbsp; Seymour was furious.&amp;nbsp;
1181He went about telling councilors that he wanted Edward to live with him
1182and the queen dowager and - more threateningly - he could easily steal
1183the king from under Somerset's nose.&amp;nbsp; When Katharine died on 5 September
11841548 after a difficult childbirth, one important link to his nephew disappeared.&amp;nbsp;
1185After all, Edward had been genuinely fond of Katharine.&amp;nbsp; But after
1186her death, Seymour became even more openly ambitious and insulting to his
1187brother.&amp;nbsp; There were rumors that he wanted to marry his former ward
1188Jane Grey but Seymour found this laughable.&amp;nbsp; He had more ambitious
1189plans - once again, he intended to woo Princess Elizabeth.&amp;nbsp; It may
1190have been that Katharine Parr exerted a calming influence upon her husband
1191and, once she died, he became more obvious and unrestrained in his plans.&amp;nbsp;
1192Whatever the case, he began to voice open disapproval of his brother's
1193government, threatening to disrupt Parliamenr; in short, he was a great
1194embarrassment to the protector.&amp;nbsp; Somerset tried to be conciliatory
1195but Seymour had none of it.&amp;nbsp; He began to gather support (at least
1196nominally) from other nobles who were dissatisfied with Somerset for less
1197personal reasons.&amp;nbsp; As Lord High Admiral, a post he had heretofore
1198neglected, Seymour was able to control the English navy.&amp;nbsp; He openly
1199asked people for support in case of a coup.&amp;nbsp; In other words, he was
1200completely indiscreet.
1201&lt;p&gt;Meanwhile, Elizabeth's governess Mrs Ashley, another victim of Seymour's
1202charm, was encouraging her young charge to think kindly of Seymour.&amp;nbsp;
1203But Elizabeth was cautious and less than thrilled; she retired to the country
1204and stayed far away from London.&amp;nbsp; But others had heard of Seymour's
1205plans and one of these was Lord Russell, the keeper of the Privy Seal,
1206an important office in Tudor England.&amp;nbsp; He confronted Seymour with
1207rumors of his intention to wed Elizabeth; he said this would ensure Seymour's
1208ruin.&amp;nbsp; Furthermore, Russell cautioned, King Edward would view a match
1209with Elizabeth very suspiciously - after all, it smacked of ambition and
1210the next step would be his own death.&amp;nbsp; Then, Seymour and Elizabeth
1211would rule.&amp;nbsp; Seymour's folly went further, however.&amp;nbsp; He was also
1212embezzling vast sums in a complicated scheme with the vice-treasurer of
1213the Bristol mint.&amp;nbsp; (Once again, this is discussed in the Elizabeth
1214I pages as well.)
1215&lt;p&gt;The vice-treasurer was a man called Sir William Sharington.&amp;nbsp; Sharington
1216had taken advantage of the general laxity and chaos the new reign to clip
1217and debase the coinage produced at Bristol.&amp;nbsp; He doctored the account
1218books to cover the operation but rumors spread of his crimes.&amp;nbsp; It
1219was inevitable - after all, others worked at the mint and Sharington was
1220using the money to refurbish his house in a very lavish manner.&amp;nbsp; Seymour
1221discovered Sharington's secret and, rather than turn him in, decided upon
1222blackmail.&amp;nbsp; He planned to use the proceeds to finance his coup to
1223take over the government.&amp;nbsp; Furthermore, he as using his position as
1224Lord High Admiral to encourage piracy (rather than protect against it,
1225as was his duty), allowing the pirates safe passage in exchange for shares
1226of their booty.&amp;nbsp; He also charged ships a toll to pass from England
1227to Ireland on official government business.
1228&lt;p&gt;He also planned to kidnap Edward, with John Fowler's help.&amp;nbsp; Fowler
1229provided keys to Edward's room and forged a stamp of Edward's signature.&amp;nbsp;
1230But at the end of 1548, everyone knew of his plans.&amp;nbsp; The council openly
1231discussed charges against him.&amp;nbsp; His aristocratic friends cautioned
1232that their support would not be forthcoming after all.&amp;nbsp; Soon enough,
1233someone had tipped off the council to one of the greatest crimes - the
1234Bristol mint was raided and Sharington fell to pieces, accusing Seymour
1235of forcing him to commit treason and turning King's evidence against him.&amp;nbsp;
1236(In an ironic footnote, he was not only pardoned - but restored to his
1237office and position in life.)&amp;nbsp; Somerset attempted to help his brother,
1238summoning him to London for a private audience.&amp;nbsp; Seymour refused.&amp;nbsp;
1239Somerset had no choice but to lay all before the council and let them proceed
1240against his brother.&amp;nbsp; Soon enough, John Fowler's incriminating evidence
1241was laid bare - as was King Edward's.&amp;nbsp; But still no direct action
1242was taken against him; it was just a treason investigation.&amp;nbsp; But on
124316 January, Seymour ensured his immediate arrest.
1244&lt;p&gt;He still had the forged keys to Edward's apartment at Hampton Court
1245and, in the middle of the night, decided to risk everything on kidnapping
1246the king.&amp;nbsp; He entered through the privy garden - but, in the room
1247outside Edward's bedroom, slept the king's pet spaniel.&amp;nbsp; The dog woke
1248up, barking, and Seymour shot him.&amp;nbsp; A Yeoman of the Guard appeared,
1249demanding an explanation, even as King Edward awoke and stood in his bedroom
1250doorway; he was clad in his nightshirt and openly terrified.&amp;nbsp; Seymour
1251told them he had come to test the king's guards; the dog had attacked him
1252so he was forced to shoot.&amp;nbsp; The guard let him leave but, upon learning
1253of the incident, the council decided to confine Seymour to the Tower while
1254they investigated.&amp;nbsp; The official charge was attempting to murder King
1255Edward; even the suspicion of regicide was enough to condemn Seymour.&amp;nbsp;
1256On 18 January, the council officially sent agents to question everyone
1257Seymour had conspired with; among those questioned were Princess Elizabeth
1258and her household.
1259&lt;p&gt;Seymour refused to appear privately before the council; he would settle
1260for nothing less than an open trial.&amp;nbsp; On 22 February, the council
1261officially indicted him of thirty-three charges of treason.&amp;nbsp; And Seymour
1262never had an open trial in which to make his case - as in Henry VIII's
1263time, a Bill of Attainder was passed on 4 March, approved by Parliament
1264and King Edward.&amp;nbsp; Somerset delayed signing the death warrant so the
1265council, led by Dudley, went to Edward for his signature.&amp;nbsp; So on 20
1266March, Seymour was executed at the Tower of London, dying 'dangerously,
1267irksomely, horribly.'&amp;nbsp; Somerset's understandable inability to condemn
1268his brother resulted in a growing rift on the council.&amp;nbsp; His family
1269was disgraced and he was angry at the councilors for so rapidly proceeding
1270against his brother.&amp;nbsp; It was only a matter of time before he, too,
1271fell from power.
1272&lt;p&gt;Somerset's fall was engineered by Dudley and helped along by a backlash
1273against his regime.&amp;nbsp; How did Somerset's policies help foster a climate
1274of betrayal and manipulation; specifically, how had he failed in his duties
1275as Lord Protector?
1276&lt;p&gt;
1277&lt;hr WIDTH=&quot;100%&quot;&gt;
1278&lt;br&gt;&lt;b&gt;A more thorough discussion of Somerset's government policies, and
1279how they led to his downfall&lt;/b&gt;
1280&lt;p&gt;Somerset's government was a confused jumble of misplaced idealism and
1281factional squabbling.&amp;nbsp; With the dynamic and charismatic figure of
1282Henry VIII gone, Tudor government was in a shambles.&amp;nbsp; Its fate was
1283inevitable - an autocratic king was replaced with a nine-year-old boy -
1284what else could result but chaos?&amp;nbsp; Henry VIII had been a mass of contradictions
1285always united in the belief that the king's will was the highest authority.&amp;nbsp;
1286Even when his religious policies became incomprehensible to anyone but
1287him, he still believed they were righteous - and through the force of his
1288will and use of kingly authority, he convinced most others of the same.&amp;nbsp;
1289Up until the week of his death, he entertained foreign ambassadors and
1290plotted grandiose foreign invasions, displaying a disturbing interest in
1291current events while his council thought he should be contemplating the
1292afterlife.&amp;nbsp; When he was gone, no one knew how to fill the void.&amp;nbsp;
1293Certainly his heir, still a child, was king in name only.&amp;nbsp; His Lord
1294Protectors - first Somerset and then Dudley - tried to &lt;i&gt;act&lt;/i&gt; as kings
1295and both perished.&amp;nbsp; The truth was obvious and inescapable - the English
1296people may have muttered (at great risk) about Henry's religious quarrels
1297and his private follies but they had respected his position as king.&amp;nbsp;
1298The men that followed him had grown up in his shadow, jockeying for position
1299and favor.&amp;nbsp; When he died, they struggled amongst themselves for Henry's
1300vanished supreme authority.&amp;nbsp; In the end, they failed and the English
1301people suffered six years of turmoil.
1302&lt;p&gt;Somerset's position as Lord Protector seemed natural enough.&amp;nbsp; After
1303all, no one seriously expected a council of sixteen peers to rule England.&amp;nbsp;
1304Factionalism and squabbling had long marked Henry's court (particularly
1305after Cromwell's execution) and it only worsened after his death.&amp;nbsp;
1306There needed to be a leader, a respected man who (in the council's opinion)
1307would not be a ruler but a figurehead.&amp;nbsp; In other words, he would be
1308perceived as leader while actually sharing authority with the council.&amp;nbsp;
1309(A position, in other words, like that of Speaker of the House in the U.S.
1310Congress.)&amp;nbsp; Of course, such a plan depended on the leader being willing
1311to share power privately.&amp;nbsp; Somerset originally promised to do so but,
1312fairly quickly, decided to disregard his peers.&amp;nbsp; This understandably
1313angered them.&amp;nbsp; In addition to his arrogant refusal to consult them,
1314he also implemented policies which helped the poor at the expense of the
1315aristocracy.
1316&lt;p&gt;In private life, Somerset was regarded as a genial man, though criticized
1317as middle-of-the-road and unreadable.&amp;nbsp; His wife, Anne Stanhope, was
1318the stereotypical shrewish wife who offended virtually everyone she met,
1319particularly other aristocratic wives.&amp;nbsp; She bore Somerset nine children
1320and he was considered a strict but fair father.&amp;nbsp; Insofar as it is
1321possible to sketch a psychological portrait of Somerset at this site, I
1322would characterize him as an essentially kind and sympathetic man who took
1323his responsibilities very seriously; he was also prone to feelings of inferiority
1324and easily offended.&amp;nbsp; As a result, his government policies were idealistic
1325- but his personal relationships with counncil members were unsatisfying.&amp;nbsp;
1326He came to be regarded as arrogant and bullying when, in fact, he was simply
1327ill-suited to his job.&amp;nbsp; Added to this, he craved appreciation - he
1328cultivated the appearance of fairness and virtue even as he replaced the
1329council with his own hand-picked advisors.
1330&lt;p&gt;Somerset had achieved the position of Lord Protector simply because
1331his younger sister, Jane, bore Henry VIII the longed-for son.&amp;nbsp; As
1332such, Henry always regarded her in a sentimental haze; she was the perfect
1333wife - gentle, meek and obedient.&amp;nbsp; She had also fulfilled her duty
1334as queen by providing a male heir, though she tragically died as a result.&amp;nbsp;
1335It was Jane who, years after her death, was painted as Henry's consort
1336in paintings of the Tudor dynasty; and it was Jane whom Henry wished to
1337lie beside in death.&amp;nbsp; While she lived as queen (for a brief eighteen
1338months), her brothers, Edward and Thomas, were showered with favors.&amp;nbsp;
1339After Edward VI's birth, the favors continued.&amp;nbsp; Edward, the elder
1340brother who became duke of Somerset in 1547, was closer to Henry than Thomas
1341and adept at handling his mercurial monarch.&amp;nbsp; In truth, Somerset had
1342emerged as a competent soldier and politician.&amp;nbsp; But competency alone
1343could not run Tudor England; indeed, even the great Cromwell had struggled
1344to control Henry's council before they connived at his execution.&amp;nbsp;
1345Somerset was no Cromwell.&amp;nbsp; He lacked a coherent vision of government
1346and the personality to govern.&amp;nbsp; But for several years he was Lord
1347Protector - before his younger brother's jealousy and ambition destroyed
1348them both.
1349&lt;p&gt;The personal tragedy of Edward and Thomas Seymour was discussed above.&amp;nbsp;
1350Suffice to say, it played out against the backdrop of actual government
1351- all the mundane day-to-day policies whicch actually control a country.&amp;nbsp;
1352Edward VI became king even as his father's past was catching up to the
1353English economy.&amp;nbsp; Henry VIII had indulged in many frivolous pursuits,
1354including several extremely expensive battles in France.&amp;nbsp; He left
1355behind a mountain of debt and little means to pay it.&amp;nbsp; The English
1356economy was heavily dependent upon wool exports to Europe, particularly
1357the Low Countries.&amp;nbsp; And it possessed the enviable ability to feed
1358its population without importing food - but only during good harvests.&amp;nbsp;
1359When harvests were bad, famine occurred and the poor became beggars, often
1360relying on the newly-impoverished churches for support.
1361&lt;p&gt;Somerset dealt with crises by consulting his own advisors and not the
1362council.&amp;nbsp; It was unfortunate that the disregarded councilors included
1363one John Dudley, earl of Warwick.&amp;nbsp; Dudley was very ambitious and determined
1364to destroy both Seymour brothers.&amp;nbsp; He began through simple gossip
1365- encouraging Thomas Seymour's jealousy whhile telling Somerset his brother
1366coveted his position.&amp;nbsp; But, for a long while, Somerset was impervious
1367to Dudley's scheming.&amp;nbsp; Within weeks of Henry's death, Somerset obtained
1368a dry stamp of Edward VI's signature - perhaps his most powerful tool (since
1369the king's signature implied the king's will - and the king's will was
1370law.)&amp;nbsp; And he soon commanded that Edward's signature alone was not
1371completely legal; instead, documents must include both Edward &lt;i&gt;and&lt;/i&gt;
1372Somerset's signatures.&amp;nbsp; For almost exactly two years (until his brother
1373was arrested on 17 January 1549), Somerset ruled England as thoroughly
1374as any king.&amp;nbsp; Indeed, it could be said he consulted the official privy
1375council less than Henry VIII had; certainly he entrusted less business
1376to it.
1377&lt;p&gt;His foreign policy was dominated by one thing - Scotland.&amp;nbsp; He wanted
1378to marry Edward VI to Mary Stuart, heiress to the Scottish throne and known
1379to history as Mary queen of Scots.&amp;nbsp; But he knew that such a betrothal
1380would have to be forced and enforced constantly.&amp;nbsp; He also knew that
1381England could ill afford to continually invade their troublesome northern
1382neighbor.&amp;nbsp; So Somerset proposed a logical - but impractical - plan.&amp;nbsp;
1383He would maintain a permanent English presence in Scotland by constructing
1384armed garrisons.&amp;nbsp; He invaded Scotland in September 1547 and won a
1385battle at Pinkie.&amp;nbsp; He instantly began to build forts while neglecting
1386to enforce a naval blockade to prevent French involvement.&amp;nbsp; Perhaps
1387Somerset did not correctly gauge the Scottish-French alliance; he was certainly
1388unprepared when 6000 French troops arrived and promptly captured English
1389forts and built their own garrisons.&amp;nbsp; Two years after the Battle of
1390Pinkie, the French had moved Mary Stuart to France (thereby ending Somerset's
1391planned marriage between her and Edward.)&amp;nbsp; Also, the battle had become
1392defensive and inconclusive.&amp;nbsp; Somerset was reduced to hiring mercenaries
1393(over 7000) to maintain some positions but conditions were bleak enough
1394to drive mercenaries away.&amp;nbsp; Soon enough, France had decided to declare
1395war; Henri II officially did so on 8 August 1549.&amp;nbsp; England could not
1396fight France and so Somerset offered to return Boulogne (captured by Henry
1397VIII) five years before an earlier treaty demanded.&amp;nbsp; The French king
1398demanded the return of Calais as well.&amp;nbsp; So Somerset ordered new forts
1399built at both cities and managed to fend off an attack at Boulogne.&amp;nbsp;
1400But soon enough the French king declared his trump card - Mary Stuart was
1401betrothed to his son and heir, the Dauphin.&amp;nbsp; The message was clear
1402- soon, the French would control Scotland..
1403&lt;p&gt;The conflicts with Scotland and France cost a great deal of money and
1404hurt Somerset's reputation.&amp;nbsp; Furthermore, he paid for the battles
1405by debasing coinage (hardly an intelligent policy.)&amp;nbsp; He combined these
1406foreign policy and economic mishaps by his religious policy.&amp;nbsp; Keep
1407in mind that in 1547 just 20% of Londoners were Protestant; Protestants
1408were also a vocal minority in Essex, Bristol, Kent and Sussex but outside
1409this all-important southeast corridor, the religion had barely spread.&amp;nbsp;
1410It was long known that whoever could hold London could control all of England
1411- London was the capital and one of the laargest cities in Europe.&amp;nbsp;
1412But since Protestants only accounted for 1/5 of the population, what explains
1413Somerset's - and the rest of government's - legal support for this new
1414religion?&amp;nbsp; The answer is complicated and deserves its own book - in
1415brief, the Protestants were a minority but they were a vocal minority with
1416money and influence.&amp;nbsp; Their members formed the basis of Somerset's
1417support and - as a vocal minority - they were far more passionate and committed
1418to spreading their faith than Catholics were with preserving the old order.&amp;nbsp;
1419This is an important point; offensive actions are more ideologically appealing
1420than defensive actions.&amp;nbsp; The group that initiated the changes (Protestants)
1421were far more likely to be committed
1422&lt;i&gt;and&lt;/i&gt; inspired to action.
1423&lt;p&gt;Many of the wealthy Protestants had benefited from the dissolution of
1424the monasteries in the 1530s but many historians have exaggerated Henry
1425VIII's generosity, implying that he gave vast monastic lands away to favored
1426courtiers.&amp;nbsp; In truth, he and Cromwell charged a fair - and often steep
1427- price for most of the lands.&amp;nbsp; They were purchased by nobles - who
1428then were committed to keeping their new lands.&amp;nbsp; But most were also
1429committed to Protestantism for very real ideological and religious reasons.&amp;nbsp;
1430One should not underestimate the importance of religion to 16th century
1431people, though our own age is awash in skepticism and cynicism.&amp;nbsp; For
1432people of the 16th century, the miseries of this world were transitory
1433- they were more committed to ensuring exiistence in the hereafter.
1434&lt;p&gt;Throughout Somerset's protectorate, the Tudor government - though sympathetic
1435to Protestantism - did not dare officially declare itself Protestant.&amp;nbsp;
1436Why?&amp;nbsp; Once again, the specter of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V hung
1437over England.&amp;nbsp; And with the Franco-Scottish alliance a pressing concern,
1438Somerset could not afford to alienate the neutral Charles V.&amp;nbsp; (Like
1439Henry VIII, Somerset wanted to avoid a Franco-Spanish-Scottish alliance
1440against England.)&amp;nbsp; So he avoided an official declaration of England's
1441religious
1442sympathies and allowed Charles's cousin, Princess Mary, freedom to celebrate
1443Catholic services.&amp;nbsp; But the religious policy was as confusing as everything
1444else during those years - what were the proper rites for church services?
1445what doctrinal changes from Henry's reign would remain? would the use of
1446an English bible be enforced? should the Host be elevated during mass?&amp;nbsp;
1447These questions - and many others - remained hotly debated.&amp;nbsp; Meanwhile,
1448Somerset's government passed numerous guidelines, each more upsetting to
1449traditionalists than the last - unlicensed preaching was banned on 24 April
14501548; &lt;i&gt;all&lt;/i&gt; preaching was banned just five months later.&amp;nbsp; Instead,
1451clergy would recite twelve government-approved homilies/proverbs from the
1452pulpit.&amp;nbsp; Images were outlawed, altars were ordered removed, private
1453masses ended....&amp;nbsp; And the twelve government-endorsed homilies continued
1454this destruction, railing against good works and purgatory while advocating
1455salvation through faith &lt;i&gt;alone&lt;/i&gt;.&amp;nbsp; All churchmen felt themselves
1456under attack while their parishes agreed.&amp;nbsp; (For example, good works
1457and purgatory were deeply-held beliefs of common people.)
1458&lt;p&gt;Added to this confusion was Edward VI's blossoming religious convictions.&amp;nbsp;
1459Like his sister, Mary, Edward became committed to a specific ideology and
1460determined to impose it upon the English people - for their own good, of
1461course.&amp;nbsp; His tacit approval did not matter much to Somerset (who,
1462after all, possessed the king's signature) but it was symbolic.&amp;nbsp; For
1463the English people, the religious policies were frightening and confusing.&amp;nbsp;
1464Most English people lived in the countryside and were fundamentally conservative
1465- as most rural populations are; they weree slow to change and suspicious
1466of new ideas.&amp;nbsp; Confined to London for most of his short life, Edward
1467was unaware of this basic truth.&amp;nbsp; Like Somerset, he resided in London
1468where the new ideas were rampant.
1469&lt;p&gt;But, of course, the people had another reason for dissatisfaction.&amp;nbsp;
1470As mentioned earlier, Somerset's economic policy was essentially nonexistent.&amp;nbsp;
1471There was no overriding philosophy - just one hare-brained scheme to raise
1472money after another.&amp;nbsp; The population had been steadily increasing
1473(see &lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fwww.englishhistory.net%2ftudor%2ffacts.html&quot;&gt;Tudor Facts
1474&amp;amp; Figures&lt;/a&gt;) and, of course, fueled a rise in prices.&amp;nbsp; But along
1475with this, currency debasement continued and increased inflation.&amp;nbsp;
1476One official mentioned the obvious solution - restore the coinage - but
1477Somerset was desperate for quick money to fund his Scottish plans.&amp;nbsp;
1478Most of his economic policies were implemented by John Hales.&amp;nbsp; Hales
1479introduced many bills to parliament 1548-49, the main ones were: the maintenance
1480of tillage, requiring sheep farmers to keep a certain number of cows to
1481ensure regular milk and cheese supplies; he also attempted to end the compulsory
1482purchase by the government of food at fixed prices.&amp;nbsp; Those bills failed
1483- but a tax on sheep and wool was approvedd in order to discourage sheep
1484farming (and enclosures.)&amp;nbsp; The attempts to end enclosures was perhaps
1485the most ill-advised of Somerset's policies.&amp;nbsp; Landholders were naturally
1486opposed to it and, when they supposedly frustrated attempts to collect
1487evidence of enclosures, Somerset grew angry - he decided to proceed without
1488legal basis.&amp;nbsp; (The landowners had frustrated the government by packing
1489juries with their own tenants and servants.)&amp;nbsp; Somerset's decision
1490to proceed inflamed the entire Midlands (where the commission had begun
1491its work.)
1492&lt;p&gt;In May 1549, revolts began which can be loosely classified as 'class
1493warfare', or as close to such as Tudor England would ever get.&amp;nbsp; This
1494was not a repeat of the Pilgrimage of Grace, where nobleman led their supporters
1495in protest of new religious policies.&amp;nbsp; This was the revolt ot thousands
1496of laborers and poor farmers who had long resented the use of enclosures.&amp;nbsp;
1497They were revolting against the noblemen with, so they believed, the government's
1498support.&amp;nbsp; These poor people, who had suffered through rising inflation
1499and prices and debased currency, were determined to end a grossly unfair
1500practice.&amp;nbsp; When Somerset insisted the nobles had deliberately filled
1501the juries with supporters, the people grew angry.&amp;nbsp; They took to the
1502fields - filling ditches, tearing down fences and hedges.&amp;nbsp; Too late,
1503Somerset recognized the force he had unleashed.&amp;nbsp; He threatened to
1504disperse the rioters by force, to no avail.&amp;nbsp; In May the first revolts
1505broke out; by August, revolts broke out in Leicestershire.&amp;nbsp; It was
1506up to the nobility to restore order to their lands, using troops originally
1507destined for Scotland.&amp;nbsp; But thousands perished during the fighting.
1508&lt;p&gt;The revolts had revealed the ugly undercurrent of dissatisfaction among
1509the English people.&amp;nbsp; The factors already discussed combined to encourage
1510revolt.&amp;nbsp; It was also a terribly hot summer with a bad harvest.&amp;nbsp;
1511As prices rose, Somerset foolishly decided to fix maximum prices for goods
1512- but the prices were incredibly high and,, once again, demonstrated his
1513knowledge of London prices and ignorance of the rest of England.&amp;nbsp;
1514In general, the rebels wanted such basic rights as this - the right to
1515have landlords forced off 'common' ground and the right to fish freely.&amp;nbsp;
1516In a way, it was very much a 'Robin Hood' rebellion; they distrusted the
1517gentry and sought to separate the church and nobility.
1518&lt;p&gt;Somerset's policies during the rebellions were typical of 'the Good
1519Duke', or so the peasantry believed - but they enraged the nobility.&amp;nbsp;
1520In effect, he waffled between action and inaction.&amp;nbsp; When the revolts
1521began, he had not wanted to delay his Scottish campaign and so he didn't
1522respond immediately.&amp;nbsp; Instead, he issued grandiose proclamations and
1523promised to pardon rebels if they stopped.&amp;nbsp; Meanwhile, the revolts
1524spread and the council urged action.&amp;nbsp; In July, Somerset finally brought
1525troops back from Scotland and sent them to smash the rebels with impunity.&amp;nbsp;
1526Thousands of deaths ensued and much property was damaged.&amp;nbsp; The council
1527was furious - Somerset had blundered once again, disregarding their advice
1528and following no clear policy of his own.&amp;nbsp; Even Paget, his former
1529ally, was disgusted.&amp;nbsp; He wrote Somerset a threatening and dismissive
1530letter which read, in part:
1531&lt;ul&gt;Society in a realm doth consist and is maintained by mean of religion
1532and law.&amp;nbsp; And these two or one wanting, farewell all just society,
1533farewell king, government, justice and all other virtue.&amp;nbsp; Look well
1534whether you have either law or religion at home and I fear you shall find
1535neither. ....And put no more so many irons in the fire at once as you have
1536had within this twelvemonth - war with Scotland, with France.... commissions
1537out for that matter, new laws for this, proclamation for another, one in
1538another's neck.&lt;/ul&gt;
1539Paget's opinion of his former ally indicated the growing disillusionment
1540with Somerset.&amp;nbsp; Coupled with his brother's ambitious attempt to overthrow
1541him, the complete loss of the council's confidence was thus the beginning
1542of Somerset's end.
1543&lt;p&gt;
1544&lt;hr WIDTH=&quot;100%&quot;&gt;
1545&lt;center&gt;&lt;font size=-1&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fmonarchs.html&quot;&gt;to
1546Tudor Monarchs&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/font&gt;
1547&lt;br&gt;&lt;font size=-1&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=1&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor.html&quot;&gt;to Tudor
1548England&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/center&gt;
1549&lt;/blockquote&gt;
1550
1551&lt;center&gt;&lt;font size=-1&gt;written by &lt;a href=&quot;mailto:[email protected]&quot;&gt;Marilee&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/center&gt;
1552&lt;/td&gt;
1553&lt;/tr&gt;
1554&lt;/table&gt;&lt;/center&gt;
1555
1556
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1559</Content>
1560</Section>
1561</Archive>
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