source: other-projects/nightly-tasks/diffcol/trunk/gs3-model-collect/Web-Download/archives/HASH01df.dir/doc.xml@ 38996

Last change on this file since 38996 was 38996, checked in by anupama, 5 weeks ago

SourceDirectory seems to be new metadata in doc.xml that is breaking diffcol (when diffcol attempted on Win VM)

File size: 48.2 KB
Line 
1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" standalone="no"?>
2<!DOCTYPE Archive SYSTEM "https://greenstone.org/dtd/Archive/1.0/Archive.dtd">
3<Archive>
4<Section>
5 <Description>
6 <Metadata name="gsdlsourcefilename">import/englishhistory.net/tudor/citizens/cromwell.html</Metadata>
7 <Metadata name="gsdlsourcefilerenamemethod">url</Metadata>
8 <Metadata name="gsdldoctype">indexed_doc</Metadata>
9 <Metadata name="Plugin">HTMLPlugin</Metadata>
10 <Metadata name="FileSize">43659</Metadata>
11 <Metadata name="SourceDirectory">englishhistory.net/tudor/citizens</Metadata>
12 <Metadata name="Source">cromwell.html</Metadata>
13 <Metadata name="SourceFile">cromwell.html</Metadata>
14 <Metadata name="Language">en</Metadata>
15 <Metadata name="Encoding">utf8</Metadata>
16 <Metadata name="Title">Tudor Citizens - Thomas Cromwell</Metadata>
17 <Metadata name="FileFormat">HTML</Metadata>
18 <Metadata name="URL">http://englishhistory.net/tudor/citizens/cromwell.html</Metadata>
19 <Metadata name="UTF8URL">http://englishhistory.net/tudor/citizens/cromwell.html</Metadata>
20 <Metadata name="Identifier">HASH01dfef237687bf0134e88e9e</Metadata>
21 <Metadata name="lastmodified">1714975834</Metadata>
22 <Metadata name="lastmodifieddate">20240506</Metadata>
23 <Metadata name="oailastmodified">1714976056</Metadata>
24 <Metadata name="oailastmodifieddate">20240506</Metadata>
25 <Metadata name="assocfilepath">HASH01df.dir</Metadata>
26 <Metadata name="gsdlassocfile">cromwell.gif:image/gif:</Metadata>
27 <Metadata name="gsdlassocfile">cromwell-small.jpg:image/jpeg:</Metadata>
28 </Description>
29 <Content>
30&lt;center&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;_httpdocimg_/cromwell.gif&quot;
31 alt=&quot;Thomas Cromwell&quot; style=&quot;width: 313px; height: 59px;&quot;&gt; &lt;br&gt;
32born c.1485 in Putney &lt;br&gt;
33executed 28 July 1540 in London
34&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;+1&quot;&gt;&quot;A good household manager, but not fit to meddle
35in the affairs of kings.&quot;&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;
36&lt;font size=&quot;-1&quot;&gt;May 1538, Henry VIII describes Cromwell to the French
37ambassador&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
38&lt;/center&gt;
39&lt;p&gt;&lt;img
40 src=&quot;_httpdocimg_/cromwell-small.jpg&quot;
41 alt=&quot;portrait of Cromwell as the earl of Essex&quot;
42 style=&quot;border: 2px solid ; width: 220px; height: 264px;&quot; align=&quot;left&quot;&gt;
43&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Thomas Cromwell was as great a statesman as England
44has ever seen and, in his decade of power, permanently changed the
45course
46of English history.&amp;nbsp; Unlike his mentor, Cardinal Wolsey, Cromwell
47was not a priest or a papist.&amp;nbsp; He was a lawyer determined to
48impose his own character - methodical, detached, and calculating - upon
49government. &lt;/p&gt;
50&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Cromwell wanted government to be effective and
51efficient; to achieve this, he had to end the chaos of feudal privilege
52and ill-defined jurisdictions.&amp;nbsp; He was blessed with a logical mind
53in an age sadly devoid of them.&amp;nbsp; And unlike his royal master, he
54did not let his emotions interfere with his position.&amp;nbsp; He was the
55ideal statesman for Tudor England and, just months after his execution
56in 1540, Henry VIII was bemoaning his loss. &lt;/p&gt;
57&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Cromwell was introduced to government service as
58a secretary for &lt;a
59 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fcitizens%2fwolsey.html&quot;&gt;Cardinal
60Wolsey&lt;/a&gt;.&amp;nbsp; His abilities won him the older man's respect and
61soon Cromwell was his most
62trusted servant and principal secretary.&amp;nbsp; But Cromwell managed to
63distance
64himself from Wolsey immediately after the Cardinal fell from grace and
65soon
66had taken his place as Henry's most valuable advisor.&amp;nbsp; Before
67entering
68Wolsey's service, Cromwell lived an adventurous life.&amp;nbsp; His father
69had
70been a brewer and blacksmith known for permanent drunkenness and
71illegal
72activities.&amp;nbsp; From this inauspicious beginning, his son went on to
73indulge
74his curiosity and practical nature by traveling through Europe.&amp;nbsp;
75Over
76the course of several years, he was a soldier in Europe, a banker in
77Italy,
78clerk in the Netherlands, and a lawyer in London.&amp;nbsp; Like so many
79ambitious
80men, he was in Wolsey's service in the mid-1520s.&amp;nbsp; His most
81important
82work was the suppression of 29 religious houses whose monies Wolsey
83used
84to endow colleges at Ipswich and Oxford.&amp;nbsp; When Wolsey fell from
85grace
86in 1529, Cromwell was hurriedly elected burgess for Taunton so he could
87remain in government service. &lt;/p&gt;
88&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; There were striking similarities between the two
89men - both managed to remain favorites of the mercurial Henry VIII for
90years; both were despised by the older nobility who coveted their
91influence with the king; both sought to reform the creaky medieval
92bureaucracy of Tudor government; both were highly intelligent and
93well-versed in international affairs.&amp;nbsp; And both, ultimately, fell
94from Henry's favor with spectacular speed.&amp;nbsp; In the end, the king
95preferred to listen to the old nobility. &lt;/p&gt;
96&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; But Cromwell and Wolsey were also markedly
97different in many ways.&amp;nbsp; Cromwell was the man responsible for the
98Henrician reformation while Wolsey fell because he served two masters,
99the king of England and the Pope.&amp;nbsp; Though Henry had ejected Rome
100from his nation, he still practiced the Roman Catholic religion.&amp;nbsp;
101The king's religious tendencies were never reformist and many
102historians have made the mistake of painting him as one of the first
103Protestant kings.&amp;nbsp; Henry was never a Protestant and he wrote
104treatises vilifying Martin Luther for which he was titled 'Defender of
105the Faith' by the Pope.&amp;nbsp; Rather, he was an opportunist who
106disliked papal authority and interference in his realm and wanted some
107of the vast wealth the English church possessed.&amp;nbsp; For
108Henry, often desperately short of money, it was near-blasphemy for his
109subjects
110to pay taxes directly to Rome; he wanted the money for his
111government.&amp;nbsp;
112He also wanted an annulment from a devoutly Catholic wife, Katharine of
113Aragon, and when the Pope, held hostage by the Holy Roman Emperor,
114refused
115to rule in his favor, he found it most expedient to simply disregard
116the
117papacy.&amp;nbsp; But throughout it all, Henry was unaware of the forces he
118had unleashed when he declared himself head of the English
119church.&amp;nbsp;
120Trained for the church as a child, he remained staunchly Catholic for
121his
122entire life though the Catholic church deemed him a heretic. &lt;/p&gt;
123&lt;center&gt;
124&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;u&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#000000&quot;&gt;a discussion of the Henrician reformation&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/u&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
125&lt;/center&gt;
126&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; It is important to remember that during Henry's
127reign, at least half of his subjects were under the age of
128eighteen.&amp;nbsp; Henry's court swarmed with young people - pages,
129scullery maids, and the like.&amp;nbsp; English culture celebrated youth;
130tournaments, hunts, glorious warfare were all the province of the young
131and strong.&amp;nbsp; And while Henry was young, he joined these events
132with a gusto sadly lacking in his father or son.&amp;nbsp; But time does
133not stop, not even for a despotic monarch determined to have his way in
134all things.&amp;nbsp; During his 'great matter', Henry was in his thirties
135and changing from 'Bluff King Hal' into an overweight and balding
136hypochondriac.&amp;nbsp; He had rid himself of Rome to gain wealth and a
137son.&amp;nbsp; He gained both and, once he had, continually toyed with the
138idea of making peace with the pope.&amp;nbsp; He didn't relish
139excommunication and it is likely that he persuaded himself that he
140wasn't disobeying Christ's vicar but rather the Emperor's puppet. &lt;/p&gt;
141&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; But he misjudged the mood of his people,
142particularly his nobles.&amp;nbsp; Educated and by nature inquisitive and
143acquisitive, the new Protestant teachings intrigued them; they also
144sought the vast monastic lands which Henry planned to sell.&amp;nbsp; This
145was the paradox of the Henrician reformation.&amp;nbsp; It was motivated by
146greed and genuine religious turmoil.&amp;nbsp; As time passed, the new
147generation of nobles were Protestant because it was expedient and
148philosophically appealing.&amp;nbsp; And with each year, more Englishmen
149were born who were further and further away from the old days of Roman
150domination.&amp;nbsp; Henry, in his forties, could remember the papist ways
151but, as the years passed, fewer and fewer of his subjects did. &lt;/p&gt;
152&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; In terms of the practical effect the reformation
153had on everyday Englishmen, the situation is more difficult to
154gauge.&amp;nbsp; Unlike the wealthy noblemen, they couldn't bid on the
155seized monastic properties.&amp;nbsp; And in many towns and villages, the
156parish church was the community center, where births, weddings, and
157deaths were officiated over by a priest.&amp;nbsp; But they undoubtedly
158enjoyed not paying their tax to Rome.&amp;nbsp; Once again, a paradox
159emerged - an excommunicated nation which found itself torn between
160loyalty to the sovereign and loyalty to the papacy.&amp;nbsp; Also, since
161Henry's marriage to Anne Boleyn could only be recognized if one
162accepted his annulment from Katharine - which in itself meant a
163rejection of papal authority - and it was treason to &lt;i&gt;not&lt;/i&gt;
164recognize his marriage to Anne, then many people were swayed by the
165threat of execution.&amp;nbsp; In other words, accept Henry's decisions or
166die.&amp;nbsp; Of course, I cannot discuss all aspects of the reformation
167at this site; I recommend L.B. Smith's &lt;i&gt;Henry VIII&lt;/i&gt; which studies
168Henry's own theological beliefs. &lt;/p&gt;
169&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; There was opposition to the reformation which
170probably had more to do with the attendant loss of independence in
171north England.&amp;nbsp; In 1536, a northern uprising which came to be
172called the Pilgrimage of Grace, gathered over 40,000 men and marched
173through England.&amp;nbsp; It eventually destroyed itself by internal
174division and lack of clear purpose but one of the rebels' demands was a
175warning for Cromwell - they want their king to be advised by &lt;i&gt;noble&lt;/i&gt;
176councilors who understand the people's wishes, not common men like
177Cromwell.&amp;nbsp; Henry was angry at their presumption - how dare his
178ignorant subjects rebel annd then tell him how to run the country! -
179but he was persuaded to show mercy and pardon those involved.&amp;nbsp; And
180he continued to listen to Cromwell. &lt;/p&gt;
181&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; The &lt;a
182 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fprimary.html&quot;&gt;Pilgrimage of Grace&lt;/a&gt;
183was largely motivated not by religious concerns but by Cromwell's
184determination to dissolve the monasteries and improve the royal tax
185collecting methods.&amp;nbsp; For example, the movement began in Louth, in
186Lincolnshire, and began with the murder of two tax collectors, one of
187whom was hanged and the other sewn into a sack and thrown to a pack of
188hungry dogs! &lt;/p&gt;
189&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; So the common people might grumble somewhat but
190they were ultimately more influenced by practical matters.&amp;nbsp; Had
191Henry's excommunication been followed by a terrible harvest or bad
192weather, it may have been otherwise.&amp;nbsp; During his daughter Mary's
193reign, such signs were taken to mean God was angry with her for
194attempting to reinstate Catholicism.&amp;nbsp; But not only did Henry enjoy
195good weather, he had a brilliant servant.&amp;nbsp; Cromwell was the one
196who gave force to Henry's grand declarations.&amp;nbsp; The king declared
197that Rome had no authority in England and Cromwell instituted the
198reforms which would make it so.&amp;nbsp; The king declared that all
199monastic lands were forfeit and Cromwell set out to close the
200monasteries, assess their value, and sell them to the highest
201bidder.&amp;nbsp; For a decade, this partnership worked marvelously. &lt;/p&gt;
202&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Also, Henry and Cromwell both recognized a
203fundamental truth of the English people; the government could do what
204it liked as long as traditional religious views were not upset too
205much.&amp;nbsp; Certainly Henry did not upset his own.&amp;nbsp; The name of
206the pope was omitted in their prayers but not much else.&amp;nbsp; Henry's
207break with Rome was really a legal reformation rather than one of real
208religious content.&amp;nbsp; England practiced Catholicism without a pope
209and, in his place, was their king.&amp;nbsp; This situation suited
210Cromwell.&amp;nbsp; Like many, he recognized that the Church had lost its
211way, remaining a ponderous medieval institution concerned with wealth
212and influence.&amp;nbsp; But Europe was no longer medieval; countries were
213becoming nation-states, patriotic and immune to the cultural unity
214which Rome promoted.&amp;nbsp; The pope envisioned a collection of nations
215joined beneath the cloak of Christendom with him at its head; but,
216particularly in xenophobic England, there were mutterings that the
217church was dominated by other nations.&amp;nbsp; Also, the church claimed
218authority over its subjects; no priest or cleric could be tried by
219their sovereign nation.&amp;nbsp; They would answer only to Rome.&amp;nbsp;
220This problem had angered Henry II centuries before and resulted in
221Thomas Becket's murder.&amp;nbsp; In Henry's time, it had grown
222worse.&amp;nbsp; Also, as king, he believed himself ruler of &lt;i&gt;all&lt;/i&gt;
223his subjects, priest and commoner alike. &lt;/p&gt;
224&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; One must also mention the corruption of the
225church, sadly evident to everyone.&amp;nbsp; Certainly there were Godly men
226who struggled to enforce the tenets of their faith.&amp;nbsp; But there
227were also bishops and cardinals more interested in business and finance
228than theology.&amp;nbsp; The church preached that the surest path to heaven
229was through good works, particularly at a monastery or abbey, but every
230Englishmen knew that only the wealthy could afford to endow or board at
231them.&amp;nbsp; Furthermore, an increasing number of churchmen were absent
232from their posts.&amp;nbsp; Cardinal Wolsey embodied this avaricious
233streak; he was bishop, archbishop, abbot, and cardinal yet the affairs
234of state kept him from his duties.&amp;nbsp; Instead of tending to his
235flock, he tended to his purse.&amp;nbsp; He sired illegitimate children and
236collected nearly 50,000 pds a year from his vast holdings. &lt;/p&gt;
237&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Wolsey represented the church as it had become;
238certainly such abuses may not have turned most Englishmen from their
239faith.&amp;nbsp; But when confronted with the forces of Protestantism, the
240church found precious few willing to die for their beliefs.&amp;nbsp; After
241all, why would anyone die for a faith they didn't respect?&amp;nbsp; When
242the king styled himself head of the church, many were perhaps
243relieved.&amp;nbsp; Henry made no claim to a holy life, not like the
244churchman Wolsey; he also was shrewd enough to endow his monarchy with
245papal apparatus.&amp;nbsp; From the 1530s on, the Tudor dynasty was even
246more divine and the machinery of state could enforce its divinity. &lt;/p&gt;
247&lt;center&gt;
248&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;u&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#000000&quot;&gt;Cromwell's revolution in government&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/u&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
249&lt;/center&gt;
250&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Cromwell's rise to power was extraordinary and
251occurred just when Henry needed a minister of great administrative
252imagination and genius, uninterested in the squabbles of his council
253and determined to empower the machinery of state.&amp;nbsp; Cromwell
254entered royal service in early 1530 and, from then on, rose
255rapidly.&amp;nbsp; In late 1530 he was sworn into the King's Council and,
256just a year later, began to attract unfavorable attention from Wolsey's
257old rivals.&amp;nbsp; These were Stephen Gardiner, bishop of Winchester,
258Thomas Howard, duke of Norfolk, and Charles Brandon, duke of
259Suffolk.&amp;nbsp; Gardiner had worked with Wolsey but, like Norfolk and
260Suffolk, viewed the Cardinal's fall as a chance to take his
261place.&amp;nbsp; From 1529 to about 1533, they enjoyed the king's
262confidence even as Cromwell rose to overtake them all.&amp;nbsp; His career
263progressed as follows: &lt;br&gt;
264&lt;b&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#990000&quot;&gt;1531&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt; - member of the privy council &lt;br&gt;
265&lt;b&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#990000&quot;&gt;1532&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt; - Master of Court of Wards and
266Master of Jewel House &lt;br&gt;
267&lt;b&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#990000&quot;&gt;1533&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt; - Chancellor of the Exchequer &lt;br&gt;
268&lt;font color=&quot;#990000&quot;&gt;&lt;b&gt;1534&lt;/b&gt; &lt;/font&gt;- King's Secretary and Master
269of the Rolls &lt;br&gt;
270&lt;b&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#990000&quot;&gt;1535&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt; - Vicar-General &lt;br&gt;
271&lt;b&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#990000&quot;&gt;1536&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt; - Lord Privy Seal and Baron
272Cromwell of Oakham &lt;br&gt;
273&lt;b&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#990000&quot;&gt;1537&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt; - Knight of the Garter and
274Dean of Wells &lt;br&gt;
275&lt;b&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#990000&quot;&gt;1539&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt; - Lord Great Chamberlain &lt;br&gt;
276&lt;b&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#990000&quot;&gt;1540&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt; - created Earl of Essex &lt;/p&gt;
277&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; As the above list shows, Henry never forgot the
278fallen Wolsey.&amp;nbsp; He had heaped honors upon him with extravagant
279generosity and had written to the pope recommending religious
280promotion.&amp;nbsp; In the end, Henry believed himself betrayed.&amp;nbsp; Not
281only had Wolsey accumulated obscene wealth, but he had grown arrogant
282and eventually treasonous.&amp;nbsp; And so Cromwell, despite his years of
283diligence and genius, was eventually rewarded with an earldom but only
284a short time before his execution. &lt;/p&gt;
285&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; His influence upon the 1530s, one of the most
286influential and vital decades in English history, was enormous.&amp;nbsp;
287One needs only to study the 1540s to realize how the loss of Cromwell
288affected Tudor government.&amp;nbsp; He also came to power during Anne
289Boleyn's ascendancy.&amp;nbsp; It was a symbolic changing of the guard -
290the old Katharine of Aragon thrust aside for the young, ambitious Anne
291Boleyn and Wolsey disgraced and replaced by his protégé
292Cromwell.&amp;nbsp; Cromwell supported Anne until she, like Wolsey, became
293a liability.&amp;nbsp; Among his immediate accomplishments were the
294following: &lt;br&gt;
295&lt;b&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#990000&quot;&gt;1&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt; - the dissolution of the
296monasteries and establishment of the royal supremacy &lt;br&gt;
297&lt;b&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#990000&quot;&gt;2&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt; - founded the ministries of
298Augmentations and First Fruits to handle income from the dissolution &lt;br&gt;
299&lt;b&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#990000&quot;&gt;3&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt; - founded the two courts of Wards
300and Surveyors which allowed more efficient taxation and leasing &lt;br&gt;
301&lt;b&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#990000&quot;&gt;4 &lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;- politically integrated the
302kingdom by extending sovereign authority into northern England, Wales
303&amp;amp; Ireland (actions which angered the great feudal lords) &lt;br&gt;
304&lt;b&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#990000&quot;&gt;5&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt; - used the power of that
305relatively new invention, the printing-press and thus spearheaded the
306first propaganda campaign in English history. &lt;/p&gt;
307&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; In the 1530s, he had instituted reforms of the
308English government which earned enmity from the nobility.&amp;nbsp;
309Cromwell recognized the basic inefficiency of feudal government and,
310from it, struggled to create a more logical system.&amp;nbsp; Instead of
311offices held solely because of birth, he wanted trained servants with
312expertise in their field.&amp;nbsp; He built a bureaucracy of professionals
313outside the royal household.&amp;nbsp; He began the first era of
314parliamentary control of England, using the institution to dissolve the
315monasteries which made up a quarter of all arable land and validate his
316other decisions. &lt;/p&gt;
317&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; From the above list, one will note that most of
318the 'accomplishments' were motivated by financial need.&amp;nbsp; Like his
319predecessors in government ministry, Cromwell needed to provide secure
320and regular income.&amp;nbsp; This alone necessitated an assault on the
321church's wealth.&amp;nbsp; Cromwell also developed a novel, and very
322unpopular idea - in the past, taxes were created to support warfare; in
3231534, he developed a new tax.&amp;nbsp; Its basis?&amp;nbsp; The king's
324maintenance of peace.&amp;nbsp; These measures did not help his reputation
325but, by 1547, had brought nearly 2,000,000 pds to
326Henry's treasury.&amp;nbsp; Of course, Henry would use the entire windfall
327to
328finance his increasingly complicated foreign policy.&amp;nbsp; At the time
329of
330Henry's death, all the wealth Cromwell had accumulated was gone and
331Edward
332VI was left with debased currency and massive debts. &lt;/p&gt;
333&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; In 1534, however, Henry was prepared to reap the
334benefits of his new anti-clerical policies.&amp;nbsp; He had appointed his
335friend Thomas Cranmer to the venerable and powerful position of
336Archbishop of Canterbury.&amp;nbsp; Cranmer was like Cromwell in many ways
337- both owed their rise to prominence entirely to Henry's mercurial
338favor; both came from humble backgrounds; both
339were despised by the traditional nobility.&amp;nbsp; Cranmer had come to
340Henry's
341attention by first suggesting a solution to the divorce problem -
342petition
343learned churchmen for their opinion, assuming they agreed with
344Henry.&amp;nbsp;
345Like Cromwell, Cranmer benefited directly from the fall of Katharine of
346Aragon and the Imperial alliance and the rise of Anne Boleyn and her
347Norfolk
348relations.&amp;nbsp; Henry's midlife crisis provided fertile ground for
349ambitious
350men.&amp;nbsp; Cranmer and Cromwell liked one another and became friends,
351though
352Cranmer was careful to distance himself once Cromwell's ruin was
353assured. &lt;/p&gt;
354&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; In 1535, Henry appointed Cromwell Vicar General
355and, over the next five years, the honors increased - Lord Privy Seal,
356titled Baron Cromwell of Oakham, Knight of the Garter and Dean of
357Wells, and finally Lord Great Chancellor and ennoblement as Earl of
358Essex.&amp;nbsp; The last was Cromwell's greatest ambition and long before
359justified by his superior service to the crown.&amp;nbsp; During the
360accumulation of these honors, however, Cromwell began to recognize the
361flaws in his success. &lt;/p&gt;
362&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; First, he had accompanied Anne Boleyn on her rise
363to power; yet, in 1536, he helped engineer her disgrace and execution
364on charges of adultery, incest, and witchcraft.&amp;nbsp; Why?&amp;nbsp;
365Cromwell recognized Henry's dissatisfaction with the marriage - after
366several years, Anne's sharp tongue had offended many and, even worse,
367she had not produced a male heir.&amp;nbsp; Furthermore, Henry had become
368infatuated with Anne's lady-in-waiting, Mistress Jane Seymour.&amp;nbsp;
369Tiring of his wife, he wanted to be rid of her.&amp;nbsp; Divorce was only
370briefly considered before being pushed aside.&amp;nbsp; As he had with
371Katharine of Aragon, Henry became convinced his marriage was invalid,
372only this time because of adultery, and he retained his absolute
373conviction in her guilt even as he truly believed his and Katharine's
374marriage was invalid.&amp;nbsp; To rid himself of Anne, he turned to the
375ever-ready Cromwell.&amp;nbsp; Soon enough, Anne was on trial with her
376brother and two male servants.&amp;nbsp; They were all executed, despite
377spirited defenses and the widely-held belief that it was judicial
378murder. &lt;/p&gt;
379&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Cromwell betrayed his former patron because she
380no longer held the king's favor.&amp;nbsp; In the rough world of Tudor
381politics, friendships were lost in the struggle for prestige and
382survival.&amp;nbsp; And now Cromwell turned to Mistress Jane Seymour and
383her relatively obscure family for support.&amp;nbsp; The Seymours, however,
384never warmed to Cromwell as had the Boleyns, largely because they
385didn't trust him or his influence over the king.&amp;nbsp; Cromwell was
386careful to press Jane's cause to the king though Henry needed little
387urging.&amp;nbsp; Just days after Anne Boleyn's execution, Jane Seymour
388became his third wife, dying eighteen months later after delivering the
389longed-for son, Prince Edward.&amp;nbsp; Cromwell busied himself with
390auctioning off church properties to various noblemen and further
391reforming the archaic machinery of Tudor government.&amp;nbsp; In doing so,
392he continued to ignore Henry's council of noble peers.&amp;nbsp; When the
393council did meet, Cromwell dominated the meetings and disregarded most
394suggestions.&amp;nbsp; To his credit, he was right on most counts; the
395nobility was quite distanced from the changing nature of
396government.&amp;nbsp; They were fiercely protective of their own
397'inalienable' rights as landowners and peers and notoriously difficult
398when these rights were impugned (this conflict between the nobility and
399monarchy was centuries-old - simply remember the 13th century &lt;i&gt;Magna
400Carta&lt;/i&gt;, when the nobles forced King John I to recognize their
401'natural' rights.) &lt;/p&gt;
402&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; As discussed earlier, the nobility resented
403Cromwell's influence with the king and his pro-monarchy, anti-nobility
404policy.&amp;nbsp; And while many of the nobles benefited from the sale of
405clerical lands, many others had relatives dedicated to religious
406service.&amp;nbsp; Also, reverence for the church and its servants was as
407deeply-held as reverence for the monarchy.&amp;nbsp; Henry's attacks upon
408the church struck many as unnatural and wrong; since they could not
409turn on the king, they turned on Cromwell and blamed him for every
410unpopular policy.&amp;nbsp; Henry VIII, who relished his popularity,
411allowed his faithful servant to be impugned.&amp;nbsp; Thus, Henry could
412meet with his nobles, listen to their complaints, and even agree with
413them since many were his dearest friends.&amp;nbsp; The king remained
414popular while his chief minister became increasingly despised and
415isolated.&amp;nbsp; It is worth noting that one of Cromwell's friends,
416Richard Moryson, argued that merit and not birth should be the only
417qualification for entry into the privy council.&amp;nbsp; Moryson
418eventually became a member himself. &lt;/p&gt;
419&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; It is also important to note that years of
420listening to anti-Cromwell gossip eventually affected Henry.&amp;nbsp; Even
421the king did not exist in a vacuum and, as his temper became
422increasingly erratic, he was easily swayed by inflamed opinion.&amp;nbsp;
423Thus, Cromwell suffered from a lapse in Henry's temper and one which
424the king almost immediately regretted.&amp;nbsp; Chief among Cromwell's
425enemies were the highest nobles in the land, once Wolsey's great
426enemies and led by the dukes of Suffolk and Norfolk.&amp;nbsp; These men
427had pushed Wolsey from favor after years of effort and were determined
428to do the same to his protégé.&amp;nbsp; The perfect
429opportunity arrived when Queen Jane died two weeks after childbirth, in
430October 1537.&amp;nbsp; Henry VIII was genuinely bereaved at her death but
431almost immediately the search began for a new queen.&amp;nbsp; After all,
432Jane had delivered a son but one male heir was not enough in the
433sixteenth century.&amp;nbsp; Henry's council began to search for a new
434consort with the king's enthusiastic support. &lt;/p&gt;
435&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; For Cromwell, this was a chance to further extend
436his influence while thwarting the English nobility.&amp;nbsp; Henry's
437second and third wives had been English noblewomen whose families
438directly profited from their rise to power.&amp;nbsp; The influence of
439these families naturally troubled Cromwell.&amp;nbsp; As their influence
440rose, his own suffered - so he was opposed to the idea of another
441English wife.&amp;nbsp; Also, as an intelligent statesman, he recognized
442the diplomatic power of royal marriages.&amp;nbsp; Henry's troublesome
443foreign policy could be soothed if he chose a foreign wife - a princess
444or duchess of one of the great European families.&amp;nbsp; Kings were
445meant to marry other royalty and Cromwell immediately searched for
446possible candidates. &lt;/p&gt;
447&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; While searching, he was careful to avoid Catholic
448candidates.&amp;nbsp; Cromwell's rise to power was directly connected to
449the fall of Catholicism in England and he wanted to keep England on the
450path of Protestantism.&amp;nbsp; Therefore, he sought a Protestant ally for
451Henry VIII.&amp;nbsp; Naturally, his gaze turned to the Protestant states
452of Germany, birthplace of the Lutheran revolution.&amp;nbsp; Meanwhile,
453Henry VIII was concerned with more aesthetic matters, sending artists
454(most famously, Hans
455Holbein the Younger) to France and Milan to paint potential
456brides.&amp;nbsp; Among those painted was Christina, duchess of Milan and
457niece of the Holy Roman Emperor; she famously remarked that she would
458be happy to marry Henry - if she had two heads!&amp;nbsp; Henry also
459considered Marie de Guise, a widowed cousin of the French king.&amp;nbsp;
460Marie, however, chose to marry Henry's nephew, James V of Scotland,
461thus creating a French-Scottish alliance along Henry's troublesome
462northern border.&amp;nbsp; Their only surviving child is famous in history
463as the tragic Mary queen of Scots. &lt;/p&gt;
464&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Cromwell was well aware that if France and the
465Holy Roman Empire ended hostilities, as seemed likely, England would be
466left out in the diplomatic cold.&amp;nbsp; He was quite happy when the
467French and Imperial marriage negotiations fell apart.&amp;nbsp; But as the
468search wound on, Henry became increasingly desperate for a wife.&amp;nbsp;
469No doubt he was lonely; also, his court needed a queen to be
470complete.&amp;nbsp; A king was not meant to be a bachelor, as every
471European monarch knew.&amp;nbsp; Finally, Cromwell found a Protestant ally
472with two available sisters - the duke of Cleves, whose lands were
473strategically located and wealthy.&amp;nbsp; He had two sisters not yet wed
474called Anne and Amelia.&amp;nbsp; As the eldest, Anne was chosen as the
475possible bride and Holbein immediately went to Cleves to paint her
476portrait.&amp;nbsp; &lt;a
477 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fwww.geocities.com%2fathens%2fforum%2f9194%2fcleves1.jpg&quot;&gt;This
478painting&lt;/a&gt; would become of paramount importance in the coming
479year.&amp;nbsp; Henry was determined to have a beautiful wife and
480specifically asked his various ambassadors probing questions - does
481Marie de Guise have wide hips for childbearing? is Christina of Milan
482pock-marked? does Anne of Cleves play the lute?&amp;nbsp; Holbein's famous
483portrait of Anne cannot be adequately judged in our time; after all,
484standards of beauty have changed.&amp;nbsp; However, it is amusing to note
485that she - so maligned in her own time as the ugliest of Henry's wives
486- is the most attractive by twentieth-century standards. &lt;/p&gt;
487&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Holbein's portrait showed a perfectly attractive
488young woman - and, on that basis, Cromwell was able to secure the
489marriage alliance with a Protestant ally.&amp;nbsp; Anne set sail for
490England, little realizing what lay ahead.&amp;nbsp; The king, meanwhile,
491was ecstatic that after almost three years as a widower he would be a
492husband again, able to play one of his favorite roles.&amp;nbsp; The entire
493country was thrilled at the news, in fact, and after Anne arrived,
494Cromwell finally secured his greatest ambition - an earldom.&amp;nbsp; He
495was titled earl of Essex by Henry VIII on 18 April 1540 after the
496marriage treaty was finalized. &lt;/p&gt;
497&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; During this time, he also attempted to placate
498the nobility by redistributing lands to the great magnates, providing
499them with near-autonomous controls of great sections of land.&amp;nbsp; For
500example, the duke of Suffolk traded East Anglian lands for lands in
501Lincolnshire - the duke of Norfolk already held lands in Anglia while
502Lincolnshire needed a strong leader.&amp;nbsp; Earlier, Cromwell had
503attempted to befriend Henry's oldest child, the stubbornly Catholic
504Princess Mary.&amp;nbsp; She rebuffed his attention, largely on religious
505grounds. &lt;/p&gt;
506&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Two years of marriage-brokering were often
507interrupted by rumors of rebellion.&amp;nbsp; The Pilgrimage of Grace had
508made Henry more sensitive to popular sentiment.&amp;nbsp; While Cromwell
509searched for a wife, rumors spread that the king planned new
510taxes.&amp;nbsp; Also, the last remnants of the legitimate Plantagenet line
511- the Nevilles, Poles, and Courtenays - were suspected of encouraging
512rebellionn and Henry used this convenient excuse to order more
513executions.&amp;nbsp; But popular unrest needed to be assuaged in some
514manner so Cromwell engineered the passing of the Six Articles at
515Parliament in April 1539.&amp;nbsp; These articles attempted to stamp a
516more conservative gloss on the Henrician reformation, thus placating
517conservative European nobles - and the Catholic nations in Europe, now
518forced to concede Henry was not so great a heretic after all.&amp;nbsp; It
519was a supreme example of Cromwell's talent for diffusing domestic
520tension.&amp;nbsp; In effect, it was all talk and no action; it didn't
521alter the course of the reformation one bit. &lt;/p&gt;
522&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Finally, on 6 October 1539, the marriage treaty
523with Cleves was finalized just two months after Holbein delivered his
524portrait.&amp;nbsp; Princess Anne, once betrothed to the duke of Lorraine,
525was now destined to be queen of England.&amp;nbsp; It was the fulfillment
526of Cromwell's domestic and foreign policies.&amp;nbsp; On 11 December, Anne
527was at Calais waiting for a favorable wind to carry her to Dover.&amp;nbsp;
528She was there for almost two weeks while Henry waited at
529Greenwich.&amp;nbsp; Finally, on 27 December she landed at Deal and then
530traveled to Dover and Canterbury before arriving at Rochester on 1
531January 1540.&amp;nbsp; Henry, desperate to see his bride in person, rushed
532in disguise to meet her 'to thus nourish love', he told Cromwell.&amp;nbsp;
533Their comical first meeting is described at the &lt;a
534 href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fprimary.html&quot;&gt;Primary Sources&lt;/a&gt;
535section. &lt;/p&gt;
536&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; The meeting was an unmitigated disaster and the
537beginning of Cromwell's end.&amp;nbsp; The New Year gifts Henry had brought
538for Anne were delivered the next day by a courier with a brief note of
539welcome.&amp;nbsp; 'I am ashamed that men have so praised her as they have
540done, and I like her not', the king said ominously; he told Cromwell
541that Anne was 'nothing so well as she was spoken of' and, if he had
542known the truth of her appearance, she would never have come to
543England.&amp;nbsp; The next day, his betrothed arrived in Greenwich and the
544marriage, scheduled for that day, was delayed for two days while Henry
545sought escape.&amp;nbsp; But there was none to be had - the Holy Roman
546Emperor was in Paris meeting with the French king and Henry, locked out
547by those two great powers, could not risk offending the German princes
548who approved the union with Anne.&amp;nbsp; They were, after all, his only
549allies at the moment.&amp;nbsp; So Anne was not sent back and Henry moaned
550that he must 'put my neck in the yoke'.&amp;nbsp; He wrote to Cromwell, 'My
551lord, if it were not to satisfy the world and my realm, I would not do
552that I must do this day for none earthly thing'. &lt;/p&gt;
553&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Poor Anne of Cleves - barely able to speak
554English, in a foreign land, and despised by her intended husband!&amp;nbsp;
555The confused woman was led to a private marriage ceremony at Greenwich
556and, then, to her equally humiliating marriage-bed.&amp;nbsp; The union was
557not consummated, a subject upon which Henry never wavered.&amp;nbsp; He
558spoke openly of how disgusted he was by Anne's appearance; 'struck to
559the heart' by distaste, he 'left her as good a maid as he found
560her'.&amp;nbsp; They lay together for the entire length of their marriage
561but were never physically intimate.&amp;nbsp; After a few months had
562passed, the French-Imperial alliance showed signs of cooling and
563Henry's natural boldness had returned.&amp;nbsp; He wanted out of this
564fourth marriage and told Cromwell to arrange it. &lt;/p&gt;
565&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; What were Cromwell's options?&amp;nbsp; There were
566two ways to nullify the marriage (in essence, arrange a divorce) -
567Henry had not consented to the marriage (this was proved by his failure
568to consummate it) and Anne had not consented to the marriage (this was
569proved by Anne's precontract to the duke of Lorraine.)&amp;nbsp; Henry had
570long been concerned with the latter problem - but had been assured that
571the contract was completely repudiated.&amp;nbsp; Still, the day before his
572marriage to Anne, he called the Clevian ambassadors to him and raised
573the issue.&amp;nbsp; They were astonished, and rightly so, and offered to
574remain as prisoners in England until the formal repudiation papers were
575delivered from Cleves.&amp;nbsp; Meanwhile, Thomas Cranmer told the king
576that Anne could simply swear that the betrothal had been repudiated -
577no official documents were necessary.&amp;nbsp; His friend Cromwell
578'travailed on him [Henry] to pass the matter over'; he hoped that once
579Henry was married to Anne, the king would resign himself to the
580marriage. &lt;/p&gt;
581&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; But instead Henry turned to the precontract when
582his distaste could not be overcome.&amp;nbsp; On 9 July, Parliament
583declared the marriage null and void and Anne, surprising Henry and the
584court, was content to be called 'sister' and receive a handsome income
585and household in England.&amp;nbsp; She had no desire to return to Cleves,
586where she would remain under her brother's
587thumb and perhaps married again.&amp;nbsp; It is also possible she found
588Henry
589as unattractive as he found her.&amp;nbsp; Henry was so pleased with this
590unexpected
591docility that he gave her status second only to his daughters,
592Princesses
593Mary and Elizabeth, both of whom came to befriend Anne.&amp;nbsp; Anne's
594letter
595to Henry, in which she accepts the dissolution of their marriage, can
596be
597read at '&lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fletters.html&quot;&gt;Letters
598of the Six Wives of Henry VIII&lt;/a&gt;'. &lt;/p&gt;
599&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; However, the time had come to search for a
600convenient scapegoat - the person responsible for the disastrous
601union.&amp;nbsp; Henry railed against his ambassadors who had so misled him
602with descriptions of her beauty - though, in truth, the ambassador's
603descriptions had been honest.&amp;nbsp; It was soon alleged that Cromwell
604had kept them from the king, for fear of discouraging the union.&amp;nbsp;
605Now, Cromwell was arrested on 10 June 1540, at 3pm on a Saturday, while
606at a Privy Council meeting.&amp;nbsp; This was a full month before the
607marriage was nullified.&amp;nbsp; Henry and Cromwell's enemies were in the
608midst of finding scapegoats for the marriage, while not yet assured of
609its outcome.&amp;nbsp; Henry, in a fit of temper and pique, complained
610bitterly that his minister had betrayed him while trying to further his
611own influence; the nobility were only too happy to encourage such
612thoughts.&amp;nbsp; They urged Henry to arrest Cromwell and teach the
613upstart his final lesson - namely, that it does not pay to mislead a
614king. &lt;/p&gt;
615&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; So the captain of the guard arrived at the
616council chamber and arrested Cromwell, while a table of his enemies
617looked on.&amp;nbsp; The moment the guard entered the room, Cromwell
618recognized the danger - and threw his hat upon the table in rage.&amp;nbsp;
619Norfolk and Southampton stripped his decorations from his robe of state
620and Cromwell was then escorted to a barge - and, then, the Tower of
621London.&amp;nbsp; The events which follow are far from clear - Cromwell's
622fall and execution are among the most mysterious events of Henry VIII's
623reign and cannot be easily understood.&amp;nbsp; I have yet to read a
624history which offers an adequate explanation.&amp;nbsp; In truth, Henry
625became increasingly mercurial and tempermental in his later years, and
626Cromwell was just one of many victims of the king's ever-changing
627whims. &lt;/p&gt;
628&lt;p&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;+1&quot;&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/font&gt; First, if Cromwell fell from favor
629because of the Cleves marriage, as most believe, why did Henry title
630him earl of Essex in April 1540 - months after the marriage had been
631finalized and while negotiations for divorce were underway?&amp;nbsp;
632Second, if Cromwell was executed because his government policies
633angered the king, as has been alleged, why did Henry give his voluntary
634approval to all of Cromwell's legislation?&amp;nbsp; Third, is his enemies
635were in the ascendancy, why had Henry only recently shown the duke of
636Norfolk (Cromwell's great enemy) open favor?&amp;nbsp; After all, Norfolk
637had just been sent abroad on diplomatic work - away from the king. &lt;/p&gt;
638&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; What are we left with?&amp;nbsp; The charges
639eventually listed in Cromwell's attainder &lt;i&gt;did not&lt;/i&gt; list the
640above - Cromwell was not accused of misleading Henry on matters of
641policy, he was not held responsible for the disastrous marriage, and he
642was not charged with leading England into an unwanted Lutheran
643alliance.&amp;nbsp; Instead, he was charged with selling export licenses
644illegally, granting passports and commissions without royal knowledge,
645freeing people suspected of treason and - of course - that he,
646base-born and ignoble, had usuurped and deliberately misused royal
647power.&amp;nbsp; Most significantly, however, he was charged with heresy -
648this charge was the bulk of his attaindder and apparently swayed Henry
649decisively.&amp;nbsp; Norfolk, allied with the Catholic bishops Cromwell
650had forced from power, engineered this charge.&amp;nbsp; Cromwell, they
651charged, had encouraged and spread heretical literature, allowed
652heretics to preach, released them from prison, and allied himself
653against their enemies.&amp;nbsp; Significantly, it was reported that in
654March 1539 Cromwell said that, even if Henry turned from Protestantism,
655'yet I would not turn, and if the king did turn, and all his people, I
656would fight in this field in mine own person, with my sword in my hand &lt;i&gt;against
657him&lt;/i&gt; and all other'.&amp;nbsp; That was treason. &lt;/p&gt;
658&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Shortly after his arrest, incriminating letters
659to Lutherans were found in Cromwell's home, placed there by agents of
660the duke of Norfolk; they were so inflammatory that the king was
661outraged.&amp;nbsp; Cromwell's name, Henry swore, would be abolished
662forever.&amp;nbsp; Cromwell wrote two desperate letters from the Tower; the
663one that survives is in tatters.&amp;nbsp; He assured his monarch that he
664was a good, loyal servant and a faithful Christian.&amp;nbsp; But Henry,
665surrounded by Cromwell's enemies and - more significantly - newly
666infatuated with Norfolk's niece, Catherine Howard, would hear
667nothing.&amp;nbsp; Furthermore, Norfolk was shrewd enough to create a
668Lutheran conspiracy; three popular reformers, Robert Barnes, Thomas
669Garret, and William Jerome, were executed just days after
670Cromwell.&amp;nbsp; None of the men were allowed an open trial.&amp;nbsp; That
671would allow the public opportunity for them to dispute the false
672charges.&amp;nbsp; Instead, they were condemned by Act of Attainder, a
673parliamentary tool which dispensed with justice in favor of speed. &lt;/p&gt;
674&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; The executed men were also neighbors of Cromwell,
675which was their only link to the earl.&amp;nbsp; And they were as innocent
676as
677Cromwell of the charges against them - as evidenced by the confusion of
678contemporary chroniclers.&amp;nbsp; Edward Hall, one of the great
679chroniclers of Tudor England, could find no real evidence against them
680although he 'searched to know the truth'. &lt;/p&gt;
681&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; So Cromwell was executed privately on Tower Green
682on 28 July 1540, still protesting his innocence.&amp;nbsp; He died with
683dignity - but the whole sordid affair of his death would not
684rest.&amp;nbsp; For the volatile Henry VIII was soon despairing of his
685loss, just a few months after he allowed the execution.&amp;nbsp; He raged
686at his council, accusing them of lying and deliberately destroying his
687'most faithful servant'.&amp;nbsp; Cromwell's destruction had been
688engineered on 'light pretexts' and against the king's wishes.&amp;nbsp; In
689truth, Henry was a victim as well - of a determined group of nobles and
690clerics, led by Norfolk, who hated Cromwell and carried the king along
691on their path of destruction.&amp;nbsp; Events were rapid and deliberately
692confused.&amp;nbsp; By the time Henry realized what had happened, it was
693too late.&amp;nbsp; He could only bemoan his loss, while never
694understanding exactly why it happened. &lt;/p&gt;
695&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; This was no comfort to Thomas Cromwell, however;
696after a lifetime of dedicated service, he met his end by execution and
697all of Henry's
698regrets could not bring him back to life. &lt;/p&gt;
699&lt;center&gt;
700&lt;hr width=&quot;100%&quot;&gt; &lt;br&gt;
701&lt;font size=&quot;-1&quot;&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fcitizens.html&quot;&gt;to
702Tudor Citizens&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/font&gt; &lt;br&gt;
703&lt;font size=&quot;-1&quot;&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor.html&quot;&gt;to Tudor
704England&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/font&gt;
705&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;-1&quot;&gt;Want to learn more about Cromwell?&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt; &lt;br&gt;
706&lt;font size=&quot;-1&quot;&gt;Try these books (used as sources for my article) -&lt;/font&gt;
707&lt;br&gt;
708&lt;font size=&quot;-1&quot;&gt;The Cardinal and the Secretary: Thomas Wolsey and
709Thomas Cromwell&lt;/font&gt; &lt;br&gt;
710&lt;font size=&quot;-1&quot;&gt;by Neville Williams.&lt;/font&gt; &lt;br&gt;
711&lt;font size=&quot;-1&quot;&gt;Policy and Police: the enforcement of the Reformation
712in the Age of Thomas Cromwell&lt;/font&gt; &lt;br&gt;
713&lt;font size=&quot;-1&quot;&gt;by G. R. Elton.&lt;/font&gt; &lt;br&gt;
714&lt;font size=&quot;-1&quot;&gt;Reform and Renewal: Thomas Cromwell and the Common Weal&lt;/font&gt;
715&lt;br&gt;
716&lt;font size=&quot;-1&quot;&gt;by G. R. Elton.&lt;/font&gt; &lt;br&gt;
717&lt;font size=&quot;-1&quot;&gt;Thomas Cromwell and the English Reformation&lt;/font&gt; &lt;br&gt;
718&lt;font size=&quot;-1&quot;&gt;by A. G. Dickens.&lt;/font&gt; &lt;br&gt;
719&lt;font size=&quot;-1&quot;&gt;Thomas Cromwell: Tudor Minister&lt;/font&gt; &lt;br&gt;
720&lt;font size=&quot;-1&quot;&gt;by B. W. Beckingsale.&lt;br&gt;
721&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
722&lt;p&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;-1&quot;&gt;&lt;br&gt;
723&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
724&lt;/center&gt;
725&lt;br&gt;
726&lt;script type=&quot;text/javascript&quot;&gt;&lt;!--
727google_ad_client = &quot;pub-0070851788245906&quot;;
728/* 468x60, created 10/21/08 */
729google_ad_slot = &quot;6531007903&quot;;
730google_ad_width = 468;
731google_ad_height = 60;
732//--&gt;
733&lt;/script&gt;
734&lt;script type=&quot;text/javascript&quot;
735 src=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fpagead2.googlesyndication.com%2fpagead%2fshow%5fads.js&quot;&gt;
736&lt;/script&gt;
737
738
739&lt;!-- text below generated by server. PLEASE REMOVE --&gt;&lt;!-- Counter/Statistics data collection code --&gt;&lt;script language=&quot;JavaScript&quot; src=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;href=http:%2f%2fl.yimg.com%2fd%2flib%2fsmb%2fjs%2fhosting%2fcp%2fjs%5fsource%2fwhv2%5f001.js&quot;&gt;&lt;/script&gt;&lt;script language=&quot;javascript&quot;&gt;geovisit();&lt;/script&gt;&lt;noscript&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;_httpextlink_&amp;amp;rl=0&amp;amp;el=direct&amp;amp;href=http://visit.webhosting.yahoo.com/visit.gif?us1374472070&quot; alt=&quot;setstats&quot; border=&quot;0&quot; width=&quot;1&quot; height=&quot;1&quot;&gt;&lt;/noscript&gt;</Content>
740</Section>
741</Archive>
Note: See TracBrowser for help on using the repository browser.