Episode 293: Burning England - podcast episode cover

Episode 293: Burning England

Mar 29, 202430 minSeason 1Ep. 293
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Episode description

In today's episode, the reign of Queen Mary I of England comes to an end. Mary's efforts to burn England free of heresy fails and Princess Elizabeth assumes the throne.

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Hello and welcome to Western CIV. Episode two hundred and ninety three, Burning England. Last week we witnessed Mary, the first Queen of England, earned the nickname we all know her by, Bloody Mary. I suppose it should be Burning Mary, but I guess Bloody Mary just sounds better. Mary was determined to make England Catholic again, even if that meant burning every heretical evangelical

in the Kingdom. But the fact of the matter is, as we will see in our final episode today, on Bloody Mary and England had simply gone too far to turn around the ship. By large, many, if not most Englishmen were fine going back to the age of Henry the Eighth. They accepted that much, but going back past Henry's break with Rome was now simply impossible. Based on a variety of factors, Mary does not live to be

queen for very long. In the end, she reigns a bit longer than Edward, but not by much, perhaps a few months, and her death will unequivocally end any Catholic dreams of a final restoration. Mary had no compassion for unabashed heretics. In February fifteen fifty five, two Catholic priests preached sermons against the burnings. They believed it was better for heretics to quote live and

be converted end quote. More likely than not, what was happening here was an effort by King Philip, no longer in England, to pump the breaks on an increasingly unpopular crusade. To those in the continent, Mary's actions were beginning to look like madness, but these voices were in the minority amongst her conservative faction. In fifteen fifty six, a different priest, Spanish priest,

dedicated a lengthy work to Philip justifying the death penalty for heretics. The punishment was, he wrote, after all, only reserved for those who refused to recant, a fact Mary's apologists consistently pointed Outnumber fifteen fifty five, Mary's agents were closing in on what could only be described as the most important confession of all the former Archbishop Cranmer. Cranmer had been wavering for a long time. Now no one could help but notice that the more he inch toward confession,

the better his conditions of captivity became. The message was unmistakable. On January the twenty eighth of fifteen fifty six, he signed a statement recognizing the authority of the pope quote so far as God's laws and the customs of the realm will permit end quote. An elastic confession, for sure, but one nonetheless under intense pressure. He made two more ambiguous confessions in mid February that then,

with his execution date quickly approaching March the seven, he cracked. Grandmurred, desperate to avoid the stake, ultimately signed a comprehensive surrender, affirming papal supremacy, purgatory and even transubstantiation, a doctrine he had preached against four decades. It was a stunning reversal, yet it did not signal a complete victory

for the Conservatives. Many within Mary's Council feared that the names affixed to the confession, those of two Spanish friars, would inflame already xenophobic concerns smoldering in London. These concerns were heightened by the discovery of a truly insane treason plot. This one is up there, probably with the gunpowder plot that we'll get to some year. The plot, this time was to raid the Royal Mint and then use that money to fund an army in place Princess Elizabeth on the

throne. Amidst these concerns, Cranmer's execution date was once more postponed and a new recantation deemed necessary. But in the end none of this mattered. Henry might be dead, but Elizabeth still needed a scapegoat, and Cranmer was to marry Honestly, the architect of it all, the architect of the break with Rome and were still Mary believed Cranmer to have been the man who had broken up her parents' marriage. That wasn't precisely true, but given what the young

Mary went through, her desire for vengeance I suppose is understandable. The problem was it wasn't a politically astute move. Despite realizing this was the end, Cranmer signed another recantation just before his execution on March the twentieth. Many observers might have thought, if he said the right things while facing the pire, he might yet be saved. Yet indeed, there were some well placed gentlemen in the audience who surely assumed such was the case. But then something strange

happened. Cranmer had another change of heart. Instead of confessing, he shouted out that he revoked all his previous statements. He reaffirmed his writings against Gardner and the Eucharist. At the top of his lungs, the elderly man proclaimed, quote and as for the Pope, I refuse him as Christ's enemy and anti Christ end quote. Gramner was then bustled quickly over to the execution site.

There, with one final act of defiance, he thrust his right hand, the hand which had signed the false confessions, into the heart of the fire. Granmer's death marked a major turning point. He was now clearly a martyr, and there was nothing Mary could do about it. Worse still, I mean, truth be told, it had all been her fault. Now, Mary did enjoy some successes. John Cheek, of famous English Protestant living in exilen Strasburg, was lured by Mary's agents into visiting the Low Countries.

There, Philip's agents grabbed him. Philip, in addition to being the Lord of Spain, now ruled the Low Countries. Not particularly effectively, though, as I'll talk about in the next episode, Cheek had no interest in burning alive. He confessed to everything almost immediately, much to the lament of his fellow exiles. But heresy as a whole showed no signs of diminishing. Fifteen fifty six proved to be a hotter year in England than had been fifteen fifty

five. Eighty five alleged heretics were burned, a further eleven died in prison. Of those fifty five, by the way, twenty two were women. Geographically, the executions were not even Almost all the executions took place around London, Essex, and Kent. In twenty six English counties, there were no burnings at all. To an extent, the burnings happened where the authorities wanted them. To Mary's Court all the way to the end saw London in that

particular region of England as the epicenter of the heresy problem. Executions normally passed with no major protest, at least no recorded protest. Mary was eventually forced to follow the lead of the Spanish Inquisition. Burning people in their home counties just simply wasn't popular, so executions were done, oftentimes in batches and in regional centers. Sympathy for the victims was countered by assurances that they deserved to

die, they were not martyrs but malignants. With the support of poll now installed in Cranmer's place as Archbishop of Canterbury. Writers contrasted the heretics quote that lately have been justly burned end quote with true martyrs quote which have suffered for the unity of the Catholic Church end quote. Men like Sir Thomas Moore Lay Catholic writers likewise praised those martyrs who had died under Henry and mocked condemned evangelicals

and their supporters. They wrote that their deaths consigned them to deserve oblivion, and that the only memorial to them would be quote enrolled in a few three halfpenny books which steal out of Germany end quote. Abroad, Edwardian clerics used the time and space to stamp out radical elements within the Evangelical faith, and a baptism was no longer to be tolerated. By and large. These flocks

in exile followed the fifteen fifty two Book of the Common Prayer. Hence, as we go forward, what you might notice is an increasing orthodoxy amongst the Evangelicals, especially upon their triumphal return. Persecutions purified English Protestantism in its heart and its heart lands. It steeled itself to resist the onslaught of what it

saws the Antichrist. In May of fifteen fifty six, heresy commissioners in East Anglia received an alarming report from a small group of beleaguered Catholic citizens in Ipswich. Inhabitants had fled the town and quote lurked in secret places end quote. Another twenty refused to receive the sacrament, and a dozen came to church, but refused and looked away at the elevation of the host. There were also a half dozen priest wives that have access to their husband. At least that's

what they said. Things were worse still in the town of Colchester, according to a letter from the priest written in fifteen fifty six. Quote, the detestable sort of schismatics were never so bold since the King and Queen's Majesty's reign as they are now at this present. They assembled together upon the Sabbath day in the time of divine service, sometimes in one house, sometimes in another, and there keep their privy conventals and schools of heresy. The ministers of

the church are hemmed in in open streets and called knaves. The blessed sacrament of the Altar is blasphemed and rallied upon in every ale house and tavern, and fasting is not regarded. Seditious talks and news are rife, both in town and country end quote. All of this, by the way, was in spite of a slew of exemplary burnings in the town six at once actually on April twenty eight, fifteen fifty six, and a recent visit from the

Bishop. Colchester in reality was probably the most Protestant place in all of England. Yet even or especially here, religious rivalries continued to shape social divisions. Protestants drank at one pub, the King's Head, Catholics drank at another, the White Heart. One writer went so far as to comment on quote, to the old law, where the people of God were the most straightly commanded,

they should not mingle themselves with the ungodly heathen end quote. To many, salvation lay in separation, and hatred sometimes did not end in death, nor were the dead safe from punishment. In January fifteen fifty seven, the former professor of Divinity at Cambridge, Martin Bucher, was dug up, declared a heretic, and dragged to the town square, where in his coffin he

was duly chained to the stake before being consumed by the flames. He might have been the only victim of Mary's fires for whom the process was at least not physically painful. Having been already dead. Prior to his return to England, Reginald Pole, the Pope's Legate, pondered whether it was right to exhume all evangelicals buried in consecrated grounds. Luckily, several high ranking officials steered him

away from that particularly divisive and terrible idea. There were even some rumors that Mary had her father, Henry the Eighth dug Up, exhumed, burned, reduced to ashes, but so far as my research can tell, that is a patent falsehood. The exhumation and subsequent burning of Bucher was more than just

a petty, vindictive act. It was the symbolic face of a serious and successful campaign to reclaim the major universities of England for Catholicism, culminating in legateine visitations by Pole of Oxford in fifteen fifty six and Cambridge in fifteen fifty seven. This was a priority for him, who actually had become the Chancellor of Cambridge upon the death of Stephen Gardner in fifteen fifty five, and Oxford just

a year later. New statutes, new curriculum, including the restoration of the faculties of canon law, and a thorough purge of heretical books from college libraries, did much to restore official confidence in the university's essential orthodoxy. Now to

a considerable extent, these universities already purged themselves. A wave of exiles washed over to Germany and Switzerland, particularly from Cambridge, where within six months of Mary's ascension to the throne, only three former heads of House remained in place. The others were all replaced by reliable Catholics. Now, while all this was going on, what no one realized is how short on time everyone really was. The Catholic bishops didn't know it, and so the program of refurbishment

and restoration rolled on throughout fifteen fifty seven. In fifteen fifty four, only half all the parishes in Bath and Wells met the requirements for books and altars. By fifteen fifty seven, just three years later, that number had gone from fifty percent to eighty six percent. There remained some evidence of what the Catholic bishops called heresy here and there, but by and large. The English Church once more at least looked Catholic Masses for the dead were back by fifteen

fifty seven. Between fifteen fifty four and fifty eight, the number of requests for said masses increased four times in wills recorded in East Sussex, and that's probably not an anomaly. But getting back to practical matters, Mary still did not have an air and that was a major problem. Under the terms of Henry's will, which is what gave Mary her legitimacy, Princess Elizabeth was next in line. Even secretly, of course, Philip, Mary's husband, began

to wonder about a match with Elizabeth should Mary die. Elizabeth had been a willing member of Mary's core since her release from captivity at the end of Edward's reign. She remained so now in fifteen fifty seven, And of course there's always the matter of politics. None of these religious questions take place in a vacuum. The English returned to Rome got caught up in European politics, specifically the seemingly never ending conflict between the Habsburgs and the French House of Valois.

In one of its many permutations, in fifteen fifty six, the Pope again switched sides, allying himself with France over Philip of Spain. In a somewhat petty move. This Pope, Paul the fourth then revoked Reginald Pole's papal legate position in England. In his place, Paul appointed an almost completely unknown quartier, whom Mary patently refused to allow in the country that Jerry. On the top of this whole affair was a brief but busy are uprising in Yorkshire,

led by none other than an evangelical nephew of Cardinal Pohl papal legate. His unsuccessful bid to raise the population against Mary ended with his head being separated from his neck on May the twenty eighth, fifteen fifty seven. Mary, however, believed that the French King I'll read the second to have been behind the rebellion. He wasn't, and in fact himself had less than two years to live still in her name alone, Mary declared war on Scotland and France on

June the seventh. At first the war went well. The English slash Spanish won a resounding victory in Pickardy. But then disaster struck. Not a military disaster either, a vicious strain of influenza hit England during the late summer fifteen fifty seven. It proved to be the worst epidemic in England during the entire sixteenth century. Mortality rates were sixty percent higher than normal, and the pressures on the poor were unprecedented. Hull responded that November by preaching a sermon of

repentance, and he meant something specific by that. Sure, the Evangelicals had built a few hospitals in London, but the Catholic Church had built hundreds across the city of northern Italy. If the people who had stolen the wealth of the Church under Henry the Eighth Pule railed would just give it back, then maybe the Church could do something to ease the suffering of the poor. Greed, immorality, disobedience. According to Paul, these were all legacies of the

schism. He traced a logical line of decline from King Henry's first assumption of his what he called strange time idol to the heresy and iconoclasm of recent years. Once again, Sir Thomas Moore was propped up as a true martyr for the cause. The themes were obvious. Rome was a cohesive agent. It could create a charitable society. The other option was heresy, schism, and

the collapse of all order. There was no third option. This was the theme of numerous sermons by bishops and others at Saint Paul's Cross, by preachers licensed by Pole for various dioceses, and by clerical officiants all throughout England. The Marian regime was as eager to proclaim its message from the pulpit as its Edwardian predecessor had been, and to emerge triumphant from an intensifying battle of ideas.

Of course, it was ironic to the least that at the turn of fifteen fifty seven fifty eight, when Pole in England was embroiled in this bitter conflict, the Pope considered Cardinal Pole a flagoned heretic. But the new year began badly. A surprise French attack in early January succeeded in recapturing Calais, the last remnant of the once mighty English Empire. In France, people could scarcely believe it. The campaign against heresy slowed down in fifteen fifty eight,

a result of disruption caused by the influenza epidemic. Though a far from negligible. Forty three people were burned over the course of the year, bringing the total for the reign to two hundred and eighty four, with a further twenty eight accused heretics dying in prison those still heavily concentrated in the southeast. The victims of fifteen fifty eight were executed across eleven counties. The single burnings taking

place in Exeter and Richmond and Yorkshire were unusual spectacles for their residence. Many of those executed came from secret churches or prayer groups of evangelicals. That might prove, depending on how you want to look at it, that the Marian regime was getting better at breaking down such illicit meetings, or that the Evangelicals were strengthening their resolve. Either way, one conclusion was unmistakable. The authorities

were nowhere close to winning the battle against heresy. Indeed, the question amongst the Evangelicals, both within Eggland and in exile, was not whether to conform or not. It was whether to abstain from the Marian Church or affirmatively oppose it. It seemed that the tide was turning. Mary could not, after all, burn England clean of heresy. She had tried, and she had failed. In early fifteen fifty eight, John Knox published his inflammatory tract,

A First Blast of the Trumpet against the Monstrous Regiment of Women. Its purpose, as the title suggested, was to argue for the unlawfulness of female rule, which was, according to Knox, quote repugnant to nature, contumingly insult to God, the subversion of good order end quote. Knox was blaming really a trio of Popish marys, that of England, of Scotland, Mary of Geese, and pronounced that quote women may and ought to be deposed from authority

end quote. If this weren't enough of an argument, Knox published again in July of fifteen fifty eight, the outline for an envisioned second Blast. In it, he argued that monarch should be elected rather than succeed by inheritance, that Catholics and notorious sinners must be barred from bearing rule, that oaths of allegiance to such rulers were null, and that unfit rulers might legitimately beat posed. Now, these were not universal or even majority views among the exiles,

let alone the more prudent evangelicals keeping their heads down at home. But in the late fifteen fifties, it was becoming more widely accepted by Catholics as well as evangelicals, that the duty of political obedience was contingent rather than absolute, that the obligations to the laws of God or of his Church always took precedent

over merely human regulations. Christians, i suppose, had always known and believed this, but for thirty years or more the English people had been parties to an unrelenting series of arguments, both coming from the prince and from the pulpit, continued in homes, continued in taverns, about what God's laws actually were.

The difficulty of identifying god laws accurately shook to the core any residual assumption that kings, parliaments, or bishops could automatically be relied upon to implement them correctly. These ideas really started with John Calvin in Geneva and his compact theory, the idea of a contract one that is open to interpretation. And now they were coming to fruition. Henry the Aightes pitched his people had been simple

trust and obey. It was a strategy not even Henry's excessive personal or regal charisma could prevent from misfiring, and one that was even less likely to succeed when the old king was replaced first by a child and then a woman. Edward and Mary claimed to be followers rather than embodiments, of the true religion,

and they commanded their people to worship as they did. Their policies in propaganda, though totally opposed to each other, had the similar effect of an emboldening sum in their support for official religion and confirming others in their opposition to it. Yet a third group, probably the majority, were eager to obey, but had been left with an uneasy, unshakable sense that their political loyalty

and their religious convitions were different and incompatible things. This was the lesson of the sixteenth century, if you needed to sum it up in one sentence. But there were practicalities. As I mentioned before, In January fifteen fifty eight, Mary informed her husband that she believed herself to be pregnant. Philip had last been in England in July of the preceding year, so clearly she should have done decisively by that point whether or not she was. She was not

pregnant. To Mary, this realization was a cruel cut. No doubt she thought back to her own mother, whose inability to conceive a baby boy heralded her political fall. But the fact of Mary's inability to conceive is also the decisive political fact of her reign. By April, Mary had to admit she was not pregnant. Had she conceived in July, she would have been over nine months at that point. Zme, Yeah, time to admit it. But things took a turn for the worse. In late summer, Mary developed

a fever and took to her apartment. It got worse still in October, Mary's health took a turn. She was dying. Mary historians believe, but still do not know for sure, had ovarian cancer. Philip knew he had no chance of succeeding his wife as king. It had been the key term of their marriage treaty. His goal became to see a smooth transition of power,

and crucially one in which the French were cut out. To that end, Philip quietly acknowledged the Princess Elizabeth as Mary's heir apparent was after all, what was specified in Henry's will. As always, Henry the eighth continued to loom like a massive shadow over England even a decade after his death, Mary duly changed her will on October twenty eighth to reflect this new reality. Parliament confirmed Elizabeth as the heir on November the fifth, and two days later the

princess herself got the news. Mary, in her final days, demanded to know that Elizabeth was a good Catholic. Elizabeth quickly assured the messengers sent to see her that she was not that any of that really mattered. Queen Mary the First of England received the Catholic right of extreme unction on November thirteenth, fifteen fifty eight. On the morning of November seventeenth, fifteen fifty eight, she died. Reginald Pohl, whose health had also been failing for some time,

outlived his queen by only twelve hours. Perhaps it was for the best. He would not like to have seen what happened next. For Protestants living abroad, there must have been some hope, but I say some and not total. Elizabeth was twenty five years old, She was very much an unknown quantity, and now she was Queen of England. Before we continue with England next week, I want to pick up on Phillip's story actually and discuss the

royal quagmire that he had gotten into. That was the Low Countries in the interim. If you're interested in any more content or to support the show, you can check out the link for a free trial of Western Civ Podcast two point zero, or Deep into Roman History and the Punic Wars. At this point, there's hours upon hours of bonus content there that you can check out and support the show. For only a dollar or two dollars a month, you can get access to everything no

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