Read A Brief History of the Tudor Age Online
Authors: Jasper Ridley
J
ASPER
R
IDLEY
is one of England’s leading biographers and historians. A former barrister turned author,
he has written many successful books, most recently
Bloody Mary’s Martyrs
, and highly acclaimed biographies of
Henry VIII
,
Elizabeth I
and
Thomas
Cranmer.
Praise for
The Tudor Age
‘The author’s intimate knowledge of the period allows him to select the most telling examples from his evidence and he presents his findings with the admirable
clarity which betokens a true understanding of the subject . . . Ridley expounds with ease the complex political and economic issues of the age, at the same time providing us with many fascinating
insights into the practicalities of everyday life.’
Scotsman
‘Tells its story with both descriptive and narrative skill.’
Observer
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Peter Berresford Ellis
A Brief History of Fighting Ships
David Davies
Forthcoming
A Brief History of The Great Moghuls
Bamber Gascoigne
A Brief History of The Royal Flying Corps in World War I
Ralph Barker
Constable & Robinson Ltd
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First published in the UK as
The Tudor Age
by
Constable and Co. Ltd, 1998
This edition published by Robinson, an imprint of Constable & Robinson Ltd, 2002
Copyright © Jasper Ridley 1988, 2002
The right of Jasper Ridley to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988
All rights reserved. This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out or otherwise circulated in any
form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
A copy of the British Library Cataloguing in Publication data is available from the British Library
ISBN 978–1–84119–471–4 (pbk)
ISBN 978–0–09–472870–7 (hbk)
eISBN 978–1–47210–795–4
Printed and bound by CPI Group (UK) Ltd, Croydon, CR0 4YY
11
To my son John
Integrated illustrations
Livestock being driven to market, 1598 (
The British Library
)
A working-man’s habit, 1569 (
The British Library
)
Bishop Bonner flogging a Protestant, 1563 (
The British Library
)
Title-page of a Tudor Age bestseller
Gardeners at work in a kitchen garden (
The British Library
)
‘Certain observations for an ostreger im keeping of a Goshawke’ (
The British Library
)
The Swan Theatre, on Bankside (
The British Museum
)
I wish to thank Roy Armstrong, Agathe Lewin, Dr Michael Smith, and Mr E. C. Till for their advice and assistance on various aspects of this book; John and Jennifer Arnold and
Tony Mercer for their hospitality on my travels while I was researching; the staff of the London Library for their help at all times; the Gloucestershire County Archivist; the staff of the British
Library, the Kent County Library at Tunbridge Wells, and the Worcestershire County Library at Evesham; and my wife Vera and my son John for their painstaking work in correcting the proofs.
Jasper Ridley
Tunbridge Wells
1485 | Henry Tudor defeats and kills Richard III at Bosworth and becomes King Henry VII. Sweating sickness appears in London. |
1486–7 | Revolt of Lambert Simnel and the Earl of Lincoln suppressed by Henry VII. |
1489 | Henry VII refuses to finance Columbus’s voyage across the Atlantic. |
1490–1510 | Extensive building in brick, with new building methods. |
1492 | Henry VII’s expedition to Boulogne. Treaty of Etaples. |
1494 | Syphilis first appears in Naples. |
1495 | Execution of Sir William Stanley. |
1495–7 | Perkin Warbeck’s invasions of England. |
1496 | Statute of Labourers regulates wages and hours of work. |
1497 | John Cabot sails to Newfoundland. Building of Canterbury Cathedral tower completed. |
1498 | Sheen Palace burned; rebuilt as Richmond Palace. |
1499 | Execution of Perkin Warbeck and the Earl of Warwick. |
1501 | Marriage of Arthur, Prince of Wales, to Catherine of Aragon. |
1502 | Death of Arthur, Prince of Wales. |
1509 | Death of Henry VII. Accession of Henry VIII, who marries Catherine of Aragon. |
1510 | New Sumptuary Law regulates the dress to be worn by the different classes. |
1512 | Wolsey becomes Henry VIII’s chief minister. Expedition to Fuentarrabia; English troops mutiny because of lack of beer. College of Physicians founded. |
1513 | Henry VIII invades France; the Earl of Surrey defeats and kills James IV of Scotland at Flodden. |
1514 | Marriage of Henry VIII’s sister Mary to Louis XII of France. Wolsey begins to build Hampton Court and York Place (later Whitehall). |
1515 | Henry VIII’s sister Mary marries the Duke of Suffolk. |
1516 | Sir Thomas More’s book |
1517–18 | Virulent outbreak of the sweating sickness in England. |
1519–21 | Magellan’s expedition from Spain sails round the world. |
1520 | Henry VIII meets Francis I of France at the Field of Cloth-of-gold. |
1521 | Execution of the Duke of Buckingham. |
1525 | William Tyndale translates the New Testament into English; it is illegally smuggled into England from the Netherlands. |
1525–30 | Anne Boleyn introduces the fashion of the French hood for women. |
1527 | Henry VIII begins divorce proceedings against Catherine of Aragon. |
1528 | Renewed outbreak of sweating sickness. |
1529 | Fall of Wolsey. The Reformation Parliament meets. |
(1529?) | Morality play, |
1530 | Intensification of the suppression of the English Bible. New severe legislation against vagabonds. Death of Wolsey, while being brought as a prisoner to London. |
1530–40 | Bishop Vesey builds houses for labourers in Sutton Coldfield. |
1531 | Henry VIII separates from Catherine of Aragon, and Anne Boleyn lives with him as his mistress. |
1533 | Henry VIII marries Anne Boleyn, who becomes Queen. Repudiation of Papal supremacy over the Church of England. Birth of Henry VIII’s daughter, the future Elizabeth I. |
1535 | Execution of Bishop Fisher, Sir Thomas More, and the Carthusian monks. Henry VIII cuts his hair short and grows a beard. Nicholas Udall’s play, |
1536 | Execution of Anne Boleyn. Henry VIII marries Jane Seymour. |
1536–9 | Suppression of monasteries. |
1536–7 | Revolt of the Pilgrimage of Grace in Lincolnshire and Yorkshire. |
1536–44 | Housing legislation deals with slum property. |
1537 | Birth of Edward VI. Death of Jane Seymour. Henry VIII permits the publication of the English translation of the Bible. |
1538 | Execution of Cardinal Pole’s family. |
1538–46 | Henry VIII builds Nonesuch Palace. |
1539 | Act of the Six Articles against the Protestants. |
1540 | Henry VIII marries and divorces Anne of Cleves. Fall and execution of Thomas Cromwell, and intensified persecution of Protestants. Henry VIII marries Katherine Howard. |
1540–50 | Beards and short hair become general. Hose gives way to trunk hose in men’s dress. |
1541 | Execution of the Countess of Salisbury. Henry VIII’s journey to York. Katherine Howard arrested for adultery; execution of her lovers. |
1542 | Execution of Katherine Howard. |
1543 | Severe restrictions on reading of the English Bible. Renewed persecution of Protestants; the Windsor heretics burned. Henry VIII marries Katherine Parr. |
1544 | English troops burn Edinburgh. Henry VIII captures Boulogne. |
1545 | French threaten to invade England; |
1545–56 | Inflation; prices rise by 100 per cent in ten years. |
1545–70 | Gentlemen wear increasingly large ruffs. |
1546 | Burning of Anne Askew and other Protestants. Henry VIII suppresses the Catholic faction in his Council. |
1547 | Death of Henry VIII; accession of Edward VI, with the Duke of Somerset as Lord Protector. Somerset and Archbishop Cranmer take the first steps to make England a Protestant |
1549 | First Book of Common Prayer suppresses the Catholic Mass. Catholic revolt in Devon and Cornwall suppressed. Kett’s agrarian revolt in Norfolk suppressed. The Earl of Warwick (later Duke of Northumberland) overthrows Somerset. |
1550 | Act against unlawful assemblies. Workhouses for vagabonds introduced. |
1550–3 | Consumer protection legislation increases. |
1551 | Last great visitation of the sweating sickness. |
1552 | Execution of Somerset. The Second Book of Common Prayer introduces a more extreme form of Protestantism. The play |
1553 | Willoughby and Chancellor sail from London to find the North-east Passage. |
1553 | Death of Edward VI; Jane Grey proclaimed Queen; Mary Tudor defeats Jane Grey, and becomes Queen. Execution of Northumberland; Protestant leaders arrested. The Catholic Mass restored. |
1554 | Sir Thomas Wyatt leads a Protestant revolt in Kent. Suppression of Wyatt’s revolt; Jane Grey executed; Elizabeth sent to the Tower. Chancellor received in Moscow by Ivan the Terrible. Mary marries Philip of Spain, who becomes King of England. Cardinal Pole returns from exile and reunites England to Rome. |
1555 | Burning of Protestants begins; Rogers and Hooper burned. False report that Mary is pregnant. Ridley and Latimer burned at Oxford. |
1555–8 | 280 Protestants burned. |
1555–87 | Sir William Cecil (later Lord Burghley) rebuilds Burghley House at Stamford. |
1556 | Cranmer burned at Oxford. |
1558 | The French capture Calais. John Knox publishes four books in Geneva which justify Protestant revolutions against Catholic rulers. Death of Mary; accession of Elizabeth I, with Cecil as Secretary of State. |
1559 | Elizabeth I repudiates Papal supremacy and makes England once again a Protestant nation; Third Book of Common Prayer published. Protestant revolution in Scotland. Elizabeth I sends William Winter and a fleet to the Firth of Forth to help the Scottish revolutionaries. |
1560 | Treaty of Edinburgh ends French control of Scotland and makes Scotland a Protestant nation. Death of Amy Robsart; Lord Robert Dudley suspected of her murder. |
1560–75 | Trunk hose, in men’s clothes, give way to breeches (‘Venetians’). |
1561 | Mary, Queen of Scots, returns from France to Scotland. |
1561–4 | Anthony Jenkinson’s voyage to Russia, Khiva and Persia. |
1562 | John Hawkins and Francis Drake go on their first slave-trading voyage to Guinea. Sackville and Norton’s play |
1562–3 | Elizabeth I intervenes disastrously in the French civil war. |
1563 | A new Statute of Labourers fixes wages and hours of work. |
1563–4 | 17,000 die of plague in London. |
1563–75 | Cecil builds another house, Theolbands, near Cheshunt. |
1566 | Outbreak of Protestant revolt in the Netherlands against the rule of Philip II of Spain. |
1567 | Murder of Darnley; Mary Queen of Scots deposed and imprisoned in Scotland. Sir John Thynne begins building his house at Longleat. |
1568 | Severe repression of Protestants in the Netherlands by the Duke of Alva. Hawkins and Drake attacked by Spaniards in the West Indies. Elizabeth I seizes Alva’s treasure-ships; Alva seizes English property in the Netherlands. |
1568–9 | Thomas Randolph’s mission as ambassador to Moscow. |
1569–72 | Hostility and economic sanctions between England and Spain. |
1569 | Catholic rising in the North suppressed by Elizabeth I. |
1570 | Pope Pius V’s Bull excommunicating and deposing Elizabeth I. |
1572 | Massacre of St Bartholomew of Protestants by Catholics in Paris. New outbreak of Protestant revolt in the Netherlands. |
1574 | The Earl of Leicester authorizes his players to act before the public in the London inns. |
1575 | Sir Humphrey Stafford builds Kirby Hall in Northamptonshire. |
1576 | First compulsory contribution imposed for alms for the impotent poor. |
1576–8 | Martin Frobisher’s voyages to find the North-west Passage. |
1577 | James Burbage opens The Theatre in Finsbury Fields. |
1577–80 | Drake sails round the world. |
1579–81 | Revolt in Munster, Ireland, suppressed. |
1580 | Massacre of Spanish prisoners at Smerwick in Ireland. Men begin to wear their cloaks ‘Collywestonwise’. The French farthingale replaces the Spanish farthingale |
1584 | Elizabeth I expels the Spanish ambassador. Assassination of William the Silent by a Catholic agent in the Netherlands. |
1585 | Treaty of Nonesuch between Elizabeth I and the Dutch Protestants. Leicester leads an army of English troops to help the Protestants in the Netherlands. Very large ruffs |
1585–6 | Drake’s expedition to the West Indies; he loots and burns Cartagena. |
1585–7 | John Davis’s expeditions to find the North-west Passage. |
1585–97 | Elizabeth Hardwick, Countess of Shrewsbury, rebuilds Hardwick Hall in Derbyshire. |
1586 | The Babington plot; trial of Mary, Queen of Scots. |
1586–8 | Thomas Cavendish sails round the world. |
1587 | Execution of Mary, Queen of Scots. Drake attacks the Spanish Armada in Cadiz harbour. Marlowe’s play, |