Read The Queen's Agent: Francis Walsingham at the Court of Elizabeth I Online
Authors: John Cooper
Tags: #Non-Fiction, #16th Century, #Geopolitics, #European History, #v.5, #21st Century, #Britain, #British History, #Political Science, #Amazon.com, #Retail, #Biography, #History
How much ought we to read into the fact that Walsingham chose exile during Mary’s reign, while William Cecil made his peace with the new regime? Cecil’s behaviour was not quite the
dignified retreat that might be expected of a man who had been a royal secretary and privy councillor during the most radical phase of Edward VI’s Reformation. He positioned himself for two possible futures, serving Queen Mary on two diplomatic missions but also acting as steward of Princess Elizabeth’s lands. His new year’s gift of gold to the queen in 1555 hints that he was open to a place in government, and he developed an unlikely friendship with Cardinal Pole, the spearhead of the Counter-Reformation in England. While Walsingham was sharing the Clarakloster with John Foxe, Cecil dined with Pole and gratefully accepted the stewardship of his manor of Wimbledon.
Cecil was a dozen years older than Walsingham, with a lot more to lose by going into exile. He was already an experienced administrator, with links to Elizabeth which could bear fruit if Philip and Mary failed to produce an heir. He was married, with a young family and a growing portfolio of property to defend. Walsingham’s public life had barely begun; compared to Cecil, he had little to detain him in England. The different situations of the two men make their decisions easier to understand. But character must also have come into it. Walsingham wasn’t forced into exile, unlike the married Protestant ministers or the London printers who lost their livelihoods under the new administration. He could have trodden the broad path of conformity and compromise, making the most of his father’s reputation in the law and the city or cashing in his Cambridge connections to find a position in royal service. He could have copied his cousin Thomas Walsingham, who attended Cardinal Pole as he travelled through Kent on his triumphal return to England in November 1554. Instead he chose the narrow path, banishing himself in Basel among the theology students whose company he had shared at university. Cecil and Walsingham had many aspects of their outlook in common, but their experience of Mary’s reign creates a sharp divide between them: one with a
politician’s pragmatism, the other unwilling to be a reed bending before the wind.
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In the spring of 1555, grim news began to reach the exiles about their co-religionists back home. The re-Catholicisation of England had begun positively enough, recovering and repairing devotional art, replacing altars and images, and celebrating mass with all the veneration that could be mustered. Money which might have restored the monasteries went instead to the universities and new seminaries to train up a better class of clergy. Dissidents were to be won over by education and preaching, and there was talk of a Catholic Bible in the English language. Many people must have welcomed the certainty of ceremony. With the return of the mass, however, came the means to police it. In December 1554 Parliament voted to resurrect the medieval heresy laws which Edward VI had repealed. Since church courts could not carry out a sentence of death, the condemned were handed back to the crown for execution, tainting the queen with the persecution which soon followed. The penalty for heresy was to be burned alive: a foretaste of the fires of hell but also a total destruction of the body, leaving nothing to answer Christ’s call on the day of resurrection.
The incineration of heresy began with the Bible translator John Rogers at Smithfield in early February 1555. Executions in Gloucester and Suffolk soon signalled that Protestants in the provinces had as much to fear as those in the capital. Lichfield, Chester, Exeter and Guernsey would all witness public burnings over the next three and a half years. Two hundred and eighty-four people were executed in all, the last five of them at Canterbury only days before Mary’s death. Another thirty died in prison of trauma or neglect.
The burnings swiftly accrued their own world of ritual. Protestants tried to die with fortitude, singing psalms and reassuring each other of the better world to come: they were convinced there was no purgatory to fear. The condemned kissed the stake or prostrated themselves in prayer before it, echoing the traditional Good Friday ceremony of creeping to the cross. Their supporters made flimsy white shrouds for them to wear, a reference to the army of martyrs in the Book of Revelation but also grimly practical: thick clothes prolonged the agony in the flames. The Kentish martyr Christopher Wade dipped himself in pitch and cried out to the crowd to beware the Whore of Babylon before he burned with his hands held to heaven. Watching him die was the nine-year-old Richard Fletcher, who would preach at the execution of Mary, Queen of Scots at Fotheringhay in 1587. While relic-hunters scrabbled in the ashes for fragments of burnt bone, the Church unloosed a fusillade of sermons and print. Miles Hogarde’s
The Displaying of the Protestants
mocked the willingness of heretics to die in a ‘fool’s paradise’. Catholic spectators at Wade’s execution pelted him with wooden faggots when he tried to shout down the chaplain preaching next to his pyre.
Accompanying the executions was an extraordinary campaign of surveillance and coercion. Eamon Duffy has drawn attention to the ‘microscopic’ scrutiny to which ordinary people were subjected during Mary’s reign. Adoration of the body of Christ during mass was non-negotiable. Congregations were monitored for anyone looking away during the elevation of the Host or choosing to sit behind a pillar. A magistrate from Kent known as ‘Justice Nine-Holes’ bored through the restored wooden rood-loft so he could spy on the people of his parish. Weekly communion and Lenten confessions could not be evaded. Women who chose not to receive the sacrament before childbirth were reported as suspect. Men known to have good voices in
Edward VI’s reign were forced to join the church choir. Anyone who refused the traditional rites of the Church on their deathbed was denied Christian burial. In Queen Mary’s England, the beauty of holiness was restored by force.
The holocaust reached its height in London. Sixty-five people were burned in or close to the capital, and many more in the wider diocese of London. Eighteen men and women went to their deaths in just six weeks in the spring of 1556. One of them was blind, another disabled. At a mass burning at Stratford-le-Bow only the men were tied to stakes, leaving the women loose among the flames. The Bishop of London was Edmund Bonner, more a lawyer than a preacher and prone to outbursts of violent anger. Four years’ imprisonment in the Marshalsea prison in Edward’s reign had given him a searing sense of grievance, and he presided over the excommunication of heretics in his diocese with meticulous attention to detail. Enraged by the stoicism of a Protestant weaver from Shoreditch, Bonner seized his hand and held it over a candle until the flesh peeled. To Foxe he was Bloody Bonner, ‘persecutor of the light and a child of darkness’.
Historians have tried to deal with these events by putting them in context. They point out that both Protestants and Catholics accepted that burning was a suitable death for a heretic. They note the relative insignificance of the English statistics on a European scale of persecution. But if the idea of burning for heresy was less shocking than we might think, the identity of the victims sent shudders of horror through a society which truly valued the ties of community and neighbourliness. Senior clergy like Bishop John Hooper and Archbishop Cranmer might have been regarded as legitimate targets, although even this cannot be assumed. The authorities were clearly nervous about public support for Hooper, and hooded him during his final journey from London to Gloucester. But high-profile heretics were followed to the stake by a procession of lesser martyrs: popular
preachers, tanners and fullers too poor to escape into exile, the elderly, those too young to have experienced pre-Reformation Catholicism. Fifty-six of them were women. The campaign to eradicate false doctrine had strayed far beyond its initial mandate from Queen Mary to ‘do justice to such as by learning would deceive the simple’.
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Spurred on by the news from England, a handful of the English émigrés began to question the doctrine that monarchs were the Lord’s anointed. These radical thinkers were a minority voice even within the community of exiles, and they had little enough impact at the time. The
Shorte Treatise of Politike Power
by the former Bishop of Winchester John Ponet summoned an array of biblical and historical examples to argue that it was lawful to depose a tyrant, but its publication in 1556 came too late to influence the actions of Thomas Wyatt or Peter Carew. John Knox’s
First Blast of the Trumpet against the Monstrous Regiment of Women
argued passionately that the idea of a woman ruling over a nation was ‘repugnant to nature’ and ‘the subversion of good order’. But the book appeared in 1558, the year of Mary’s death. The significance of these texts was only truly felt in Elizabeth’s reign, when this subversive strand of English political thought was supplemented by the writings of Dutch and French Protestants; men close to Francis Walsingham. His exile in Basel and Padua provided Walsingham with more than a taste of the Reformation and Renaissance, more even than an apprenticeship in spycraft and conspiracy. It altered his perception of monarchy itself, and ensured that his relationship with Queen Elizabeth would never be as simple as that of mistress and servant.
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NOTES
1
Walsingham family, London and Kent: E. A. Webb, G. W. Miller and J. Beckwith,
The History of Chislehurst: Its Church, Manors, and Parish
(London, 1899), 30–6, 111–32; Karl Stählin,
Die Walsinghams bis zur Mitte des 16 Jahrhunderts
(Heidelberg, 1905); William B. Robison, ‘Sir Edmund Walsingham’ and Reavley Gair, ‘Sir Thomas Walsingham’ in
Oxford DNB
; Conyers Read,
Mr Secretary Walsingham and the Policy of Queen Elizabeth
(Oxford, 1925), I, 1–13; Joseph Foster,
Register of Admissions to Gray’s Inn
(London, 1889), 2. Baptismal rite: Eamon Duffy,
The Stripping of the Altars: Traditional Religion in England c.1400–c.1580
(New Haven and London, 1992), 280–1. Henry VIII jewel: PRO, PROB 11/42B, fol. 137v. Aldermanbury: PRO, PROB 11/25, fol. 70v; John Stow,
A Survey of London
, ed. C. L. Kingsford (Oxford, 1908), under ‘Cripplegate warde’.
2
Key of all England: John Chandler,
John Leland’s Itinerary
(Stroud, 1993), 245. Society and church in Kent: Peter Clark,
English Provincial Society from the Reformation to the Revolution
(Hassocks, 1977), 3–23; Michael Zell, ‘The Coming of Religious Reform’, in Michael Zell (ed.),
Early Modern Kent 1540–1640
(Woodbridge, 2000), 177–206; Diane Watt, ‘Elizabeth Barton’ in
Oxford DNB
.
3
Act of Appeals:
Statutes of the Realm
(London, 1810–28), III, 427. Rebellion of youth: Susan Brigden, ‘Youth and the English Reformation’,
PP
95 (1982), 37–67. Rood of Boxley: Zell, ‘Religious Reform’, 199.
4
William Walsingham’s will: PRO, PROB 11/25, fol. 70v. Sir John Carey: Read,
Walsingham
, I, 13–14. Hunsdon: Simon Thurley,
The Royal Palaces of Tudor England
(New Haven and London, 1993), 49, 80–1.
5
Cambridge and King’s: King’s College, Cambridge Archive Centre, KCAR 4/1/6 commons book 1549–50, KCAR 4/1/1 mundum book 1547–53; Read,
Walsingham
, I, 14–16; D. R. Leader,
A History of the University of Cambridge
, volume I: to 1546 (Cambridge, 1988), 69–71, 228 and chapter 13; Victor Morgan,
A History of the University of Cambridge
, volume II: 1546–1750 (Cambridge, 2004), 16–17, 119–21.
6
Chapel glass: H. G. Wayment,
The Windows of King’s College Chapel Cambridge
(London, 1972), 1–6, 55–6.
7
Provosts of King’s: Malcolm Kitch, ‘George Day’ and Alan Bryson, ‘Sir John Cheke’ in
Oxford DNB
. Bucer: Winthrop S. Hudson,
The Cambridge Connection and the Elizabethan Settlement of 1559
(Durham, North Carolina, 1980), 58–60. Gardiner: C. H. Cooper and T. Cooper,
Athenae Cantabrigienses
(Cambridge, 1858), I, 515. Cheke and Cecil: Stephen Alford,
Burghley: William Cecil at the Court of Elizabeth I
(New Haven and London, 2008), 17–21.