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12 - Chronicles of private life

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 May 2006

Arthur F. Kinney
Affiliation:
University of Massachusetts, Amherst
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Summary

The defining event of the sixteenth century was the Reformation. The break with Rome left its mark not only on the ecclesiastical, political, and economic spheres, but also on the private. Politically, the doctrine of the royal supremacy was advanced by the creation of an Anglican church headed by the English King. A principal way in which the monarchy justified its new power was through analogy to the “natural” structure of the private family: as the father was in his household, so the King was in his country, the uncontested center of authority. It was in the interest of the monarchy to produce an ideology which authorized the private household as the primary unit of social order and which reinforced the notion that the householder was absolute ruler within his household. Economically, repudiation of the Roman religion permitted the seizure of English lands and goods formerly held by churches, monasteries, and abbeys. The church had owned as much as a third of the country, and when the Crown not only appropriated these properties but also began to give them away and then sell them off, a relatively static land market exploded into activity.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1999

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