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The origins of the dissolution of the monasteries*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

R. W. Hoyle
Affiliation:
University of Central Lancashire

Abstract

The dissolution of the monasteries is one of the most familiar incidents in Tudor history. The genesis of the dissolution is however ill-documented. Here it is traced back to the suppressions of smaller houses authorized in 1528. It is shown how a partial dissolution could be construed as a desirable and necessary reform without challenging either the basis of monasticism or the doctrine of purgatory. A previously unnoticed petition is published to cast light on the anti-clerical agitation of 1529. It is suggested that there was an attempt to secure a dissolution for financial reasons in 1534 and it was the failure of this which forced the crown to adopt a new strategy to achieve a partial dissolution. This was the collection of damaging evidence of monastic corruption during the visitations of 1535. The display of this material to the Commons in 1536 persuaded them to accept a partial dissolution in the guise of a reform of monasticism. It is suggested that there was no ‘public’ demand for a dissolution in the 1530s except in the artificial circumstances of 1536, and that the shape of the dissolution was determined by the inability of government to secure the support of parliament for a dissolution justified on financial grounds.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1995

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References

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35 Berkeley Castle, Gloucestershire, Select Roll 153. The original may be inspected through the Gloucestershire Record Office (who also have a microfilm). For the text of the manuscript see the appendix.

36 It is printed in Myers, A. R. (ed.), English historical documents, 1327–1485 (1969), pp. 668–70Google Scholar, in Hudson, A. (ed.), Selections from English Wycliffite writings (Cambridge, 1978), pp. 135–7Google Scholar, with commentary, pp. 203–7, and partly in Youings, , Dissolution, p. 135Google Scholar. The fullest discussion is Hudson, , Premature Reformation, pp. 114–15, 339–40.Google Scholar

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38 Henry VI's appearance in this context may seem peculiar, but Henry VIII, in his letter to the Yorkshire rebels, remembered his dissolution of monasteries towards the establishment of King's College, Cambridge, but stressed that he kept some lands for himself.

39 Statute 1 Henry VII c. 4.

40 Chapuys, though, retailed rumours that the king would raise large sums of money through the sale of church lands. Calendar State Papers Spanish, IV (i), 1529–30, p. 367: later in the same letter he speaks of the king's intention to bring forward a measure ‘to bleed the clergy’ (p. 371). In his letter to the Lincolnshire rebels in 1536, Henry rehearsed complaints by the Commons ‘in times past that most of the goods, lands and possessions of the realm were in spiritual men's hands’: this may be an oblique reference to 1529. LP XI 780 (2), printed State Papers, 1, 465 and Dodds, , Pilgrimage of Grace, I, 138.Google Scholar

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42 On one occasion the petition slips into the first person singular, 1. 81.

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44 Dr MacCulloch has pointed out to me instances of gentlemen securing benefices without cure of souls in the 1530 for themselves, for instance Cromwell, dean of Wells from 1537.

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47 Ives has recently shown how some of Darcy's criticisms of Wolsey drawn up in July are carried forwards into the Lords' petition of 1 December. Ives, E. W., ‘The fall of Wolsey’, in Gunn, and Lindley, (eds.), Cardinal Wolsey, pp. 297–8.Google Scholar

48 LP IV (iii) no. 5749, pp. 2550–2, passim.

49 LP IV (iii) no. 5416 (letter of Cardinal Campeggio, 3 April), discussed by German Marc'hardour in Manley, F. and others (eds.), The complete works of St. Thomas More, VII (New Haven, 1990), pp. lxvii–ix.Google Scholar

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54 The suggestion that mortmain licences should be examined (and perhaps revoked) may explain why such licences disappear in the early 1530s. Kreider has suggested that the granting of licences was deliberately stopped, but one might equally ask who would want to obtain one when their validity and purpose had been challenged. Kreider, A., English chantries. The road to dissolution (Cambridge, Mass., 1979), pp. 82–5.Google Scholar

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60 Ibid. p. 204.

61 It will be observed that the title of the manuscript links the ‘increase and augmentation’ of the royal estate with the ‘taking away of the excess which is the great cause of the abuses within the church’, a clear throwback to the cleansing notions of 1529.

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64 Interestingly, a similar proposal for turning the religious and bishops into annuitants on stipends appears in the ‘Gybson’ proposals of 1537. Having argued the conventional line that the failings of the church arose from ‘the superabundance of riches and temporal possessions’, ‘Gybson’ then proposed that all bishops or archbishops ordained in the future should have 1,000 marks annually. The religious were to be confined to their convents to a life of contemplation, study and manual labour, receiving a stipend of 40s. per monk and 5 marks for each prior or abbot whilst their lands were placed in the hands of an hereditary lay warden, who was to allow the convent 1,000 marks annually for hospitality and other necessary provisions. Stone, , ‘Political programme’, pp. 1315.Google Scholar

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67 LP VII, no. 1482 (i), and see also his account in (ii) (of 5 December).

68 Stone, , ‘Political programme’, 7Google Scholar; Elton, , Studies, II, 72–7Google Scholar. I am not persuaded that a standing army was meant; were these to be garrisons for Henry's new fortifications?

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72 Knowles, , Religious Orders, III, 275–7.Google Scholar

73 Ibid. p. 278 and Youings, , Dissolution, pp. 38–9 summarize.Google Scholar

74 It appears that the visitors sent to Oxford and Cambridge in the autumn of 1535 were not instructed to search out moral lapses. This perhaps gives some idea of the government's intention towards the colleges. Logan, F. D., ‘The first royal visitation of the English universities, 1535’, EHR, CVI (1991).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

75 Knowles, , Religious Orders, III, 302–3.Google Scholar

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77 Knowles, , Religious Orders, III, 308–9Google Scholar; his app. VIII shows the grosser instances of such discrepancies.

78 LP X, no. 406.

79 The evidence for this point is uncertain and turns on a single unspecific letter; Lehmberg, , Reformation Parliament, p. 227Google Scholar; Knowles, , Religious Orders, III, 292 n. 1.Google Scholar

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82 Quoted in Knowles, , Religious Orders, III, 204.Google Scholar

83 Statute 27 Henry VIII c. 28, conveniently abstracted in Youings, , Dissolution of the monasteries, pp. 155–9.Google Scholar

84 What the government wanted people to believe may further be seen from the preamble to a draft commission of aid for the commissioners. ‘Forasmuch as for the extirpation and avoiding of sin used as commonly as detestably within the most part of the petty monasteries of this our realm and the increase and augmentation of good religion which with an inward zeal we desire, it has been thought to us and the [e]states of our realm…expedient and necessary to dissolve and suppress so many of the same petty monasteries…as a means also to cause the great houses to have more vigilant respect and regard to their professions than they have had of many years used and accustomed…’. Public Record Office, E36/116, fo. 50r–v.

85 Statute 26 Henry VIII, c. 3.

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90 Knowles, , Religious Orders, III, 305.Google Scholar

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92 For the text of the statute, The statutes at large passed in the parliaments held in Dublin, 1310–1786 (Dublin, 1786), I, 127–32Google Scholar and see Bradshaw, B., The dissolution of the religious orders in Ireland under Henry VIII (Cambridge, 1974), chs. 2–4.Google Scholar

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94 31 Henry VIII c. 9. Dr Harriss has suggested to me that the Commons may have acceded to the statute at a moment when royal expenditure was very high, and so traded monasteries against a demand for additional subsidies.

95 Houses unamenable to pressure could have their lands seized by the indictment of their heads for treason.

96 Knowles, , Religious Orders, III, 332–3.Google Scholar

97 The authoritative study is Heal, Of prelates and princes, ch. 5.

98 Lehmberg, , Reformation Parliament, pp. 133–4, 137–8, 254–5.Google Scholar

99 See Ives, E. W., ‘The genesis of the Statute of Uses’, EHR LXXXII (1967)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Professor Guy has now shown that the desire to profit from uses can be traced back to 1526. Guy, J. A., Christopher St German on Chancery and Statute, Selden Soc. supp. ser. VI (1985), 78–9.Google Scholar

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a I.e. delight.

b I.e. vice.

c I.e. know.

d Pampered, petted.

e I.e. resume.

f I.e. against.

g The reference is to the Ordinatio de Libertatibus Perquirendis of 27 Edward I (Statutes of the Realm, I, 131), which provides for the issue of writs out of Chancery for the holding of inquisitions for religious houses who wished to amortize land.

h The reference here is to the confirmation of Magna Carta issued by Edward I in 1297 (Statutes of the Realm, I, 114–19), where cl. 36 forbids grants of land to religious houses which were then regranted to the grantee to be held of the house, and certain other forms of grants.

1 The writ ad quod damnum was sued out by religious bodies, etc. wishing to have a licence to buy lands contrary to the Statute of Mortmain, upon which an inquest would be held by the escheator of the county. For the procedure see Raban, S., Mortmain legislation and the English church, 1279–1500 (Cambridge, 1982), esp. pp. 40–1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar