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The Attitude of Whitgift and Bancroft to the Scottish Church
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 February 2009
Extract
The friendship and understanding which had joined the reformed churches of England and Scotland in the early years of Elizabeth's reign were not menaced until shortly after Whitgift's accession to the see of Canterbury in 1583. The new primate had to deal with problems which had been quite unknown to his predecessors—problems arising from the success of the Scottish presbyterians and the efforts of their English imitators. The constitution of the Scottish reformed church, after developing in the direction of ‘conformity with England’, had not attained stability before being undermined by the emergence of intransigent presbyterianism. In 1581 the general assembly had approved the full presbyterian programme, and in August 1582 a coup d'état, the ‘Ruthven raid’, by the ultra-protestant party among the Scottish nobles had produced a government favourable to the first brief presbyterian experiment. In England also the struggle between presbyterianism and episcopacy had begun, and Whitgift himself had been the protagonist of the episcopalian cause. The English crown was immune from such coups d'état as made possible three changes in the constitution of the Scottish church within five years; but the English presbyterians had powerful friends among the radical politicians and diplomats. Already there were signs of co-operation between the ecclesiastical rebels in the two British kingdoms, and the incipient alliance soon had political repercussions, for the conduct of Anglo-Scottish relations was during several years in the hands of Francis Walsingham and William Davison, two diplomats who, as secretary and ambassador, consistently used their influence on behalf of the Scottish presbyterians, whom they alleged to be the only sincere supporters in Scotland of the cause of ‘amity with England’.
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References
page 95 note 1 In the author's absence.
page 96 note 1 Melville, James, Autobiography and diary (Wodrow Soc., 1842), pp. 53, 293Google Scholar; Row, John, History of the kirk of Scotland (Wodrow Soc., 1842), p. 115Google Scholar; Historie and life of king James the sext (Bannatyne Club, 1825), p. 205Google Scholar; Brit. Mus., Cotton MSS., Calig. C. ix. fo. 161.
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page 103 note 1 Cal. S.P. Scot., vii.Google Scholar nos. 233, 236.
page 103 note 2 The letter (Harl. MSS., 7004, fo. 3) is endorsed ‘The receat of his letter I signifiet to her majestie at Nonesuch in Sommer anno 1584’.
page 103 note 3 [Blank] to Whitgift, 10 Jan. 1584/5, Add. MSS., 32,092, fo. 78v (copy). This letter, written in Scots and dated from Holyroodhouse, contains only invective against the Scottish presbyterian ministers.
page 104 note 1 Nat. Lib. Scot. MSS., 6.1.13, fos. 33–4; copy in B.M., Add. MSS. 32,092, fo. 88v. Giles Fletcher described the assembly's proceedings to Walsingham also (Cal. S.P. Scot., viii. no. 407).Google Scholar
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page 108 note 1 Nat. Lib. Scot. MSS., 6.1.13, fos. 37–8. Dr. H. W. Meikle identified this paper as being a series of answers to Bancroft's questions. The same volume includes (at fos. 33–4) a letter to Whitgift of which there is a copy in the British Museum (Add. MSS., 32,092, fo. 88v) and (at fo. 42) a letter from a Scotsman which undoubtedly reached England; it is therefore likely that the papers directed to Bancroft which it contains came into his hands safely. It is noteworthy that Calderwood, who had access to a copy of the questions, did not apparently see any answers to them.
page 108 note 2 Ibid., fos. 39–41. The identification of Bancroft's informant is conjectural; see Register of presentations to benefices (H.M. Gen. Reg. House), i. 144; ii. 113, 115v; Venn, , Alumni Cantab., ii. 211Google Scholar; Scott, Hew, Fasti Eccl. Scot., i. 353.Google Scholar
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