This subtopic examines the dramatic religious transformations during Edward VI's Protestant ascendancy and Mary I's Catholic restoration, highlighting the
Topic Synopsis
This subtopic examines the dramatic religious transformations during Edward VI's Protestant ascendancy and Mary I's Catholic restoration, highlighting the interplay of political authority and doctrinal change. Students will explore how rapid shifts in liturgy, governance, and persecution shaped national identity and laid foundations for Elizabethan settlement. Emphasis is placed on evaluating the effectiveness and motivations behind these changes, fostering critical analysis of state-imposed religious reform.
Key Concepts & Core Principles
- Sola Scriptura and Sola Fide: The Protestant principles that Scripture alone is the source of religious authority and that justification is by faith alone, not by good works. These challenged Catholic doctrines of papal authority, tradition, and the sacramental system.
- Royal Supremacy: The assertion that the monarch, not the Pope, is the supreme head of the Church in England. This was established by the Act of Supremacy (1534) under Henry VIII and reasserted under Elizabeth I (1559). It gave the Crown control over church appointments, doctrine, and discipline.
- The Elizabethan Settlement: The religious settlement of 1559 that established the Church of England as a via media (middle way) between Catholicism and radical Protestantism. It included the Act of Supremacy, the Act of Uniformity (which imposed the Book of Common Prayer), and the Thirty-Nine Articles (1571) defining doctrine.
- Presbyterianism: A system of church government by elders (presbyters), without bishops, adopted by the Scottish Reformation. It emphasised the sovereignty of God, predestination, and the authority of the Bible, as articulated in the Scots Confession (1560) and the First Book of Discipline.
- Counter-Reformation in Ireland: The Catholic response to Protestantism, spearheaded by the Council of Trent (1545–63) and the Jesuit mission. In Ireland, this led to a revival of Catholic piety, the establishment of seminaries, and the identification of Catholicism with Irish resistance to English rule.
Exam Tips & Revision Strategies
- Use specific dates and names to anchor your arguments, such as the 1552 Second Act of Uniformity or Cardinal Pole's legatine mission.
- When analysing Mary's restoration, balance the narrative of martyrdom with evidence of partial success, like the survival of Marian bishops into Elizabeth's reign.
- Structure essays to explicitly compare and contrast the two reigns, using themes like royal authority, public response, and foreign influence.
- Demonstrate understanding of cause and consequence by linking Edwardian reforms to earlier Henrician changes and later Marian reactions.
- In source-based questions, evaluate provenance by considering who wrote and why, especially for polemical accounts from Foxe's Book of Martyrs.
Common Misconceptions & Mistakes to Avoid
- Oversimplifying Edwardian reforms as wholly uniform or popular, ignoring regional resistance and the phased nature of Protestant implementation.
- Confusing the chronological sequence of legislation (e.g., the Acts of Uniformity) and misattributing them to the wrong monarch.
- Assuming Mary's restoration was solely defined by burnings without considering diplomatic marriages, seminary foundations, and doctrinal success.
- Neglecting the European context, such as Calvinist influences on Edwardian reforms or Mary's alignment with Habsburg policies.
- Presenting a teleological view that inevitability leads to the Elizabethan settlement, rather than assessing contingency and immediate consequences.
Examiner Marking Points
- Award credit for demonstrating accurate knowledge of the 1549 and 1552 Books of Common Prayer and their doctrinal shifts away from Catholic practices.
- Credit analysis of the role of key architects like Thomas Cranmer and the influence of Somerset and Northumberland in advancing or moderating reform.
- Expect detailed evaluation of the Marian restoration methods, including the repeal of anti-heresy laws, revival of papal authority, and the strategic use of persecution.
- Reward identification of sources of opposition and conformity across both reigns, with specific examples such as the Prayer Book Rebellion.
- Credit discussion of the long-term impact of Marian persecutions on English Protestant identity and the subsequent Elizabethan settlement.