Reading for section: Anthony Fletcher and Diarmaid MacCullough, Tudor Rebellions, pp. 3-15, 28-53, and 67-138 -Pay attention to the causes and course of.

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Reading for section: Anthony Fletcher and Diarmaid MacCullough, Tudor Rebellions, pp. 3-15, 28-53, and Pay attention to the causes and course of each of the rebellions, the demands made by the rebels, and the reactions of the government. -What kinds of events/issues sparked rebellions? -What kinds of people were inclined to rebel? -How was rebellion justified? -How did the grievances of nobles and gentry differ from those of the commonalty? -Did rebels directly challenge the crown? Were rebels normally violent? -How did the crown view rebels and how did they treat them?

Edward VI and Mary I Edward VI (r ) Edward Seymour, duke of Somerset (d. 1552) -Lord Protector (1547-9) Archbishop Cranmer -repeal of heresy laws and Six Articles; reform injunctions (1547) -iconoclasm -Book of Homilies -new Communion rite (1548) Edward VI with Henry VIII (left), pope (center) and Protector Somerset (right)

-Book of Common Prayer; Act of Uniformity (1549) -Prayer Book Rebellion and Kett’s Rebellion (1549) -Somerset replaced by John Dudley, duke of Northumberland, as Lord Protector (1549) -Second Prayer Book (1552) -Forty-Two Articles (1553) Lady Jane Grey Queen for 9 Days Lady Jane Grey

Mary I (r ) -repeal of the Act of Uniformity (1553) -Wyatt’s Rebellion (1554) -marriage to Philip II of Spain (1554); Hapsburg Philip and Mary Love Story Cardinal Reginald Pole -archbishop of Canterbury ( ) Mary and Philip

-renewal of heresy laws (Dec. 1554) -execution of Bishops Latimer and Ridley (1555) -execution of Archbishop Cranmer (1556) John Knox, The First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstrous Regiment of Women (1558) -Mary Tudor, Mary of Guise, and Mary Queen of Scots John Foxe, Acts and Monuments, aka Book of Martyrs (1563) Execution of Archbishop Cranmer