News1 min ago
ELIZABETH 1
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by kit_kat_507. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Sprog has a short answer, and here is a longer one.
Mary I Tudor died in 1558 on the same night as her chief minister Cardinal Pole. The archbishopric of Canterbury was therefore vacant. Although twenty years before, Henry had no trouble in turning the bishops protestant, no-one would crown Elizabeth except in the Catholic rite and so it came about that Elizabeth I was the last monarch to crowned in the Roman rite in Latin.
Elizabeth lasted well until 1568 when she was excommunicated by Pius (V I think) and later on deposed by the Pope. The deposition was postponed also by the Pope but caused great trouble for Catholics whose loyalties were strained.
Priests were sent in to reconvert the population, with varying success from 1580. The Jesuits were in the forefront and became hate-figures for Elizabeth's protestant hard line ministers. Edmund Campion whose autobiography was written by Evelyn Waugh and is quite a good read, was caught up in this and was executed.
Laws were framed so that harboring priests was treason and this means that the Catholics said on execution tht they were dying for their faith and the authorities that they were traitors.
40 of these unfortunates were canonised in 1970 by Paul VI, includng St John Rigby who was 19 when he was sent down to London to say that another defendant was too ill to attend court. He was identified as a Catholic and asked ' if Queen Elizabeth were hiding up a tree and the Popes forces were hunting her, what would you say on being asked if she were up the tree,
I regret he failed to answer that question satisfactorily to his questioners althoughmost satisfactorily to hmself and was hanged drawn and quartered.
There was a second wave in the early 1600s, of Jesuit infiltration if you like, and this is referred to in Act 1 Sc 2 of Macbeth, written for the Kings accession (James VI and I) in the Porter's speech
John gerard was one of the jesuits and Philip Caraman has left an account of the translation of gerard's "Spy's Manual" in Autobiography of an Elizabethan Gentleman. This too is worth a read.
I hope in this brief answer I have given you an idea of what is was like to be a Roman Catholic in England in the last half of the sixteenth century.