William Compton is removed -
replaced by Henry Norris who isn't
anti-Wolsey
1520 - 'Gentlemen of The
Privy Chamber' formed
Henry agrees - Wolsey did this
under financial reform - however
other parts weren't carried out
1521-25 Wolsey sends them
abroad as ambassadors/to control
the army
1525 Treaty of More - peace with
France means they all come back
Wolsey disregarded the
noble's advice on the 1525
Amicable Grant
Wolsey encouraged people to take
nobles to court because of enclosure
1515 Act of Resumption -
nobles disliked as they had to
give land back to the crown
Legal System
Canon Law - religious law
Civil Law - based on Roman
law, decisions based on
common sense
Common Law (Norman) -
derived from custom and judicial
precedent rather than laws
Changes
1516 - Star Chamber was made more
efficient. Case load rose from 12 a year
under Henry VII to 120 a year with Wolsey
Status gave people no protection - 1516
Earl of Northumberland sent to jail
1519 - Set up Court of Requests so that
poor people could get justice cheaply
Court of Chancery used more often
- cases about property and wills
Abuses
Sir Amyus Paulet - made to attend court
every day for 5 years because he put
Wolsey in the stocks when he was young
Wolsey used the courts to target his
enemies, e.g. Sir Robert Sheffield was sent to
jail in 1517 for being an 'accessory to crime'
Decisions in court were often
corrupt and bias towards the rich;
cases were also too long and
expensive
Parliament
1515
Wolsey was appointed Lord Chancellor
Parliament was hostile towards Wolsey
because of the 1511 Richard Hunne case
and the fact that he didn't want Horsey
(accused of Hunne's murder) to go on trial
Wolsey opposed the Benefit of
the Clergy being taken away
Wolsey dismissed Parliament
before they voted on
taxation, as he didn't want
higher taxes - caused dislike
The public resented Wolsey
because Horsey was released after
being tried in 1515. Wolsey also
blocked law reforms on mortuary
fees - linked to Hunne case
1523
Wolsey was given
£130,000 for war with
France, originally asked
for £800,000
Taxes were increased and people
had to declare their earnings to the
government - dislike from public
Wolsey was forced to drop his anti-enclosure
policy in order to appease Parliament for money
Only meeting of
Parliament whilst
Wolsey was Chancellor
Parliament disliked Wolsey
as he manipulated the
House of Commons into
voting in the Subsidy Tax
1st December 1529 - Thomas More created a
list of articles against Wolsey's government
and accusing him of treason. However, this
was dropped because of Cromwell and the
King's lack of support
Finance
1515 Act of Resumption
Nobles had to give land
back to the crown that had
been gifted
Once the land was
given back the
Crown rented it out
The Crown gained £5,000-£10,000 p/a
Subsidy Tax
1 shilling per pound taken
The Crown gained over £300,000 from this
Based on a more accurate
valuation of the taxpayer's wealth
Collected in 1513-15 and 1523
Gained £170,000 between 1515-1516
Benevolences of 1522
Emergency measure,
collected from wealthy
subjects
Brought in £260,000 between 1522-23
Needed for 1523 3 Pronged Attack
Caused resentment from nobles
1523 Parliament
Wolsey demanded
£800,000 to be collected
over several years
Only £150,000 was collected in 1522
Problem - this was on
top of loans collected
in 1522
Wasn't a lump sum,
paid in installments
1525 Amicable Grant
non-Parliamentary tax
Commission sent out in April
1525 - met with much resistance
Rebellion in London and East Anglia - 10,000 people took
part in Lavenham, crushed by Norfolk and Suffolk
This was for the 1525 Battle of Pavia
Henry had to abandon his
campaign to invade France
after the Battle of Pavia
Domestic Policy
Enclosure
3 Statutes were passed against enclosure
before Wolsey became Chancellor
1517 Wolsey launched a national anti
enclosure act - had to rebuild houses
and return land to farming
Problems caused by enclosure
Food
shortages due
to a lack of
crops
Rural depopulation
and unemployment
Caused by inflation
264 people were taken to court
because of enclosure; 32 knights, 9
nobles, 3 bishops, 51 heads of
religious houses and several Oxford
colleges
Wolsey insisted that the
enclosure laws of 1489 and
1514-15 were obeyed
1523
Wolsey dropped his
anti-enclosure campaign in 1523
This was to appease Parliament in
order to obtain money for war with
France
Subsidy Tax
'Just Price' - to stop people being overcharged for
basic foodstuffs. Poultry prices in London were fixed
in 1518 and in 1527 he purchased surplus grain to
sell to the poor at a cheap price