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Catholic Loyalism in Elizabethan England
Catholic Loyalism in Elizabethan England
Catholic Loyalism in Elizabethan England
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Catholic Loyalism in Elizabethan England

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Although the varying attitudes toward the English crown and the order of English society were central to the differences between the loyalists and the militants, disagreements involved many questions other than political ones, including the role of the Jesuits in the English mission and the nature of church government. This first work to concentrate on the Elizabethan Catholic church relates party thought to the quarrels with the Catholic community during Elizabeth's reign.

Originally published in 1979.

A UNC Press Enduring Edition -- UNC Press Enduring Editions use the latest in digital technology to make available again books from our distinguished backlist that were previously out of print. These editions are published unaltered from the original, and are presented in affordable paperback formats, bringing readers both historical and cultural value.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 10, 2017
ISBN9781469640181
Catholic Loyalism in Elizabethan England
Author

Arnold Pritchard

Bahru Zewde is a senior lecturer in history at Addis Ababa University.

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    Catholic Loyalism in Elizabethan England - Arnold Pritchard

    CATHOLIC LOYALISM IN ELIZABETHAN ENGLAND

    Catholic Loyalism in Elizabethan England

    by

    Arnold Pritchard

    THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS

    CHAPEL HILL

    © 1979 The University of North Carolina Press

    All rights reserved

    Manufactured in the United States of America

    ISBN 0-8078-1345-1

    Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 78-10208

    Pritchard, Arnold, 1949-

    Catholic Loyalism in Elizabethan England.

        Bibliography: p.

        Includes index.

        1. Catholics—England. 2. Archpriest controversy,

    1598-1602. 3. Church and state in England—History.

    I. Title.

    BX1492.P78            261.7'0942            78-10208

    ISBN 0-8078-1345-1

    Contents

    Preface

    I        Introductory: The Situation of the Elizabethan Catholics

    II       Allen and Parsons: The Political Theory of Militant Catholicism

    III      Loyalist Sentiment before 1595

    IV      Background: The Jesuits and England to 1594

    V       The Wisbech Stirs

    VI      The Roman Stirs

    VII     Background: Narrative of the Archpriest Controversy

    VIII   The Archpriest Controversy: The Problem of Church Order

    IX      The Archpriest Controversy: The Problem of Religion and Politics

    X       The Myth of the Evil Jesuit

    XI      Religion and Loyalty

    Appendix: Bibliographical Essay

    Notes

    Bibliography

    Index

    To my mother and father

    Preface

    I had been interested in sixteenth-century England for several years before the idea of doing any serious work on Elizabethan Catholicism entered my head. As I suspect is the case with many historians, I had the impression that English Catholics were a small band of exiles, martyrs, and political plotters, pushed around by the great religious and political currents of their day, but with little history of their own worth bothering about. My interest was aroused when I found that Elizabethan Catholicism had an internal history of its own and that the English Catholics wrestled not only with the practical difficulties of an oppressed minority compelled to operate in secret, but with moral and political problems every bit as agonizing as those that faced many better-known religious traditions. The greatest internal division through which the Elizabethan Catholics passed came in the last decade of Elizabeth's reign, when the community was torn by a series of dissensions about the organization of the mission and about its relationship to the English political and social order. These disputes culminated in the archpriest controversy of 1598-1602, during which a group of priests who became known as Appellants twice appealed to Rome against the ecclesiastical regime that the papacy had set up in England.

    The clash between the Appellants and their opponents was the longest and noisiest controversy within the Elizabethan Catholic body, but it was not an isolated episode. The Appellants were the most voluble opponents of what might be called the militant view within English Catholicism. The most immediately controversial aspect of the militant program was support for the efforts of foreign Catholic powers to overthrow Elizabeth; the most controversial aspect of the Appellant (or loyalist) view was loyalty to the queen.

    The primary purpose of this book is to analyze the mentality of the loyalist Catholics and to compare it with that of their better-known militant coreligionists. Most people aware of the problem know that the differences between militant and loyalist Catholics covered many issues besides that of allegiance to the crown, and this book deals with several of those issues. But I still believe that the most serious issue facing the Elizabethan Catholics was, in the broad sense of the term, political. Almost all of the peculiar problems that they confronted were caused by the hostility between the Catholic church and the English political order. No matter how apolitical a particular Catholic may have been by inclination, if he was seriously concerned with the problems of English Catholicism he would sooner or later be forced to confront the problem of his religious community's relationship to the wider community of England, whose symbol of unity was the monarchy.

    I hope that I have contributed something to the understanding of the differences between the loyalist and militant Catholics. I know that the subject is worth trying to understand. The controversies were important for the history of Catholicism in England. I suspect (although I do not have the learning to say) that they provide a clue to the conflicting beliefs that divided European Catholics in their attitudes toward the political aspects of the Counter-Reformation. But perhaps most important, the conflicts within English Catholicism show persons who were, in many cases, of relatively ordinary talents struggling with the particular way in which issues of universal moral importance were presented to them. Most of the specific issues that faced Elizabethan Catholics are long dead. The questions of the rights and obligations of authority and conscience, however, are eternal, and so is the interest of people trying to deal with these questions in the special situations with which history confronts them.

    Readers who are already relatively familiar with the history of Elizabethan Catholicism may wish to read the appendix first; for them it can function as a prologue to set some of the issues in historiographical perspective.

    One of the salutary things about writing this book has been that I have been made aware of how much even such a modest effort of historical inquiry rests on the efforts of others—of historians, archivists, editors, spread through several countries and generations. I can render only some inadequate thanks for the most obvious debts.

    This work began as a Ph.D. dissertation at Yale University, and I have to thank my dissertation adviser, J. H. Hexter, for constant encouragement and advice. Steven Ozment and Robert Harding, the other readers on my committee, were also very helpful critics. T. H. Clancy of Loyola University, New Orleans, and John Bossy of the Queen's University of Belfast have been generous with helpful advice, as has a reader of the University of North Carolina Press whom (since the press's policy in such matters is anonymity) I am unable to identify. Mr. Bossy and Peter Holmes have kindly allowed me to refer to their unpublished dissertations.

    For permission to refer to unpublished documents in their custody, I wish to thank His Grace the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Trustees of the Lambeth Palace Library; the Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster; Father F. J. Turner, librarian of Stony hurst College; and the authorities of the Public Record Office. The staff at each of these institutions, as well as at the Jesuit Library on Mount Street in London, was very helpful and kind in many ways; I should particularly mention Miss Elizabeth Poyser of the Westminster Diocesan Archives and Father Francis Edwards and Father Geoffrey Holt of the Jesuit Library. I am also grateful to the libraries of the universities of Cambridge and of London for allowing me to read unpublished dissertations in their possession, to the Connecticut State Library for last-minute reference help, and to the staff of the Yale University Library for many large and small assistances. Yale gave me fellowship support for most of my time in graduate school, and a grant from the Yale Concilium for International and Area Studies enabled me to spend several months working in England. I am also grateful to The University of North Carolina Press for undertaking publication, particularly to Executive Editor Lewis Bateman and Managing Editor Gwen Duffey for their help along the way. Needless to say, no one besides myself bears responsibility for any errors or inadequacies that remain. I once thought that this traditional disclaimer was a pious platitude; now I know how true it is.

    Many friends in New Haven and elsewhere have helped me in many ways to get through the various traumas to which graduate students and aspiring authors are subject. There are really more than I can mention, but among those who helped most directly with the progress of the book itself (sometimes in rather unusual ways) were Bill Tighe, Betsy Gilliam, Mike Root, Kathy Staudt, and Barbara Newman. My wife Gretchen deserves special mention, for translating some passages from Italian, for some eleventh-hour typing, for listening patiently to wearying harangues about English Catholicism, and for constant sympathetic support at a time when her own work was occupying a great deal of her attention.

    CATHOLIC LOYALISM IN ELIZABETHAN ENGLAND

    CHAPTER I

    Introductory: The Situation of the Elizabethan Catholics

    The first parliament of the reign of Elizabeth I in 1559 made illegal the celebration of the Mass, the denial of the royal supremacy over the church, and various other essentials of the Catholic religion. It also required all subjects to attend the services of the established church on Sundays and holy days, on penalty of a fine of twelve-pence for every absence. The parliament of 1562-63 added penalties for upholding the pope's authority; a first such offense was made subject to the penalties of praemunire, while a second offense was made treason. This parliament also extended the Oath of Supremacy as a test of religious loyalty to a wide range of laymen and clerics.

    In spite of this legislation, the first decade of Elizabeth's reign saw comparatively little active persecution of Catholics; later during her rule some Catholic writers looked back on the period with nostalgia as a time of general live-and-let-live.¹ Enforcement of the anti-Catholic laws was slack; the Oath of Supremacy was widely evaded, and the fine for nonattendance at church was apparently often left uncollected. The level of active hostility between Protestants and Catholics in the 1560s was comparatively low largely because the dividing line between the two religious camps was not as clear as it later became. A study of Yorkshire has found evidence of widespread vaguely conservative religious sentiment early in Elizabeth's reign, manifested mainly by the continuation of traditional practices such as using holy water, images, and other religious objects or praying with Latin primers.² Apparently, however, there was comparatively little actual recusancy (i.e., refusal to attend Anglican services) before the 1570s. Although the Catholic church did formally forbid attendance at Protestant services,³ little was done to make the decision known in England. Most people of Catholic sympathies, and even some Catholic priests, apparently saw no harm in complying with the minimum legal requirement of being present at Anglican worship, although many disassociated themselves from actual participation by not receiving communion or by ostentatious lack of attention to the proceedings.⁴

    Ironically enough, it was almost certainly during this period of relatively little active persecution that the Catholic church lost most of its hold on the English people. A. O. Meyer has pointed out some convincing reasons for this diminishing influence: the physical and moral isolation of Englishmen of Catholic sympathies from the international church and the positive attractions of a vernacular liturgy and Bible.⁵ But, in a sense, to ask why most Englishmen left Catholicism so quickly is to ask the wrong question. To a Catholic theologian, the community in communion with Rome that has existed in England since Elizabeth's reign may be the continuation of the church to which virtually all Englishmen belonged before the Reformation. The ordinary subject, however, may have seen as much of the continuation of the church to which he had always belonged in the Anglican church as in the Catholic. The Anglican church kept the buildings and the hierarchical structure of the pre-Reformation church; it retained the close integration with the political and social hierarchy; the parish church remained the center of much of the social and political as well as the religious life of the local community. To leave the established church for a small sect that retained the Latin mass, a celibate clergy, and the supremacy of a faraway pope might have seemed even to conservative people a greater break with the past than did acceptance of the changes of 1559. The Catholic community in England from Elizabeth's reign on drew on many of the loyalties and traditions of the pre-Reformation church, but historically speaking it was a new creation.⁶

    This creation might not have taken place without the transformation of the political and religious situation between 1568 and 1574. Several factors increased tension between England and international Catholicism—the imprisonment in England of Mary Queen of Scots; the northern rebellion of 1569; the Ridolfi plot; increasing rivalry with Spain; and most of all, the papal bull Regnans in Excelsis (1570), which excommunicated Elizabeth and declared her subjects absolved of their obligation of obedience to her. All these events made the government much less indulgent toward signs of Catholic sympathies among the queen's subjects. But perhaps the most important cause of long-term change in the nature of English Catholicism and of the government's attitude toward it was the result not of high-level politics, but of the initiative of a few English exiles.

    Some English Catholics had been going abroad since 1559. As might be expected, most of the exiles were gentlemen and clerics, the latter including a substantial number of academics, particularly from Oxford.⁷ At first, the academics generally settled into their traditional role of writing apologetics. Even the seminary for English students founded at Douai in the Spanish Netherlands in 1568 was not at first conceived as a base for missionary work in England. But the idea of the mission soon took hold. In 1574 the first missionary priests were sent to England, and in 1577 Cuthbert Mayne, their first martyr, was executed. Under its founder and first president, William Allen, Douai (which operated at Rheims from 1578 to 1593) played the preeminent role in the training of priests in the mission's early days. It was soon joined by the seminary founded at Rome in 1578 and by seminaries founded at Seville and Valladolid after the defeat of the Spanish Armada. By the 1580s there were several hundred priests in England. In 1580, in response to Allen's requests, the first Jesuit missionaries were sent on the English mission; a very small but very important Jesuit mission continued to work in England throughout Elizabeth's reign.

    The idea of a missionary movement operating in secret to evade a persecuting government was a radical departure from the previous methods of the Catholic church in England—or indeed, in Europe as a whole.⁸ In many ways the mission was very successful, providing by far the most concrete link between Catholics in England and the rest of the church and making it possible for a much larger number of people in England to live as Catholics. Perhaps most crucially, the missionaries helped make English Catholics more self-conscious and more conscious of the differences between themselves and the Protestant majority. Apparently due primarily to the missionary priests, the practice of attending Anglican services to comply with the minimum requirements of the law seems to have been reduced.

    Without the missionary priests, the Catholic community in England would probably never have come into existence, but the nature of the community that they helped create was to a great degree determined by elements beyond their control. Given the mounting persecution that met the expansion of the mission, the missionaries could hope to work with some degree of security only where they had either some popular sympathy or the protection of influential persons in the area—usually members of the gentry and aristocracy. The geographical and social makeup of the Catholic community was varied, but it tended to be very heavily influenced by the distribution of the Catholic gentry and nobility. Many Catholic landowners attempted to protect their fellow Catholics as well as they could, and some had a conscious policy (whether out of benevolence or concern for security) of preferring Catholic tenants and servants.⁹ The importance of the support that the Catholic nobility and gentry gave to the mission can be seen from the frequent strong correlations between the geographical distribution of recusancy and the estates and influence of Catholic landowners. In Cornwall, for example, recusants were most numerous in those parishes where the Arundells, the county's most prominent Catholic family, had their estates, while the survival of a comparatively large Catholic community in Sussex was due largely to the influence of the first Viscount Montague and, after his death in 1592, his widow and grandson.¹⁰

    Catholics were most numerous in the North of England and in parts of the Welsh border; the two strongest Catholic counties were Lancashire and Monmouthshire. It was in parts of the remote highlands of the north that Catholicism came closest to being a popular religion, not so limited as elsewhere to some gentry families and their immediate dependents. In most of southern England there were fewer Catholics, and Catholicism seems to have been much more a form of nonconformism of the gentry¹¹ than in the north. There were relatively large numbers of Catholic magnates in west Sussex and in Hampshire, the only area of lowland England where the presence of Catholic aristocrats seems to have had much influence on the general religious tone of an area. Significant numbers of Catholic gentry lived also in the west Midlands, parts of the Thames valley, and, rather surprisingly, in the most strongly Protestant region of the country, East Anglia.¹²

    Virtually all of the Catholic gentry seem to have had little desire to take up active opposition to the crown and considered themselves loyal subjects of the queen. But the government was naturally cautious in taking Catholic protestations of loyalty at face value. English relations with the papacy, Spain, and the other forces of the militant Counter-Reformation grew increasingly strained up to the outbreak of war with Spain in 1585. Before the crises of 1568-72, it was possible to believe that the problem of religious conservatism did not require strong action. Before the arrival of the missionary priests, Catholicism in England seemed likely to wither away if left to itself. After the mid-1570s, neither of these beliefs seemed justified. Instead of the widespread but vague and shallow religious conservatism of the 1560s, the government was faced with a small (though they might not have realized how small) but more highly committed Catholic community, increasingly marked off from the Protestant majority and showing no sign of disappearing of its own accord. Naturally, the government feared the English Catholics as a potential fifth column in the war with Spain. The political propaganda and other activities of some prominent Catholic exiles, as well as the occasional plots against Elizabeth's life in which some more marginal characters engaged, gave considerable plausibility to this view. It is not surprising that the government responded by increasing the severity of both the laws against Catholics and their enforcement.¹³ In 1571 it was made treason to bring into the country, publish, or put into effect any bull, writing, or instrument from Rome. In 1581 it was made treason to reconcile others to the Catholic church, to be reconciled oneself, to seek to withdraw others from their allegiance to the queen, or to seek to withdraw them from the established church to Rome. The fine for recusancy was raised to twenty pounds for each four-week period, a sum absolutely prohibitive for all but the wealthiest Catholics. In 1585 it was made treason for any subject of the queen ordained priest in the Catholic church since 1559 to be in England at all, and it was made a capital offense knowingly to give a priest aid or comfort. It was also made subject to the penalties of praemunire to send money overseas to the aid of Jesuits, seminary priests, or their colleges. In 1593, Catholic recusants were forbidden to travel more than five miles from home without special license.¹⁴

    The enforcement of the laws was always erratic, but the persecution was severe enough to make adherence to Catholicism a very costly choice for many of those who made it. The government, which had a good idea of where its enemies’ strength lay, generally struck hardest at the wealth of the Catholic laity and at the lives and liberty of the Catholic clergy. The laity was harassed with fines, spells of imprisonment, and occasionally execution; 63 Catholic lay men and women of Elizabeth's reign have been recognized as martyrs.¹⁵ Death for the cause was, however, rare for the laity, and the large majority probably never were imprisoned or fined. For the priests, prison was a more likely fate than not, and death was common. The biographical dictionary of the seminary priests¹⁶ lists 803 priests trained at the English seminaries on the Continent during Elizabeth's reign. Of these, 649 were apparently sent to England, although in some cases there is no definite evidence that they actually arrived in the country. At least 377 of the priests were imprisoned, in some cases more than once. And 133 of the missionary priests, or slightly more than 1 in 5, were executed.

    The longest-standing debate about the English Catholic mission and the government's reaction to it has been whether the missionary movement was religious or political and whether the missionaries who were executed died as martyrs or as traitors.¹⁷ This dispute is partly the result of the different needs of propagandists on both sides of the issue. Even in the sixteenth century it was more widely considered proper to kill a person for treason than for Catholicism, and the distinction has become more pronounced since then. But various interpretations may also rest on genuine differences in perception of an ambivalent enterprise.

    The English government always claimed that Catholics were executed as traitors, and in spite of the manifold injustices that it inflicted, the government's general attitude is perfectly comprehensible. The Catholic missionaries were trained at institutions under papal patronage and financed partly by the pope and Spain, and their most prominent leaders, William Allen and Robert Parsons, were open advocates of a foreign invasion of England. Once in England, they persuaded the queen's subjects to disobey her ecclesiastical laws out of obedience to the pope. No sixteenth-century politician could have regarded such activity as a purely spiritual enterprise. Whatever the motives of the missionary priests, if they had succeeded in winning over a large number of Englishmen to Rome, their success would have constituted a grave political threat to Elizabeth's government. The persecution of Catholics was evil, but it was not the result of any particular wickedness on the part of the rulers of England. Given analogous circumstances, it is doubtful that any government in Europe, of any religion, would have been less severe than that of England; many would have been worse.

    Nevertheless, Catholic writers, in their many works praising and defending their martyrs, constantly denied that the missionary priests had any political purpose, and in almost all cases their claims seem to have been correct. The actual operation of the missionary movement seems to have been kept separate from political activities —even though some of the most prominent exile leaders were involved in both. No political tests were imposed on students at the English seminaries on the Continent. Political discussion among the students at Douai was forbidden, and the crucial question of the pope's right to depose temporal rulers was not discussed in Douai classrooms.¹⁸ The faculties of priests sent into England normally forbade them to discuss matters of state.

    The majority of priests seem to have followed the policy of the exile leaders in maintaining that the mission had nothing to do with politics; the fact that most of them were executed under the statute that defined a priest's mere presence in England as treason certainly indicates that the government could find nothing more incriminating against them than the exercise of their priesthood.¹⁹ The refusal of most captured priests to answer when the authorities asked the bloody question about which side they would take in the event of a papally sponsored invasion of England was frequently regarded by Protestants as evidence of their disloyalty, but their refusal may in many cases have represented a sincere belief that the question was irrelevant to their work in England.

    The persecution fell on many people who took little active interest in politics, but the Catholic community was persecuted because the government saw it as a factor in politics. In fact, for the leaders of the missionary movement political questions were very difficult to avoid. By necessity, the schools and bases that the Catholic exiles used to support the mission were located in territory controlled by powers hostile to the Elizabethan regime. It was therefore necessary that those responsible for setting the policy of the mission at least acquiesce in attempts to overthrow Elizabeth, and it is not surprising that many of them went a good deal further than passive acquiescence and supported such efforts vigorously and actively.²⁰ Sir Francis Englefield, a privy councillor under Queen Mary, entered the service of Philip II and urged on him the necessity of restoring Catholicism in England by force of arms.²¹ Even more important, the most prominent leaders of the seminary priests, William Allen and Robert Parsons, were deeply involved in efforts to overthrow Elizabeth and establish a Catholic regime in England. Especially after Parsons returned from the English mission in 1581, the two men used every opportunity to urge the pope, Spain, the Guise faction in France, and whoever else would listen to use their political and military power against Protestant England. Their entreaties were frequently coupled with assertions that the sympathies of the English people were still predominantly Catholic and that many would side with a Catholic invader. To the powers of Catholic Europe, Englefield, Allen, and Parsons all portrayed the English missionaries as potential helpers for a Catholic invasion, either by the effect they had on their flock's sympathies or as actual organizers of English Catholic assistance to the invader.²²

    In addition to acting as leaders of the exile movement, Allen and Parsons played a major role as writers and propagandists.²³ As a recent writer has pointed out, Allen, Parsons, and their party were not as consistently militant in print as they were in action.²⁴ But at least after about 1580, Allen's and Parsons's occasional loyal-sounding noises seem to be of very little importance. They seem never to have been taken seriously by the English government and virtually always seem dictated by some immediate goal—usually that of making Catholics appear completely innocent, so as to be able to denounce the persecution with convincing fervor. They sometimes used what one might call the Brutus-is-an-honorable-man trick; that is, combining reiterated general expressions of respect for a person (in this case, Elizabeth) with an argument intended to damn that person and her cause in the eyes of one's audience.²⁵

    But the most compelling reason for taking Allen's and Parsons's occasional ostensibly loyal utterances with a large dose of salt is that these statements are utterly inconsistent with both their actual political conduct and the great bulk of their writings on politics. In their most directly political works, Allen and Parsons clearly set forth a strong moral justification of the attack on the English government by the forces of both the international Counter-Reformation and English Catholics who joined in that effort. The politically militant wing of English Catholicism is not the main subject of this book, but the way in which Allen and Parsons formulated a long-standing tradition on the relations of the church and temporal rulers set the terms of their later debate with their Catholic opponents, and this development must be understood before considering the ideas of those opponents.

    CHAPTER II

    Allen and Parsons: The Political Theory of Militant Catholicism

    Pius, Bishop, servant of the servants of God, in lasting memory of the matter.

    He that reigneth on high, to whom is given all power in heaven and earth, has committed one holy Catholic and apostolic church, outside of which there is no salvation, to one alone upon earth, namely to Peter, the first of the apostles, and to Peter's successor, the pope of Rome, to be by him governed in fullness of power. Him alone he has made ruler over all peoples and kingdoms, to pull up, destroy, scatter, disperse, plant and build, so that he may preserve His faithful people ... in the unity of the Spirit and present them safe and spotless to their Saviour. . . .

    [after a recital of Elizabeth's offenses]

    . . . Therefore, resting upon the authority of Him whose pleasure it was to place us . . . upon this supreme justice-seat, we do out of the fullness of our apostolic power declare the aforesaid Elizabeth to be a heretic and favourer of heretics, and her adherents in the matters aforesaid to have incurred the sentence of excommunication and to be cut off from the unity of the body of Christ.

    And moreover [we declare] her to be deprived of her pretended title to the aforesaid crown. . . .

    . . . We charge and command ... the nobles, subjects, peoples and others aforesaid that they do not dare obey her orders, mandates and laws.¹

    When Pius V declared Elizabeth to be deposed from her throne, he was acting in accordance with a tradition of papal authority over temporal rulers that stretched back to the eleventh century.² His claim of the right to judge and depose secular rulers would not have seemed strange to Gregory VII, to Innocent III, or to Boniface VIII. Pius's successors also claimed the right to judge Elizabeth, and one of them, Sixtus V, applied the same principle in his attempt to keep Henry of Navarre from the throne of France.

    The principle of the pope's right to political supremacy over secular rulers had, of course, its ups and downs, both in practice and in theory. The Reformation naturally denied the pope's power over temporal rulers as a by-product of its denial of his spiritual supremacy, while the conciliar movement within the Catholic church had also challenged the position as head of the church on which the pope's supremacy over temporal rulers depended. Temporal rulers naturally had rarely been willing to recognize the pope as their political superior in any real sense, and they had rarely lacked churchmen and writers to defend their independence—the most notable of whom was Marsilius of Padua. But the circumstances of the religious wars were almost bound to lead to a reassertion of the principles of papal supremacy. The two most prominent leaders of the militant wing of English Catholicism joined enthusiastically in this reassertion, and in the process of doing so they revealed a great deal about their ideas of the relationship between

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