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Created by
Cait Aldridge
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Cards (25)
The advisors of the king were not popular with
Parliament
, some promoted
Catholicism
or
Arminianism
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Charles had married
Henrietta Maria
of
France
, a
Catholic
, and she was allowed to freely practise
Catholicism
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Charles's
court had a
closed
nature, leading to suspicions of
Catholic
plots and straining relations with his subjects
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Charles
believed in the
divine
right of
kings
and had contempt for
Parliament
, threatening to
dissolve
it if it
opposed
his
policies
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Charles
dissolved
Parliament
multiple times due to disagreements, including
over funds
for wars and the influence of
Buckingham
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Forced loans
were introduced to
finance wars
,
unpopular
and led to imprisonments
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The
Act of Revocation 1625
took back land granted to Scottish nobles, unpopular as it seemed to restore
Catholic influence
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The
Five
Knights Case
1627
involved
imprisoned knights
appealing for release, court found no authority over the king's decision, leading to more
disdain
towards
Charles
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Third
Parliament issued a
Petition
of
Right
to curb the king's power, forced Charles to
accept
demands,
Buckingham
was
assassinated
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Charles
dissolved
Parliament
in
1629
and ruled alone, known as the
Personal Rule
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Charles
attempted to raise funds without Parliament's consent, leading to
tensions
and
discontent
among his
subjects
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Charles's court was viewed as
alien
, rumours of
Popish plots
arose, and
religious tensions
increased under the
Personal Rule
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William Laud
, Archbishop of
Canterbury
,
favored
by Charles for his
conformity
, seen as attacking
Anglican
tradition due to his
Arminian
views
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William Laud
introduced
Laudian reforms
to create a
uniform church
throughout the
kingdoms
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Changes introduced by Laud:
Communion table
moved to a different location in the
church
, from the
centre
to the
side
Altar
to have a
rail
around it
Clergy
to wear more
traditional
and
decorated
attire to
services
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Laud
aimed to increase the
power
and
authority
of the clergy by
restoring
their
lands
and lay
positions
of
power
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Protestants
were concerned that
Laud's
changes resembled a
gradual restoration
of
Catholic practices
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Charles's
support
of
Laud
and the
Laudian reforms
hurt his
standing
in the
realm
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In
1637
, Charles introduced the
English Prayer Book
to Scotland, causing
riots
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Scottish nobles
and
clergy
signed a
Covenant
to
uphold
their
traditional church
and not allow
changes
to be
imposed
on it
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Charles raised an army to force the
Scots
to accept the changes, leading to the
Bishops' War
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Charles
realized he needed
Parliament
to
finance
his
army
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Parliament vs Charles:
Parliament
was unwilling to
vote
large sums of money for
military
expeditions that were
poorly
executed
Insufficient
funds led to
conflict
with Parliament and affected the success of
foreign
enterprises
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Anglo-French
War
1626
:
Relations with France deteriorated
Buckingham's
failed expedition to
La Rochelle
in
1627
Parliament crisis
fueled by the failure of the expedition
Buckingham's assassination
in
1628
by
Lieutenant John Felton
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Peace agreements:
Treaty of
Souza
in
April 1629
with France
Treaty of
Madrid
in
November 1630
with Spain
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