society

Cards (13)

  • Structure of society
    • Nobility
    • Gentry
    • Churchmen
    • Commoners
  • Nobility
    • Peerage of around 50/60 men that were controlled through bonds and recognizances
    • Could buy the King's favour
    • Henry did not add more to the peerage
  • Bastard Feudalism: 1486 peers and MPs were required to take an oath against illegal retaining, reinforced by 1487 and 1504 Acts
  • Gentry
    • Owned 15-20% of land
    • In 1490 there were 275 knights
    • Identity can be established through knighthood, income and coat of arms
    • Esquires were numerous and could be defined by the 'eldest sons of knights'
  • Churchmen
    • Lower clergy helped the ordinary folk
    • Bishops were elected off of their legal training but he did not want clergy to be from aristocratic backgrounds
    • The church was a great landowner
    • Pope Martin V said that the King is should govern the church of the england, rather than the pope
    • John Morton and Richard Fox
  • Commoners
    • Middling Sort
    • Lower class
  • Commoners - Middling Sort
    • In the towns: professionals like merchants and lawyers
    • In the countryside: yeoman farmers who farmed substantial properties for an increasingly sophisticated market economy
  • Commoners - Lower class
    • In the towns: shopkeepers and tradesmen
    • In the countryside: husbandmen who kept smaller farms
    • Their position was very insecure
  • There was a growth in professional bourgeoisie
  • Due to the black death, social mobility had increased

    Which led to the upper classes creating sumptuary laws out of fear
  • Variations in agricultural production, with a line drawn from the mouth of Tees to Dorset, with ¾ living below the line
  • South East believed in mixed farming whereas the other side was Pastoral, with Hertfordshire being grain farming
  • Magnate influence often was cut across county boundaries, and pilgrimages which was enforced by Saint Cults which placed importance on centres such as Durham