Mary,
Mary quite contrary,
How does your garden grow?
With
silver bells and cockleshells,
And pretty maids all in a row.
This
nursery rhyme is about Mary Tudor.
The
'garden' is England. 'Silver bells and
cockleshells'
were
badges worn by pilgrims to the shrine of Compostella in
Spain.
The
'pretty maids' were the nuns she brought back to England.
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Links!
Clear
account
The
Return to Rome - biased but straightforward
An
old textbook
Queen
Mary - good site
Different
historians' views - hard
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The Marian
Reaction
Mary
tried to make England a Roman Catholic country again:
-
the
Catholic bishops were let out of the Tower and the
Protestant leaders imprisoned;
-
the
Latin Mass and Bibles were brought back;
-
Cardinal
Pole, the Pope's adviser, was brought to England from Rome
to re-introduce Catholic ways;
-
in
1554 the country was officially reunited with Rome and the
Pope declared Head of the Church;
-
Mary
married Prince Philip of Spain, an extreme Catholic;
-
About
300 Protestants who would not accepted Catholic beliefs
were burned to death.
Historians
disagree about the effect that Mary had on the
country. Most historians in the past believed that she turned the people
against Catholicism; but many modern historians say that most English people were delighted to go back to the Catholic
religion.
During
Mary's reign, England became a Roman Catholic country.
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A
picture, from Foxe's Book of Martyrs, of the burning of
Archbishop Cranmer. Cranmer had been frightened
into renouncing his Protestant faith but - when he learned he
was going to be burned anyway - he declared himself again to
be a Protestant. When he was burned, he held the
hand that signed the deed in the flames until it was
completely burned, saying all the time: 'Unworthy hand'.
Did
You Know?
In
1558 Mary believed that she was pregnant, although Philip
had long before gone back to Spain. In fact, the
swelling was terminal cancer.
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