Timeline of the English Reformation
Appearance
This is a timeline of the Protestant Reformation in England.
Date | Event | Significance to the Reformation in England | |
---|---|---|---|
c. 1328 | Birth of John Wycliffe | Ordained in September 1351, Master of Balliol College in 1360, Warden of Canterbury College in 1365 and Rector of St Mary's, Lutterworth from 1374, John Wycliffe is earliest known teacher of evangelical ideas in England and a translator of the Bible into the vernacular Middle English. He is popularly known as the morning star or stella matutina of the English Reformation and both he and his followers (the Lollards) were much invoked by later reformers. Most notably they are a key topic of Foxes Book of Martyrs and their story did much to solidify the self understanding of the 16th century reformers. | |
1374 | Wycliffe returned from Bruges with a new reforming outlook and soon published works such as De civili dominio (1377), De veritate sacrae scripturae (1378), De Eucharistia (1379), and many other texts criticising church property, clerical corruption, sacraments, and the infidelity of the church to scripture. | Earliest public declarations of positions that would become central to later reformers. His writings also radicalise many students and "poor preachers" outside the university who came into contact with his ideas (Lollards). | |
1381, 30 May | Peasants' Revolt begins. | Originating from dissatisfaction with taxes and rigid class hierarchy this rebellion did much to spread Wycliffite and more general Lollard thought among the ordinary population. | |
1381, 13 June | John Ball preached his famous Blackheath sermon during the Peasants Revolt. | John Ball’s career suggests that Wycliffe was merely the first man of rank in the university to express more widespread discontent. | |
1382, May 21 | Earthquake Synod at Blackfriars, London condemns Wycliffe’s teachings | ||
1382, 17 November | Anti-Wycliffe Synod at Oxford | Wycliffe defiantly reasserts his positions in a famous oration and is exiled to his Rectory at Lutterworth | |
c. 1383 | Philip Repyngdon is deprived of his position at Oxford for defending Wycliffe’s teachings. | Repyngdon was later made Abbot of Leicester in 1394 and Bishop of Lincoln in 1404 and was elavated to the rank of Cardinal. This shows that Wycliffe’s thought had a wide influence even in the church hierarchy. | |
1384 | Wycliffe's Bible probably completed around this time. Wycliffe also dies this year on on Holy Innocents' Day (28 December) | Earliest complete translation of the Latin Vulgate into English. | |
1395 | Twelve Conclusions of the Lollards presented to Parliament and posted on the doors of Westminster Abbey and Old St Paul's | ||
1414, 9 January | Oldcastle Revolt | Small popular uprising inspired by Lollard ideals. | |
1414, 30 April | Fire and Faggot Parliament. Symbolically the Parliament was held at Leicester, a stronghold of Lollardy. | The Parliament which passed the Suppression of Heresy Act in response to Lollardy. This act was used to justify the burning of many Lollards and many more radical reformers during the reign of Henry VIII. It was one of the acts restored by Mary I’s Revival of the Heresy Acts. | |
1496 | Catherine of Aragon's hand secured for Arthur, Prince of Wales, son of Henry VII | Brought Catherine of Aragon to England. | |
1499-1500 | First visit of Erasmus to England | The Renaissance Humanist scholar Erasmus was a key inspiration for many reformers and, while remaining a faithful Roman Catholic, articulated many of the criticisms of the Pre-Reformation Church that they shared. Notably he visits Oxford and Cambridge Universities where his ideas spread. | |
1501, October | Arthur marries Catherine | ||
1502, April | Arthur dies of tuberculosis | ||
1503 | Henry VII's wife dies; considers taking Catherine, but decides to pass her to his son Henry VIII | ||
1504 | Pope Julius II confirms the marriage between Catherine and Henry | ||
11 June 1509 | Henry VIII marries Catherine | ||
1514, December | A boy born to Catherine; dies 6 weeks later | ||
18 February 1516 | Princess Mary born | ||
31 October 1517 | Martin Luther posts his 95 Theses on the door of a church in Wittenberg, Germany, formally beginning the Protestant Reformation | ||
1521 | Pope Leo X rewards Henry VIII for his publication of Assertio Septem Sacramentorum, an attack on reformed theology, by granting him the title Fidei Defensor or "Defender of the Faith" | The publication of this intensely orthodox work constrains Henry’s commitment to reformation in the years ahead. | |
1524, May | William Tyndale expelled from the Catholic Church | ||
1525 | Cardinal Wolsey suppresses 29 monasteries aided by Thomas Cromwell | Provides a precedent for the later more widespread Dissolution of the Monasteries. | |
1525 | The New Testament of the Tyndale Bible (in English) is published in Worms, Germany. | Although banned in England, Tyndale's work heavily influenced subsequent approved Bible translations. | |
1525, 24 December | Robert Barnes O.E.S.A. Prior of Cambridge Austin Friars, preached what is considered the first evangelical sermon in England at Midnight Mass in the Church of St Edward King and Martyr, Cambridge. | First open deed of the growing Protestant movement at Cambridge University that would shape Thomas Cranmer, Hugh Latimer, Nicholas Ridley, John Hooper and other English Protestant reformers. | |
1527 | Henry VIII sure of intentions to divorce Catherine | ||
1527, May | Catherine appeals to Rome | ||
1529, June | Court opens in England for divorce case | ||
1529, August | Peace of Cambrai | ||
9 August 1529 | Writs for new parliament; Thomas Wolsey removed as Lord Chancellor | ||
9 October 1529 | Wolsey charged on Praemunire | ||
1530, April | Wolsey returns to his see at York | ||
1530, Summer | Writs of Praemunire against 15 clergy | ||
1530, November | Wolsey dies on his journey back to London and the Tower | ||
1530 | Cromwell part of the King's council's inner ring | ||
1531 | Henry makes claims to imperial title | ||
1531 | Henry extends protection to clergymen denying papal supremacy | ||
1532 | Duke of Norfolk and Duke of Suffolk fall out of favour | ||
1532, March | Supplication against the Ordinaries | ||
1532, March | Act in Conditional Restraint of Appeals | ||
1532, May | Submission of the Clergy | ||
16 May 1532 | Thomas More resigns as Lord Chancellor of England | ||
1532, December | Anne Boleyn becomes pregnant | ||
1533, January | Thomas Cranmer appointed Archbishop of Canterbury | ||
1533, 25 January | Henry VIII marries Anne Boleyn at Whitehall [1] | ||
1533, March | Statute in Restraint of Appeals | ||
1533, May | Cranmer annuls Henry's marriage to Catherine of Aragon | ||
1533, 4 July | John Frith burned at the stake | ||
1533, September | Princess Elizabeth born | ||
1534 | Henry begins negotiations with Paul III | ||
1534, January to March | Act Concerning Ecclesiastical Appointments and Absolute Restraint of Annates, Act Concerning Peter's Pence and Dispensations, Act of Succession | ||
1534, March | Clement VII pronounces marriage valid | ||
1534, April | Elizabeth Barton ('Nun of Kent') executed | ||
1534, November | First Act of Supremacy, Treason Act, Act of First Fruits and Tenths | These acts clearly establish the principle of Royal Supremacy and the end of Papal supremacy in the Church of England | |
1535 | Henry adds "of the Church of England in Earth, under Jesus Christ, Supreme Head" to his royal style. Henry proclaims himself, not the Pope, to be the head of the Church of England | ||
1535 | Bishop Gardiner's De Vera Obedientia published | ||
1535 | The Coverdale Bible, compiled by Myles Coverdale published in Antwerp. | The first complete Modern English translation of the Bible (not just the Old Testament or New Testament), and the first complete printed translation into English. Coverdale's translation of the Psalms was adopted by Cranmer for the 1549 Book of Common Prayer and remained for centuries the translation of the psalter prescribed for liturgical use in the Anglican church. | |
1535 | Cranmer appoints Hugh Latimer, Edward Foxe, Nicholas Shaxton to episcopacy | ||
1535, May | Humphrey Middlemore, William Exmew, and Sebastian Newdigate, all Carthusian monks of the London Charterhouse, locked up for seventeen days. Ten more starve | ||
1535, 22 June | John Fisher executed | ||
1535, 6 July | Thomas More executed | ||
1536, January | Anne miscarries again | ||
1536, 16 April | Royal Assent given to the First Suppression of Religious Houses Act | Initiated the first round of the Dissolution of the Monasteries | |
1536, April | 'Reformation parliament' dissolved | ||
19 May 1536 | Anne Boleyn is executed | ||
1536, July | Ten Articles adopted | This was the first formulation of the doctrine of the Church of England after the separation from Rome. Affirmed Transubstantiation, prayers for the dead, the intercession of the saints, and justification by both faith and works. | |
1536, 18 July | Act Extinguishing the Authority of the Bishop of Rome passed | Reaffirmed the end of Papal Supremacy first expressed by the Act of Supremacy | |
1536, 1 October | Pilgrimage of Grace, Phase One | ||
1536, 4 October | Pilgrimage of Grace led by 18 members of the gentry | ||
1536, 13 October | York taken by 10,000 'pilgrims' | ||
1536, 8 December | Duke of Norfolk offers pardon to rebels | ||
1537 | Bishops' Book published, John Rogers produces the Matthew Bible | ||
1537, January | Bigod's Rebellion, a further phase of the Pilgrimage of Grace, led by Sir Francis Bigod | ||
1537, 12 October | Jane Seymour gives birth to Prince Edward at Hampton Court Palace. | ||
1538 | 'Exeter Conspiracy' | ||
1539, 28 June | Six Articles (1539) | Affirmed traditional doctrine | |
1539, 28 June | Royal Assent given to the Second Suppression of Religious Houses Act | Leads to the second wave of the Dissolution of the Monasteries | |
1539 | Publication of the Great Bible compiled by Miles Coverdale | This is the first English translation of the Bible to be authorised for use in parish churches. | |
1540, 6 January | Henry marries Anne of Cleves | ||
1540, 9 July | Henry's marriage to Anne of Cleves is annulled | ||
1540, 28 July | Thomas Cromwell is beheaded | ||
1540, 30 July | Robert Barnes is burned at the stake | ||
1540, 30 July | Thomas Abel is hanged, drawn and quartered. | ||
1543 | Cranmer is arrested on grounds of heresy, The King's Book is published | ||
1544 | Bishop Gardiner is targeted | ||
1545 | First Dissolution of Colleges Act | First wave of the dissolution of chantries | |
1546, 16 July | Anne Askew burned for heresy. | ||
1546 | 'Creeping to the Cross' added to the list of forbidden practises | ||
1547, 28 January | Henry VIII dies, Edward VI accedes to the throne aged 9 | Henry’s death opened the way for full reformation. He had appointed a Council of Regency dominated by Protestants. | |
1547, August | A visitation of parish churches is undertaken and the Royal Injunctions are implemented. | Rosaries are outlawed along with religious processions | |
1547 | The First Book of Homilies introduced by Thomas Cranmer | ||
1547, December 24th | Second Dissolution of Colleges Act | Second wave of the dissolution of chantries | |
1549 | The First Book of Common Prayer is introduced by Thomas Cranmer and the Act of Uniformity 1549 | This made the Book of Common Prayer the only lawful form of public worship | |
1549 | Putting away of Books and Images Act orders the removal of religious books and the destruction of images in churches | ||
1549, 25 April | Martin Bucer, the German Lutheran reformer arrives in London as a refugee accompanied by the scholar Paul Fagius. Welcomed with honour by Cranmer and Edward VI | ||
1549, June–August | The Prayer Book Rebellion in the West Country against the imposition of the new liturgy, especially amongst Cornish speakers who knew no English | ||
1552 | The Second Book of Common Prayer is introduced by Thomas Cranmer, the use of which is enforced by the Act of Uniformity 1552 | ||
1553, 19 June | Cranmer's Forty-two Articles are made normative for all the English clergy by the Privy Council. | This formulation of doctrine, its first thoroughly reformed formulation, survived as the teaching of the Church of England only a few months. | |
1553, 6 July | Edward VI dies aged 15, leaving the throne to his Protestant cousin, Lady Jane Grey and excluding both his half-sisters in an attempt to secure the continued reformation of the Church of England. | Edward’s death marks the point of most radical reform the Church of England ever experienced until the time of The Interregnum. It resulted in the restoration of full communion with the papacy to the Church under Mary I and the comparatively conservative Elizabethan Settlement when Protestantism was restored under Elizabeth. | |
1553, 19 July | Jane is deposed after the Catholic Princess Mary gathers military and popular support in Suffolk, arriving in London on 3 August | ||
1553, December | First Statute of Repeal nullifies all religious legislation passed under Edward VI | Returned religious policy to the one in place during her father’s reign and undid all Cranmer’s reforms during Edward's short reign. The Book of Common Prayer was banned and parishes were encouraged to resume processions and restore desecrated iconography. | |
1554, 26 January | Start of Wyatt's rebellion in protest at Mary's planned marriage to Prince Philip of Spain | ||
1554, 12 February | Lady Jane Grey is executed | ||
1554, 25 July | Mary marries her cousin Philip, who becomes King of England in a coregency with Mary | ||
1555,
13 November |
Thomas Cranmer officially deprived of the See of Canterbury. | ||
1554, 20 November | Cardinal Reginald Pole returns to England | ||
1554, 30 November | Mary persuades Parliament to request Reginald Pole, the Papal Legate, to seek Papal absolution for England's separation from the Catholic Church. | Signals the beginning of the return of the Church of England to communion with the See of Rome | |
1555, 16 January | Revival of the Heresy Acts restored the death penalty for those that denied the principles of Catholicism. | More than 300 people would be executed during Mary's reign, mostly by burning at the stake, earning her the title of Bloody Mary, even though Queen Elizabeth and King Henry executed many more people during their reigns | |
1555, 16 January | Second Statute of Repeal, also known as the See of Rome Act, removes all religious legislation passed since 1529 | Formally ended the schism, reestablished Papal Supremacy over the Church of England, and returned the nations Dioceses and Parishes to full communion with the rest of the Latin Church. | |
1555, 9 February | Former Bishop of Gloucester John Hooper burned at the stake in Gloucester. | ||
1555, 16 October | Hugh Latimer, former Bishop of Worcester, and Nicholas Ridley, former Bishop of London, were burned at the stake in Oxford. Cranmer was a witness to their deaths. | ||
1556, 21 March | Archbishop Thomas Cranmer burned at the stake in Oxford. | The story of Cranmer’s death and those of all the Protestant martyrs become ideologically very potent in future years thanks to their faithful willingness to suffer and Foxes Book of Martyrs which popularised them. | |
1556, 22 March | Reginald Pole consecrated Archbishop of Canterbury | ||
1558, 17 November | Mary I dies and her half-sister Elizabeth I accedes. Cardinal Pole, Archbishop of Canterbury dies the same day leaving the key clerical position conveniently open for a Protestant replacement. Philip's English title lapses with the death of his wife. | Initiates the Elizabethan reformation, the final end of Roman Catholicism as the state | |
1559, 15 January | Elizabeth is crowned. Because of her Protestant views, only the low-ranking Bishop of Carlisle is willing to officiate | The last Catholic coronation of a British monarch | |
1558-59 | Elizabethan Religious Settlement, a compromise which secured a return to a Reformed Protestantism but allowed some Catholic traditions such as kneeling for Communion and the sign of the cross to continue. | The Elizabethan Settlement finally established the norms of Anglican doctrine around the principle of the via media which, apart from during The Interregnum, has remained the bedrock of the Church of England’s identity ever since. | |
1559, May 8 | Act of Supremacy 1558 confirmed Elizabeth as Head of the Church of England and abolished the authority of the Pope in England. | Final break with the Roman Church | |
1559, May 8 | Act of Uniformity 1558 | Required attendances at church services and introduced the newly revised Book of Common Prayer (1559). | |
1559, 1 August | Matthew Parker appointed Archbishop of Canterbury | The uncertain circumstances of his private consecration gave rise to the Nag's Head Fable popular among recusants. | |
1560 | Geneva Bible published in Switzerland | Published by Sir Rowland Hill. Although never authorised for use in England, it was the first English Bible to be divided into verses and became popular with Dissenters. | |
1568 | Bishops' Bible published | A compromise between the vigorous but Calvinist Geneva Bible and the Great Bible, which it replaces in parish churches. | |
1570, 27 April | Regnans in Excelsis a papal bull declaring Elizabeth a heretic and threatening those who obeyed her laws with excommunication. | ||
1571 | The Thirty-nine Articles of Religion finalised and accepted as the Church of England’s principle doctrinal statement. | The mature theological expression of Elizabethan Settlement. These articles replaced Cranmer’s Forty-two Articles of Religion and were appended to the Book of Common Prayer. Apart from a period during The Interregnum when the articles were replaced with the Westminster Confession this has remained the Church of England’s core statement of faith (aside from the three Ecumenical Creeds) ever since and still plays a fundamental role in Anglican doctrine today. | |
1587, 8 February | Mary, Queen of Scots is executed | ||
1588, 8 August | The Spanish Armada is defeated by the English fleet, aided by high winds | ||
1597 | Irish Rebellion led by Hugh O'Neill, Earl of Tyrone | ||
1603, 11 July | James VI of Scotland crowned King of England | ||
1604, January | Hampton Court Conference | The first major discussion of church policy in the reign of James I. Book of Common Prayer (1604) published and a new Bible translation commissioned, what would become the King James Version | |
1605 | Gunpowder Plot foiled, Guy Fawkes is executed(1606) | ||
1609 | Plantation of Ulster | ||
1611 | King James Bible first published and used throughout the English speaking world. | ||
1625, 27 March | Charles I crowned King of England, Scotland and Ireland. | ||
1641, May | Root and Branch petition set before parliament | A popular call for the abolition of the bishops of the Church of England and the establishment of a presbyterate. | |
1642 | English Civil War breaks out | Issues largely centered on the Church of England's being seen as too Catholic | |
1643 | Westminster Assembly of Divines worked to restructure the Church of England. | This might be called the Puritan Reformation | |
1644 | Directory for Public Worship published by the Westminster Assembly as a replacement to the Book of Common Prayer | ||
1644 | Westminster Confession of Faith published by the Westminster Assembly to replace the Thirty-nine Articles as the Church of England’s doctrinal statement | The most progressively Protestant doctrinal statement in Church of England history. It was overturned as the Church of England’s statement of faith by the 1660 restoration but remains a fundamental text in Reformed Churches, both Presbyterian and Congregationalist, across the world today. In Britain it remains a central text in the Church of Scotland, the established church north of the border, and the United Reformed Church. | |
1645, 10 January | Execution of Archbishop William Laud. | Noted high churchman and figure of hatred for puritans. | |
1646, October | Parliament passes an ordinance abolishing bishops and archbishops in the Church of England | Temporarily replaces the historically Episcopal polity of the Church of England with a Presbyterian polity. In practice, in more radical areas and areas where Royalist loyalties remained strong, this lead to a Congregational polity. | |
1649, 30 January | Execution of Charles I | ||
1660, May | Restoration of King Charles II | ||
1662, 19 May | 1662 Act of Uniformity came into law. | The 1662 Book of Common Prayer came into use and the Thirty-nine Articles of 1570 were restored as the Church of England’s principal confession of faith. This version of the Prayer Book remained the Church of England's only authorised liturgy well into the 20th century. | |
1662 | The Great Ejection | As a result of the Act of Uniformity a great many puritan clergy loyal to the Westminster Confession were ejected from their various livings | |
1688 | The Glorious Revolution |