Rising of the North

The Rising of the North of 1569, also called the Revolt of the Northern Earls or Northern Rebellion, was an unsuccessful attempt by Catholic nobles from Northern England to depose Queen Elizabeth I of England and replace her with Mary, Queen of Scots.

Rising of the North
DateNovember 9, 1569 โ€“ January 21, 1570
Location
Result

Elizabethan victory

  • Elizabeth's authority strengthened
  • Aristocracy of the North weakened
Belligerents
Scotland Partisans of Mary, Queen of Scots

England Northern English Catholics
England Elizabeth I of England

England English and Welsh Protestants
Scotland Scottish Protestants
Commanders and leaders

Earl of Westmorland
Earl of Northumberland Executed
Countess of Westmorland Countess of Northumberland

Aftermath:
Leonard Dacre
Earl of Sussex
Baron Clinton
Earl of Warwick
Aftermath:
Baron Hunsdon
Strength
4,600 7,000

Background

Elizabeth I succeeded her half-sister Mary I as queen of England in 1558. Elizabeth's accession was disputed due to the questioned legitimacy of the marriage of her parents (Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn), and Elizabeth's own questioned legitimacy due to the Act of Succession 1536. Under Henry VIII and his advisor Thomas Cromwell, power was gradually shifted from regional institutions to royal control. This course was encouraged by Elizabeth's counsellors such as William Cecil and a policy of centralization was the approach favoured by Elizabeth herself at least in regards to the northern border region.

Opponents of Elizabeth looked to Mary, Queen of Scots, the descendant of Henry VIII's sister Margaret. The claims were initially put forward by Mary's father-in-law, King Henry II of France, and Mary upheld them after her return to Scotland in 1561.

Many English Catholics, then a significant portion of the population, supported Mary's claim as a way to restore Roman Catholicism. This position was especially strong in Northern England, where several powerful nobles were Roman Catholics; there had been similar risings against Henry VIII; the Pilgrimage of Grace of 1536 and Bigod's Rebellion of 1537. Supporters of Mary hoped for aid from France (among Scots) and possibly Spain (among English). Mary's position was strengthened by the birth of her son, James, in 1566 but weakened again when she was deposed in July 1567. Following this, she fled to England and at the time of the Rising was in the custody of the Earl of Shrewsbury, on Elizabeth's orders.

Rebellion under Northumberland and Westmorland

Blessed

Thomas Plumtree
Priest, Rector, Chaplain to the Rising of the North
Bornc. 1520
Lincolnshire, England
Died4 January 1570 (aged 49 - 50)
In the marketplace at Durham Castle, Durham, England
Honored inRoman Catholic Church
Beatified29 December 1886 by Pope Leo XIII
Feast4 January, 1 December as one of the Martyrs of Oxford University
AttributesRosary
Brancepeth Castle

The rebellion was led by Charles Neville, 6th Earl of Westmorland, and Thomas Percy, 7th Earl of Northumberland. Seven hundred soldiers assembled at Brancepeth Castle.[1] In November 1569 Westmorland and Northumberland occupied Durham. Thomas Plumtree (see right) celebrated Mass in Durham Cathedral.[2][3] From Durham, the rebels marched south to Bramham Moor, while Elizabeth struggled to raise forces sufficient to confront them. But, hearing of a large force being raised by the Earl of Sussex, the rebels abandoned plans to besiege York, and captured Barnard Castle instead. They proceeded to Clifford Moor, but found little popular support. Sussex marched out from York on 13 December 1569 with 10,000 men against the rebels' 6,000,[4] and was followed by 12,000 men under Baron Clinton. The rebel earls retreated northward and finally dispersed their forces, fleeing into Scotland.

Leonard Dacre's resistance

A questionable role in the rebellion was played by Leonard Dacre, an early sympathiser of Mary. At the outbreak of the rebellion, he travelled to Elizabeth's court at Windsor to claim the heritage of his young nephew, the 5th Baron Dacre. After the latter's untimely death in 1569, this had descended to his sisters, all married to sons of Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk. Dacre returned to Northern England, ostensibly a faithful partisan of Elizabeth, but his intentions remain unclear.

After the retreat of the rebels, he seized Greystoke Castle and fortified his own Naworth Castle, where he gathered 3,000 Cumbrian troops and tried to keep up the appearance of good relations with the Queen. He held out against a siege of the royal army under Baron Hunsdon but then attacked the retreating army at Gelt River. Though Hunsdon was outnumbered, he charged Dacre's foot with his cavalry, killing 300โ€“400 and capturing 200โ€“300 men. Dacre escaped via Scotland to Brussels, where he died in exile.[5]

Reprisals

Some of the rebels escaped into Scotland. Regent Mar wrote that Agnes Gray, Lady Home, had been a busy worker to receive the rebels.[6] Two of the leaders, the Earls of Northumberland and Westmorland, had fled into Scotland. Northumberland was captured by James Douglas, 4th Earl of Morton, and turned over to Elizabeth in 1572, who had him beheaded at York. After having been hidden at Ferniehirst Castle, Westmorland escaped to Flanders, where he died impoverished. His family lost their ancestral homes and his wife, Jane Howard, also fled to the Continent. She lived the rest of her life under house arrest. Her brother, the Duke of Norfolk, was first imprisoned, then pardoned. He was imprisoned again following the Ridolfi plot in 1571 and finally executed in 1572. Norfolk's treason charges included "comforting and relieving of the English rebels that stirred the Rebellion in the North since they have fled out of the realm."[7] Altogether, 600 supporters of Mary were executed, while many others fled into exile.

Queen Elizabeth declared martial law, exacting terrible retribution on the ordinary folk of the Yorkshire Dales, despite the lack of any popular support for the Earls' Rising, with her demand for at least 700 executions. The victims of this purge were, as a contemporary account said "wholly of the meanest sort of people", so that hardly a village escaped the sight of a public hanging.[8]

In 1570, Pope Pius V had tried to aid the rebellion by excommunicating Elizabeth and declaring her deposed in the papal bull Regnans in Excelsis, but the document did not arrive until the rebellion had been suppressed. The bull gave Elizabeth more reason to view Catholics with suspicion. It inspired conspiracies to assassinate her, starting with the Ridolfi plot.

In 1587, Elizabeth brought Mary, Queen of Scots, to trial for treason; she was convicted by the court and executed.

See also

References

  1. Evans, Gareth. "Raby Castle and the Rising of the North", Time Travel - Britain
  2. Butler's Lives of the Saints, Vol 1, P 17
  3. "Lives of the English Martyrs;". archive.org. Retrieved 5 July 2017.
  4. "Protest in Tudor and Stuart times", BBC History
  5. Davidson, Alan. "DACRE, Leonard (by 1533-73), of Naworth, Cumb. and West Harlsey, Yorks". The History of Parliament. Institute of Historical Research. Archived from the original on 26 August 2017. Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  6. William Boyd, Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 4 (Edinburgh, 1905), pp. 701-2.
  7. Cecil, William; Haynes, Samuel (1759). Murdin, William (ed.). A collection of state papers. Vol. 2. London: William Bowyer. p. 178.
  8. "Yorkshire Moors and Dales" Marian Sugden & Ernest Frankl, The Pevensey Press, 1987

Further reading

  • Fletcher, Anthony, and Diarmaid MacCulloch. Tudor rebellions (Routledge, 2015).
  • Kesselring, Krista. The Northern Rebellion of 1569: Faith, Politics and Protest in Elizabethan England (Springer, 2007).
  • Lowers, James K. Mirrors for rebels: a study of polemical literature relating to the Northern Rebellion, 1569 (University of California Press, 1953).
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