British Museum, list of Marian Martyrs
The English campaign uniquely held its hearings in public
Both the Inquisition and the English campaign under Philip and Mary tried not to burn people. Compromises were sought, multiple times, and in the case of Philip and Mary royal pardons offered. So why did the numbers keep mounting?
The one thing that made the English campaign against heresy in the 1550s different from everywhere else was that its hearings were in public. That looked right, fair and just to the lawyers, councillors, Mary and Philip.
But for many ordinary folk, confused and frightened, watching well-known preachers openly refuse pardons and compromises, it exposed them to the public shame of seeming to abandon their beliefs.
It looks as though many who might privately have agreed to the compromises they were offered, felt publicly compelled to go through with making a stand, even to being burned at the stake.
And this may also perhaps help explain why so many, having already accepted a compromise and gone home, within a few weeks disposed of their property, and openly began to court arrest and execution.
Perhaps the shame of having publicly seemed to disown their long-proclaimed beliefs was too much. If only the English had listened to the more experienced Spanish from the start, the numbers of poor folk who went to the stake just might have been far lower, as it was in other places in Europe.
In the unforgiving light of public hearings the illiterate poor insisted on standing up for their beliefs, often in very old heresies they had practised hidden in the marshy valleys and inaccessible woodlands for generations.
Historian Thomas Freeman has described the result as ‘unanticipated and unforeseeable’ and we should agree. We should add that it was utterly, unspeakably tragic.
Episode 05 - It was mainly the poor who burned



|