Tuesday, 10 March 2026

The Acts of Supremacy: When the Crown Claimed the Church

The Acts of Supremacy: When the Crown Claimed the Church

Today lets discover more about the Acts of Supremacy- the moments when faith, and the crown became entangled.

It all begins with Henry VIII, and a story most are familiar with. By the early 1530s, his marriage to Catherine of Aragon had failed to produce the long-desired surviving son. For a king who had grown up in the shadow of civil war and succession insecurity, this was not just a disappointment. It was seen as a threat to the dynasty. The Wars of the Roses was still fresh in many peoples minds and Henry had been raised to believe that a disputed succession could send the country back into war. He became convinced that his marriage was cursed, and that God was punishing him. It also had a little something to do with wanting to be with Anne Boleyn, who was not willing to give herself to him as only his mistress. Whether she wanted to be queen or was hoping it would convince him to leave her alone, we will never know for sure. 

When Pope Clement VII refused to grant an annulment, to say Henry was frustrated would have been an understatement, he became defiant. This was no small falling out with the church, and became huge. In 1534, Parliament passed the first Act of Supremacy. It declared the king “Supreme Head on Earth of the Church of England.” Faith was hugely important in this time and to go against the church like this was to many-unthinkable. This was not presented as a gift of power, but as a recognition that Henry claimed had always existed. The authority of Rome was rejected. England’s church would answer to its monarch.

The act was not just about theology. It was about control, identity, and sovereignty. The Treasons Act of the same year made it a capital offence to deny the king’s supremacy. Men like Thomas More, who could not accept the break with Rome, were executed. Families were divided. Priests and ordinary believers were forced to choose between conscience and loyalty. Religion, once anchored in centuries of tradition, felt unstable.

The policy did not remain confined to England. In 1537, the Irish Parliament passed its own Act of Supremacy, recognising Henry as head of the Church of Ireland. Acceptance in Ireland was far more fragile and resistant though.
When Henry died, the religious direction of the country changed again. Under his Catholic daughter Mary I of England, the 1534 Act was repealed in 1554. Papal authority was once again restored. For Mary, this was not politic, it was a matter of salvation. She had watched her mother cast aside and her own legitimacy was questioned. To her, returning England to Rome may well have felt like restoring moral order. But her reign persecuted Protestants, and the country became anxious once again.

After Mary’s death in November 1558, her half-sister Elizabeth I inherited a fractured coubtry. In 1559, her Parliament passed a second Act of Supremacy. This time the monarch was styled “Supreme Governor” rather than “Supreme Head.” The wording was deliberate. It softened the objections, particularly among those who were uneasy about a woman claiming to be head of the church. Elizabeth was pragmatic. She did not seek constant persecution, but she demanded outward conformity. An Oath of Supremacy required office-holders to acknowledge her authority over the Church. Refusal could still mean charges of treason.

In Ireland, a further Act of Supremacy came in 1560, mirroring Elizabeth’s settlement. But in practice, religious allegiance across Ireland remained complex.

Over time, royal supremacy became part into the constitutional fabric of England. It was interrupted during the Interregnum in the mid-seventeenth century and restored with the monarchy in 1660. What began as one king’s desperate attempt to secure a male heir had permanently altered the relationship between Crown and Church.

Do you think the Acts of Supremacy were more about faith, fear, or the need for control -and could they ever have unfolded differently?


Image info:
Portrait of Henry VIII  
Artist: After Hans Holbein the Younger
Date: 1540–1547
Collection: Walker Art Gallery

The Fight to Repeal the Corn Laws

The Fight to Repeal the Corn Laws 

I have been learning more about the political movements that shaped Victorian Britain, and today I want to discover more about the Anti-Corn Law League, a campaign that united industrial towns in an effort to change how Britain fed its people.

To understand the League, we have to begin with the Corn Laws themselves. After the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815, Parliament introduced tariffs on imported grain in order to protect British landowners from foreign competition. On paper, this seemed a good idea that would create stability. In reality though, these laws kept the price of bread high. For wealthy landowners, this protection safeguarded their income. But for working families in growing industrial towns, where wages were often insecure, the cost of bread must have felt like a constant worry. Bread was not a luxury, it was survival. During the 1830s economic downturns caused further hardship, and inevitably this created resentment. Many began to believe that the political system favoured the landed elite at the expense of ordinary people.

In 1838, in the industrial city of Manchester, a group of reformers formally established the Anti-Corn Law League. Two of its most prominent leaders were Richard Cobden and John Bright. Both were manufacturers rather than aristocrats. They believed passionately in free trade and argued that removing tariffs on grain would lower food prices, improve living standards, and encourage international cooperation. Cobden in particular framed the campaign as a moral issue. To him, the Corn Laws were not just a misguided policy, they were unjust.

Throughout the late 1830s and early 1840s, it organised public meetings, printed pamphlets and built a brilliant fundraising network. Town halls filled with men and women eager to hear speeches that combined economic argument with morality. 

Opposition was fierce, many landowners and Conservative politicians were worried that repealing the corn laws would undermine agriculture and destabilise rural society and inevitable lower their profits. The Prime Minister, Sir Robert Peel, initially upheld the Corn Laws. But the League’s relentless campaigning put him under mounting pressure. At the same time, Britain faced even wider economic difficulties, including unemployment and unrest. The debate over grain became entwined with anxieties about class, power, and representation.

In 1845, the potato blight in Ireland was hitting hard. The crisis, which would become the Great Famine, forced people to recognise the desperation. Peel came to believe that maintaining restrictions on imported grain in the face of starvation was morally indefensible. His decision to support its repeal split his own party and cost him his leadership. 

In 1846, Parliament finally voted to repeal the Corn Laws. For Cobden, Bright, and their supporters, it was a triumphant moment. 

Do you think the repeal of the Corn Laws was an act of courage, political calculation, or economic necessity-and can those motives ever truly be separated?

Image info:
Meeting of the Anti-Corn Law League in Exeter Hall 
Date: 1846

Who Exactly Were the Plantagenets?

Who Exactly Were the Plantagenets? 

Power, Conflict, and the Weight of a Crown
I have been learning more about medieval England, and today I want to discover more about the Plantagenets.

The story started in the twelfth century, during civil war. England had just been through the chaos of the Anarchy, which was a bitter struggle between King Stephen and the Empress Matilda. Out of this instability came Matilda’s son, Henry of Anjou. In 1154, he became king as Henry II, and with him began what we now call the Plantagenet dynasty.
The name “Plantagenet” comes from Henry’s father, Geoffrey of Anjou, who was said to wear a sprig of broom -planta genista -in his hat. But the family did not use this as a formal surname. It was only later that historians gave them this name. Henry II inherited vast lands in France as well as England. His lands stretched across much of western Europe, creating what historians call the Angevin Empire. 

Henry’s reign brought reform but also conflict. He sought to strengthen royal justice, bringing law courts more firmly under crown control. But his determination to assert authority brought him into disagreement with Thomas Becket, the Archbishop of Canterbury. When Becket was murdered in 1170 by knights who believed they were acting in the king’s name, Henry was left shocked and publicly penitent. 
Richard I, his son is remembered as the Lionheart, and spent much of his reign on crusade and England was often distant to him. The country became a source of funds for his warfare abroad. His brother John, who succeeded him in 1199, struggled to command the same loyalty. John lost most of the family’s French territories and faced growing resentment from his barons. In 1215, he was forced to seal the Magna Carta, a document that sought to limit royal power. For John, this must have felt humiliating.

The thirteenth century saw attempts at recovery and reform. Henry III ruled for over fifty years, but he faced rebellion when barons demanded stronger oversight of government. His son Edward I managed to restore some authority through his military, he conquered Wales and campaigned in Scotland. But even Edward, could not escape resistance. The Plantagenet kings were powerful, but were forced to rely on negotiation as much as force.

By the fourteenth century, tensions were beginning to increase. Edward II’s reign ended in deposition, proving that even kings could be removed. Edward III managed to gain some royal prestige through his victories in the early years of the Hundred Years’ War, giving the nation some pride. But the prolonged war drained resources and caused rivalries. Richard II was determined to assert his authority but he clashed with the powerful nobles and was eventually overthrown in 1399 by Henry Bolingbroke, who became Henry IV. This was the beginning of the Lancastrian line of the Plantagenets.

The fifteenth century was plunged into the Wars of the Roses, a struggle between the houses of Lancaster and York - both Plantagenet lines. Brothers, cousins, and former allies fought for the crown. Edward IV seized power; Richard III’s controversial reign ended at Bosworth in 1485, where he was defeated by Henry Tudor. With that, the Plantagenet era ended.

When we think about the Plantagenets, do we see ruthless ambition -or individuals struggling to hold together a fragile crown in a restless and changing world?

Image info:
Henry II of England

The London Dock Strike of 1889

The London Dock Strike of 1889

I have been learning more about the lives of ordinary working people in Victorian Britain, and today I want to discover more about the London Dock Strike of 1889- a moment when some of the poorest labourers in London stood together and changed how the nation saw them.

By the late nineteenth century, life for London dockworkers was harsh and uncertain. Work was casual, often offered by the day or even the hour. Men would gather at the dock gates every morning, hoping to be given work for the day. Many went home empty-handed. Even those who found work could not rely on steady wages. Pay was low and the conditions were exhausting. Evidence given to Parliament at the time described men arriving at work without boots and without food, so hungry that after earning a few pennies they had to stop to buy something to eat. It is difficult to imagine the strain of living with that constant insecurity-never knowing if you could feed your family tomorrow.

Tensions were already rising among unskilled workers across London. The successful strike of the Bryant and May matchgirls in 1888 and the organisation of gasworkers had shown that even those with little power could unite. 
In August 1889, a dispute happened over “plus” money, which is a bonus paid for unloading ships quickly. When these rates were reduced at the West India Docks, frustration started to grow. On the 14th of August 1889, thousands of dockers stopped work. Their main demand was simple: sixpence an hour- the “dockers’ tanner.”

What makes this strike so remarkable is not only its scale, with around 100,000 men involved, but its discipline. Under men like Ben Tillett, Tom Mann and John Burns, the dockers organised mass processions through London’s streets. People expected there to be disorder. Instead, there was order, restraint, and determination. The middle-classes watched from hotel balconies and reportedly waved handkerchiefs in support. The strikers’ strength challenged the stereotype that the poor were naturally violent or chaotic. 

Relief funds were raised to support families who had no income during the strike. Donations even arrived from Australia. The presence of respected religious figures also shaped public feeling. Cardinal Manning acted as mediator between the dock owners and the men. He was trusted by both sides, and he gave weight to the workers’ cause. 

After weeks of pressure and negotiation, the dock owners finally conceded. The sixpence an hour rate was granted. For the men who had been hungry at the gates only weeks before, the victory must have felt transformative-not just financially, but emotionally. They had proved that unity gave them a voice.

The strike also had lasting consequences. It strengthened the Dock, Wharf, Riverside and General Labourers' Union and became a defining moment in what historians later called “New Unionism” - the organisation of unskilled and poorly paid workers, not just skilled craftsmen. It exposed the urban poverty in Victorian Britain and reshaped how society viewed the working class.

Do you think this strike changed Britain because of the pay victory -or because it changed how ordinary workers were seen and valued?

Image info:
Manifesto of the South Side Central Strike Committee.
Date: 1889
Signed by Ben Tillett , John Burns , Tom Mann , H. H. Champion, James Toomey and three illegible names.

Sunday, 8 March 2026

Music Halls of Victorian Britain: Entertainment, Community, and Escape for Working People

Music Halls of Victorian Britain: Entertainment, Community, and Escape for Working People

I have been learning about the everyday lives of people in the past, and today I want to discover more about music halls in Victorian Britain, they were lively places where entertainment, laughter, and community came together in a rapidly changing world.

In the early nineteenth century, Britain was transforming fast as towns and cities grew during the Industrial Revolution. For many working people, life was just long hours, crowded living conditions, and hard physical labour. Music halls began to flourish from the 1830s and expanded rapidly during the mid-nineteenth century. They stemmed from places like tavern singing rooms and pleasure gardens. At first, these were informal spaces where people gathered to sing, drink, and forget their worries for a while. 

By the 1840s and 1850s, music halls began to develop into more organised venues. Purpose-built halls began to appear in cities like London and Manchester, they offered regular programmes of entertainment. Audiences would sit at small tables, often with food and drink, watching performers on stage while they chatted with friends. Unlike the more formal theatres, music halls felt more relaxed and accessible, and this sense of informality must have made people feel more comfortable.

As the Victorian period evolved so did the music hall entertainment. It became more varied and polished. Performances included comical songs, sentimental ballads, dancing, acrobatics, and comedy sketches. The acts very often got inspiration from everyday life and ordinary people, they poked fun at strict employers, crowded housing, or social expectations. Audiences likely recognised their own lives in these performances.

By the 1860s and 1870s, music halls had become hugely popular and began attracting larger and more diverse audiences. Managers started to introduce more rules and structure to make venues appear respectable, partly to appeal to middle-class visitors who were curious about this popular form of entertainment. Performers also became more professional, and some even gaining celebrity status. 

In the later Victorian years, stars such as Marie Lloyd and Dan Leno became household names, drawing ever larger crowds. 

Music halls also reflected the tensions of Victorian society. While many people absolutely loved them, there were some critics who worried about the drinking, the noise, and the mixing of different social classes. One such movement was the Temperance Movement, who were reformers, religious groups, and campaigners that promoted reduced alcohol consumption or abstinence. Despite these concerns, music halls continued to thrive because they filled an important emotional need, offering joy, escapism, and a sense of community during a time of rapid change.

By the end of the nineteenth century, music halls were firmly established as a central part of British popular culture.  Even as forms of entertainment changed, the spirit of the music hall left a lasting influence on comedy, popular music, and live performance.

Do you think the popularity of music halls shows that people have always needed spaces to escape daily pressures and feel part of a community?


Image info:
The Oxford Music Hall
Date: 1875

When Edward III Turned on His Powerful Regent Roger Mortimer

When Edward III Turned on His Powerful Regent Roger Mortimer


We have been finding out about scandals in history and today I want to learn more about the a dramatic moment in medieval history, the fall of Roger Mortimer.

Roger Mortimer was at one of the most powerful men in England, but his rise to power caused quite a bit of resentment among the nobility. After he helped Queen Isabella to overthrow her husband, King Edward II, in 1326, Mortimer had became the power behind the throne while Edward III was still a teenager. For years, Mortimer effectively ruled the country, he made decisions, granting lands, and rewarding his supporters. He may well have felt justified. To others though, he seemed to just be self-serving, and many people began to worry that he had no intention of ever giving up his control.

Mortimer’s influence grew increasingly unpopular. His accumulation of wealth and titles, including being created Earl of March, had created a great deal of envy and anger among the nobles who had begun to feel pushed aside. Rumours began to spread that he was arrogant and greedy, and his close relationship with Queen Isabella only increased this resentment.  

By 1330, Edward III was at an age where he was ready to take the crown fully. Although he appeared to accept Mortimer’s control, he was in fact secretly gathering a small group of supporters who were loyal to him personally. Mortimer though, was confident in his position, he may not have fully realised just how vulnerable he had become.

8In October 1330, Edward III and his allies planned a coup at Nottingham Castle, they entered the castle through a secret passage with the help of insiders. Mortimer was arrested, and he was reportedly dragged from Queen Isabella’s chambers whilst she made pleas to spare his life.

Mortimer was taken to the Tower of London. He was actually denied a trial by his peers and he was instead condemned by Parliament on a range of charges, including assuming royal authority and enriching himself at the expense of the crown. Edward III was clearly determined to make a clear break from Mortimer. 
On the 29th of November 1330, Roger Mortimer was executed by hanging at Tyburn. Edward III’s then went on to rule in his own right. 

Do you think Roger Mortimer saw himself as a ruler holding the country together, or was he a man who went too far for power?



Image info:
Queen Isabella and her army
Date: 1471-1483

Friday, 6 March 2026

Abelard and Heloise: Love, Scandal, and Tragedy in Medieval Paris

Abelard and Heloise: Love, Scandal, and Tragedy in Medieval Paris

I have been learning more about the stories behind the famous names in history, and today I wanted to find out about the love affair of Abelard and Heloise, a relationship from the twelfth century. 

Peter Abelard was a scholar in Paris. He was known for his intelligence and his confidence. He was admired and sometimes even envied. Around 1115-1117 he met Heloise, the exceptionally well-educated niece of Canon Fulbert, a Paris cathedral cleric. Heloise was unusual for her time, she was highly literate with a love of learning. 

Abelard arranged to stay in Fulbert’s house under the pretence of tutoring Heloise, but their lessons soon turned into something more. Their relationship grew and they even had secret meetings. They were forced to hide their affair because their relationship was not acceptable by the social expectations of the time and the risk of scandal could have destroyed reputations.

For Heloise, the experience must have been thrilling but also scary. The world they lived in was one where reputation was important and could be lost easily. Abelard seemed less worried. Their love letters later reveal a strong emotional bond, showing how much they influenced each other’s thinking and feelings.

Heloise became pregnant and they could no longer hide it. Abelard sent her to stay with his family in Brittany, where she gave birth to a son, named Astrolabe. Abelard proposed marriage, in the hopes of reducing Fulbert’s anger and protect his career, but Heloise refused, worried that marriage would damage his reputation and limit his future. Her reluctance shows us that she was independent and in total love, putting his ambitions before herself.

Eventually, they did marry in secret, but Fulbert felt betrayed when Abelard placed Heloise in a convent for her safety. Believing that Abelard was abandoning her. One night, men who were sent by Fulbert attacked Abelard and castrated him. The violence of this is shocking even now. 

After this, Abelard became a monk, and Heloise took religious vows, eventually becoming abbess of the Paraclete. Altough they were separated by circumstances and their religious commitments, their emotional connection continued. Their letters reveal that their friendship continued. Heloise wrote with honesty about her continuing love and the difficulty of reconciling her emotions with her religious life, while Abelard struggled to balance his regret and his faith.

Their story does not end with a traditional happy ending, but it is powerful because of its honesty. 

When you think about Abelard and Heloise, do you see their story as a tragedy of circumstances, or as a testament to a love that survived despite everything?


Image info:
Abelard and Heloise
Date:1425 -1450 
Collection: Condé Museum

The Acts of Supremacy: When the Crown Claimed the Church

The Acts of Supremacy: When the Crown Claimed the Church Today lets discover more about the Acts of Supremacy- the moments when faith, and t...