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Vagrancy, heresy and treason in the 16th century

Vagrancy

was a big concern for the monarchy and Government in the 16th century. ±«Óătvless and unemployed people would roam around the country and were often called vagabonds.

Vagabonds were a mix of ex-soldiers, unemployed farm workers, women, children, old and sick people. Some of the vagrants were fit and able to work, but who decided that a life of crime was easier. These people were often known as sturdy beggars.

Some sturdy beggars engaged in many cons or tricks to steal from people, or to get people to feel sorry for them.

Sturdy beggarCon/Trick
Tom O’BedlamPretended to be insane and followed people around until they gave money.
The Counterfeit CrankPretended to have violent fits and sucked on soap to froth at the mouth.
The Baretop TricksterFemale beggars would flash men in the street and trick them into going with her into a house. There would be a gang of men waiting in the house to rob him.
The ClapperdudgeonCut skin to make it bleed and then cover it with dirty rags. Some children were deliberately mutilated by their parents to get more money from passers-by.
Angler/HookerCarried a long wooden stick and would knock on people’s doors during the day to see what he could steal. He would then return after dark, with a hook attached to the end of the stick. He’d use the stick to steal items through windows which could then be sold.
Sturdy beggarTom O’Bedlam
Con/TrickPretended to be insane and followed people around until they gave money.
Sturdy beggarThe Counterfeit Crank
Con/TrickPretended to have violent fits and sucked on soap to froth at the mouth.
Sturdy beggarThe Baretop Trickster
Con/TrickFemale beggars would flash men in the street and trick them into going with her into a house. There would be a gang of men waiting in the house to rob him.
Sturdy beggarThe Clapperdudgeon
Con/TrickCut skin to make it bleed and then cover it with dirty rags. Some children were deliberately mutilated by their parents to get more money from passers-by.
Sturdy beggarAngler/Hooker
Con/TrickCarried a long wooden stick and would knock on people’s doors during the day to see what he could steal. He would then return after dark, with a hook attached to the end of the stick. He’d use the stick to steal items through windows which could then be sold.

Just being a vagrant was a crime in Tudor times. The authorities believed that people who did not work should be punished for their idleness.

1547 Vagrancy Act

The Vagrancy Act stated that any able-bodied person who had not worked should be with a V, and sold into slavery for two years.

Child vagabonds were forced into service. Other laws said that vagrants should be whipped and sent back to their place of birth.

Over time the authorities began to distinguish between the able-bodied vagrants, who continued to be treated as criminals, and the â€impotent’ or â€deserving’ poor, who were given work or sent to a .

Heresy and treason

is no longer a crime in Britain, but it was a serious crime in Tudor times. Often heresy was linked with , as refusing to follow the state religion was an offence against the state, as well as a religious offence.

What constituted the crime of heresy was different in each reign, depending on the laws passed concerning religion. Mary I, a Catholic, burned 280 people for heresy during her reign. Under Elizabeth I, a Protestant, continuing Catholic traditions became heresy, however she preferred to convict people of treason rather than heresy.

The punishment for heresy was being burned at the stake for men, or beheading for women and nobility. The punishment for treason was being hanged, drawn and quartered. This was also known as a .

Archbishop Cranmer agreed to his Protestant beliefs, but Mary still decided to have him executed. When he was burned at the stake he held out the hand with which he had signed the recantation.

Latimer and Ridley were both Protestant Bishops who helped Edward VI make the country Protestant. Both were executed by Mary I for heresy on 6 October 1555.

Illustration showing a crowd gathered around two men being burned at the stake.
Image caption,
The execution of Latimer and Ridley

Rawlins White

Rawlins White was a poor Protestant fisherman from Cardiff. He refused to recant his Protestant faith after Mary I became queen. White was imprisoned in Chepstow, then Cardiff and was burned at the stake on 30 March 1555 in Cardiff. He was one of only two people in Wales burned by Mary for heresy.

Richard Gwyn

Richard Gwyn was a Catholic teacher who declined to convert to Anglicanism during Elizabeth I's reign. He also refused to attend Anglican Church services. Over a period of several years he was imprisoned, fined and put in the stocks. Along with two other Catholics, John Hughes and Robert Morris, Gwyn was found guilty of high treason in 1583 and was hanged, drawn and quartered.

John Penry

A Puritan preacher, John Penry, used a secret printing press to publish material that was denounced by the Anglican Bishops. He was executed for treason in 1593.

Various Catholic plots against Elizabeth I focused on the claims of Elizabeth’s cousin, Mary Queen of Scots, to the throne. How much Mary herself knew of some of the plots is unclear. However, she was executed by Elizabeth I in 1587 after several years of imprisonment.