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against theft of household items, even furniture, indicating that such theft was commonplace. It attempted to expel "rascals and vagabonds" and replace them with "servants honest in gesture and behaviour". To maintain the moral standard, the
Ordinance prescribed creation of a perfectly transparent environment, devoid of private places, where every person would be always watched and evaluated. Pincombe and Shrank noted that the duality of imaginary order and real-life disorder evident in the Ordinance is also present in contemporary literature like the
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court. According to the Eltham
Ordinance, the court council should have been reduced in size to a compact, working council that could accompany the King during his travels. There would have been twenty permanent council members, "the most important officers of the realm", who would meet the King daily at his dining chamber. They would have been free from private affairs and capable of giving attention to all the important issues of the government.
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The
Ordinance began with a statement that during Henry's absence from the Court in London the latter "hath been greatly hindered and in manner subverted, which by little and little is now come more and more unto an indirect course far from good constitutions of old times..." "rascals and vagabonds
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Wolsey jealously watched the rising influence of Henry's courtiers. By around 1518 he himself amassed enough influence to control the access of lay courtiers to the king but the Privy chamber and the King's council remained a formidable obstacle. In 1526 Wolsey settled for a radical reform of the
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in scale and ambition". The lists of household items regulated by the
Ordinance (like candle wax) provide the historians an insight into what was deemed expensive or rare. These items, now considered ordinary, formed the "spatial decorum" of the court. The Ordinance was filled with precautions
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The
Ordinance was presented as a serious attempt to reform the court, continuing the household reform of 1525, and formulated as a detailed set of rules regulating the life of the court. Pincombe and Shrank wrote that the degree of regulation, down to "the management of spent candles", was
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now spread and remaining and being in all the court..." Pincombe and Shrank wrote that the excuse of Henry's absence "was nothing more than a convenient fiction". The primary aim declared in the
Ordinance was quite practical: to limit the expenses of the court, especially on the move.
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was another consideration. However, the actual financial standing of the government and the degree of the need to control expenses remain uncertain.
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Wolsey's plan as a whole, however, "did not leave the drawing board". In 1527 he failed to secure annulment of the marriage between Henry and Queen
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formed the inner permanent
Council attendant to Henry, of which no less than two persons accompanied the King at all times. Wolsey's opponents
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Wolsey managed to steer the new council to judiciary issues and away from foreign relations, thus completing the formation of the
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and fell out of favour. By 1529 he was stripped of his court office and property. After his death the plan was resurrected by
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330:(Volume 1 of Studies in Tudor and Stuart Politics and Government: Papers and Reviews). Cambridge University Press.
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where Wolsey devised his plan. The
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379:(Volume 15 of Blackwell companions to British history). Wiley-Blackwell.
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Studies in Tudor and Stuart
Politics and Government: Tudor politics
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Unrealised proposals put forward by
Cardinal Thomas Wolsey
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The reign of Henry VIII: politics, policy, and piety
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373:Tittler, Robert; Jones, Norman Leslie (2004).
34:of January 1526 was the failed reform of the
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360:The Oxford Handbook of Tudor Literature
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358:Pincombe, Mary; Shrank, Cathy (2009).
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250:Pincombe, Shrank p. 171.
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322:Elton, Geoffrey Rudolph
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347:. Palgrave Macmillan.
170:Cromwellian Ordinances
282:Tittler, Jones p. 62.
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222:Tittler, Jones p. 34.
18:Ordinances of Eltham
300:MacCullough, p. 26.
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130:Sir William Compton
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134:Groom of the Stool
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126:Thomas More
447:Henry VIII
431:Categories
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316:References
156:Denouement
114:John Clerk
62:Background
40:Henry VIII
162:Catherine
112:. Bishop
38:court of
394:(2002).
324:(2003).
176:See also
168:in the
116:, Dean
94:utopian
87:Content
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