Anglicans (Episcopal Church of England)
Ideology | Active
1536 CE to 2057 CE
Anglicanism is a tradition within Christianity comprising churches with historical connections to the Church of England or similar beliefs, worship and church structures.
The word Anglican originates in ecclesia anglicana, a medieval Latin phrase dating to at least 1246 meaning the English Church.
Adherents of Anglicanism are called Anglicans.
The great majority of Anglicans are members of churches which are part of the international Anglican Communion.
There are, however, a number of churches outside of the Anglican Communion which also consider themselves to be in the Anglican tradition, most notably those referred to as Continuing Anglican churches.
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East Melanesia (820–1971 CE): Interactions, Colonization, and Independence
Political and Military Developments
Chiefdoms and Inter-Island Alliances
From 820 CE onward, East Melanesia experienced significant growth of complex chiefdoms, notably in Fiji, Vanuatu, and the eastern Solomon Islands. These chiefdoms formed intricate networks of alliances and rivalries, reflecting advanced political organization and military strategies.
European Contact and Colonization
European explorers, beginning in the 17th century, profoundly impacted East Melanesia. Initial exploration was followed by colonization, particularly by British and French powers. New Caledonia became a French colony in 1853, while Fiji was ceded to Britain in 1874, and Vanuatu was jointly administered by Britain and France from 1906 as the New Hebrides Condominium.
Road to Independence
During the 20th century, nationalist movements intensified across East Melanesia. Fiji gained independence in 1970, and later Vanuatu in 1980, highlighting significant shifts towards self-governance and regional sovereignty.
Economic and Technological Developments
Agricultural Innovation and Trade
Agricultural techniques continued evolving, with innovations in crop diversification, cultivation methods, and trade expansion. Copra (dried coconut meat), sandalwood, and sugar became significant economic commodities, fostering regional and global trade.
Technological Integration and Modernization
European colonization introduced new technologies, including metal tools, firearms, and improved shipbuilding techniques. These advancements altered economic practices, transportation, and military dynamics within the region.
Cultural and Artistic Developments
Syncretism and Cultural Adaptation
Cultural traditions adapted and syncretized indigenous Melanesian practices with European influences. Artistic expression, including traditional carvings, dances, and music, incorporated external elements, reflecting evolving cultural identities.
Preservation of Indigenous Traditions
Despite colonial pressures, many indigenous cultural traditions were preserved and revitalized. Ceremonial practices, storytelling, and traditional knowledge systems remained critical components of community cohesion and identity.
Social and Religious Developments
Impact of Christianity
Missionary activities beginning in the 19th century profoundly reshaped religious landscapes, introducing Christianity widely throughout East Melanesia. This led to the blending of indigenous religious practices with Christian doctrines.
Social Changes and Community Structures
Colonialism significantly influenced social structures, introducing Western legal systems, education, and governance models. Nevertheless, traditional community organization, chiefly hierarchies, and kinship networks continued playing vital roles.
Long-Term Consequences and Historical Significance
From 820 to 1971 CE, East Melanesia underwent transformative changes through internal dynamics, external influences, and colonization. The resulting synthesis of traditional and introduced elements profoundly shaped contemporary political structures, economic foundations, cultural identities, and social systems, laying critical groundwork for the post-colonial era.
Northwest Europe (1396–1539 CE): North Sea Commons, Island Kingdoms, and Tudor Beginnings
Geographic & Environmental Context
The subregion of Northwest Europe includes the British–Irish archipelago, Iceland and the Faroes, and the ocean-facing rims of western Norway and western Denmark. Anchors span the North Atlantic fisheries (Iceland, Faroes, Shetland–Orkney), the North Sea littoral (Jutland, Yorkshire–East Anglia, Firths of Forth and Clyde), the Irish Sea and Channel approaches, and inland cores such as the Thames–Severn lowlands, Scottish Highlands/Islands, and Irish midlands. River corridors (Thames, Severn, Humber), firths, and sounds tied agrarian interiors to maritime trade, while the Norwegian fjords and Jutland bights faced wind-heavy seas.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
The Little Ice Age sharpened cold and storminess:
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North Atlantic fringe (Iceland, Faroes, west Norway): longer sea-ice seasons and harsher gales; erratic cod/herring runs shaped fishing booms and busts.
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Britain & Ireland: cooler winters, wet summers in some decades; harvest failures recurred locally; severe storms and surges disrupted coasts.
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Jutland & North Sea: shifting bars and storm surges altered havens; dunes advanced on exposed shores.
Despite volatility, fisheries and mixed husbandry buffered many communities.
Subsistence & Settlement
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Lowland farms (England, eastern Ireland, Jutland): wheat, rye, barley, oats; cattle, sheep, and dairying; open-field systems persisted in much of England, while enclosed demesnes and pastures spread unevenly.
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Uplands & isles (Scotland, Wales, west Ireland, Norway): oats, barley, stock-rearing, and transhumant dairying; peat fuel; kelp and shore-gathering in island economies.
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Iceland & Faroes: subsistence grain marginal; livelihoods centered on cod, dried fish, seabirds, sheep, and trade with Bergen–Hanse merchants.
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Towns & ports: London (Thames) surged as a staple market; York, Bristol, Dublin, Cork, Edinburgh/Leith, Aberdeen, Bergen, and Aalborg tied hinterlands to sea lanes.
Technology & Material Culture
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Maritime craft: clinker-built hulks and cogs gave way to round-hulled naos and early caravels; North Sea sailing rigs adapted to shoals and tides; Icelandic and Norse open boats remained crucial.
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Arms & fortification: English longbow remained decisive into the mid-15th century; early handguns and field guns appeared; castles evolved toward gun-forts and, in Scotland/Ireland, tower houses.
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Print & craft: William Caxton introduced printing to England (1476); cloth finishing (East Anglia, Yorkshire), tin/lead (Cornwall), and shipwrighting expanded.
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Architecture & art: Perpendicular Gothic in England; late medieval parish art in Ireland; stave-church legacies and stone churches in west Norway; bardic manuscripts in Gaelic lands; saga copying continued in Icelandic scriptoria.
Movement & Interaction Corridors
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North Sea/Irish Sea lanes: carried wool, cloth, salt fish (herring, cod), wine, salt, and iron; London, Hull, and east-coast ports linked to Hanseatic towns and Bergen’s fish market.
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Atlantic ventures: Bristol merchants probed western waters; John Cabot’s voyage (1497) opened English awareness of Newfoundland’s cod banks.
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Fjord & Jutland coasts: Bergen–Hanse convoy cycles and Jutland’s cattle/grain exports sustained Norway–Denmark’s Atlantic rim.
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Isles networks: Birlinn and galley traffic knit Hebrides, Islay, Kintyre, Man, and Ulster; inter-island lordships balanced sea power and kin ties.
Cultural & Symbolic Expressions
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Monarchy & law: English common law courts stabilized after civil war; Scottish kings balanced Highland/Lowland blocs; Gaelic lordships in Ireland maintained Brehon law and bardic patronage alongside the English Pale.
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Language & letters: Middle English matured into Tudor English; Scots literature flourished (Dunbar, Henryson); Gaelic poetry remained courtly and genealogical; Icelandic annals and sagas preserved memory.
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Devotion & reform: Late medieval piety—guild altars, pilgrimages (St. Andrews, Walsingham, St. David’s)—coexisted with early humanism; by the 1530s, England’s break with Rome began to reorder ritual and property.
Environmental Adaptation & Resilience
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Mixed portfolios: grain–livestock rotations, dairying, and woodland management hedged climatic risk; parish granaries and seigneurial stores mitigated famine.
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Fisheries & curing: salt fish, stockfish, and barrelled herring stabilized caloric intake and trade; salt-pan and coopers’ crafts were critical.
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Field systems & enclosure: commons and open fields balanced with piecemeal enclosure to protect flocks and improve yields; drainage in fens and dike work on exposed coasts guarded arable.
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Island adaptations: peat, driftwood, and turf for fuel; drying sheds and fish lofts; seasonal transhumance to shielings.
Technology & Power Shifts (Conflict Dynamics)
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Hundred Years’ War (to 1453): English chevauchées faded after Joan of Arc’s campaigns (1429); defeat at Castillon (1453) ended English rule in France, redirecting power struggles homeward.
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Wars of the Roses (1455–1487): Yorkist–Lancastrian civil war saw set-piece battles—Towton (1461), Tewkesbury (1471)—culminating in Tudor victory at Bosworth Field (1485); Henry VII stabilized crown finances and order.
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Anglo-Scottish warpoints: Border raids persisted; Scotland’s defeat at Flodden (1513) killed James IV, reshaping regency politics.
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Ireland: Tudor authority remained thin beyond the Pale; Gaelic confederacies and earldoms contested royal initiatives; intermittent wars foreshadowed later Tudor conquest.
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Scandinavia: Denmark–Norway ruled the Atlantic rim; Bergen’s Hanse links endured; the Count’s Feud (1534–1536) in Denmark–Norway (closing years of this age) ushered in the Lutheran Reformation and tighter royal control.
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Sea conflict: Privateering and piracy flickered in the Channel and North Sea; naval gunnery began to matter in convoy defense.
Transition
By 1539 CE, Northwest Europe had shifted from external continental wars to internal consolidation and oceanic horizons. England emerged under the Tudors with an embryonic navy and a royal church; Scotland balanced Franco-Scottish ties after Flodden; Ireland’s patchwork lordships and the Pale foreshadowed Tudor campaigns; Denmark–Norway steered the North Atlantic trades toward Lutheran monarchy; Iceland and the Faroes remained fishing outposts within this orbit. Fisheries, wool–cloth trades, and mixed husbandry underwrote resilience in a stormier climate, while printing and court centralization set the stage for later religious and imperial transformations.
Their marriage is declared invalid, making Mary an illegitimate child.
Henry marries Anne Boleyn in secret in January 1533, just as his divorce from Catherine is finalized.
After this, they have a second, public wedding.
Anne soon becomes pregnant and may have already been when they wed, but on September 7, 1533, she gives birth to a daughter, Elizabeth.
The king is devastated at his failure to obtain a son after all the effort it had taken to remarry.
Gradually, he comes to develop a disliking of his new queen for her strange behavior.
In 1536, when Anne is pregnant again, Henry is badly injured in a jousting accident.
Shaken by this, the queen gives birth prematurely to a stillborn boy.
By now, the king is convinced that his marriage is hexed, and having already found a new queen, Jane Seymour, he puts Anne in the Tower of London on charges of witchcraft.
She is afterward beheaded along with five men (her brother included) accused of adultery with her.
The marriage is now declared invalid, so that Elizabeth, just like her half sister, becomes a bastard.
On October 12, 1537, she gives birth to a healthy boy, Edward, which is greeted with huge celebrations.
The king's quest for a son is finally over, so long as Edward can be kept healthy.
However, the queen dies of puerperal sepsis ten days later.
Henry genuinely mourns her death, and at his own passing nine years later, will be buried next to her.
The king becomes increasingly nervous about the possibility of his daughter Mary inheriting the throne, as England's one experience with a female sovereign, Matilda in the twelfth century, had been a catastrophe.
He eventually decides that it is necessary to divorce Catherine and find a new queen.
The Church will not simply grant this favor, so Henry cites the passage in the Book of Leviticus where it says, "If a man taketh his brother's wife, he hath committed adultery; they shall be childless."
However, Catherine insists that she and Arthur had never consummated their brief marriage and that the prohibition does not apply here.
The timing of Henry's case is very unfortunate; it is 1527 and the Pope has been taken prisoner by the emperor Charles V, Catherine's nephew and the most powerful man in Europe, for siding with his archenemy Francis I of France.
As there is no possibility of getting a divorce in these circumstances, Henry decides to simply secede from the Church, in what becomes known as the English Reformation.
The newly established Church of England amounts to little more than the existing Catholic Church, but with the king rather than the Pope as its head.
It will take a number of years for the separation from Rome to be completed, however, and many will be executed for resisting the king's religious policies.
Indonesians hold virtually exclusive control of the spice trade, and decisive power in the extensive exchange of luxury and bulk goods that accompanies it, until the challenge of direct traders from Europe (first the Portuguese and Spanish at the beginning of the sixteenth century, then the Dutch, English, and others at the end of it) and renewed interest from the Chinese (after the Ming government relaxed prohibitions on private overseas trade in the mid-sixteenth century).
Over a period of about two hundred and fifty years, however, they will gradually lose their commercial primacy and, in some cases, much of their political independence.
This crucial process is far too complex to be understood simply as a struggle between East and West, or Christianity and Islam, or "modern" and "traditional" technology.
Europeans not only war vigorously among themselves, but they routinely ally themselves with local powers, many of them Muslim, and become participants in local rivalries; they also frequently find that their weaponry does not give them obvious superiority over indigenous powers, who purchase both light and heavy firearms and sometimes, as in Java well into the eighteenth century, are able to manufacture serviceable copies of European models.
Europeans find their position fluctuates as a result of a multitude of factors, some of them well beyond their control.
Northwest Europe (1540–1683 CE): Religious Turmoil, Colonial Expansion, and Political Transformation
Religious Turmoil and Conflicts
Between 1540 and 1683 CE, Northwest Europe was profoundly shaped by religious upheavals stemming from the Reformation. England experienced significant turbulence under Edward VI, Mary I, and Elizabeth I. Mary's Catholic restoration saw persecution of Protestants, earning her the title "Bloody Mary," marked notably by the burning of two hundred and seventy-four Protestants. Elizabeth I's moderate Anglican settlement established relative stability but intensified tensions with Catholic Spain, climaxing in the defeat of the Spanish Armada (1588). Scotland faced similar religious strife, culminating in the establishment of Presbyterianism under the influence of John Knox. Denmark became officially Lutheran around 1550 under King Christian III, solidifying Lutheranism's dominance throughout Scandinavia.
The English Civil War and Revolution
Political and religious tensions erupted in the English Civil War (1642–1651) between Royalists (Cavaliers) and Parliamentarians (Roundheads), ending with the execution of King Charles I and the establishment of a brief republican Commonwealth under Oliver Cromwell. Cromwell's subsequent military campaigns in Ireland (1649–1653) resulted in catastrophic losses, significantly reshaping Irish society. The monarchy was restored under Charles II in 1660, followed by political and religious instability under James II, culminating in the peaceful Glorious Revolution (1688), solidifying parliamentary authority and Protestant ascendancy.
Ireland: Conflict and Colonization
English colonization intensified significantly, notably through the Plantation of Ulster (1609) and the Tudor conquest initiated by Henry VIII's re-creation of the title King of Ireland in 1542. Irish resistance culminated in the Nine Years' War (1593–1603) and the consequential Flight of the Earls (1607). The Wars of the Three Kingdoms, particularly Cromwell’s conquest, inflicted severe demographic losses, including approximately two hundred thousand civilian deaths from famine, disease, and conflict-related displacement, and the forced indenture of fifty thousand to the West Indies.
Scottish Union and Cultural Renaissance
Scotland underwent significant religious and political upheaval leading to the Union of the Crowns (1603) under James VI of Scotland (later James I of England). Cultural and educational achievements flourished during the Scottish Renaissance, significantly enhancing Scottish literary and intellectual contributions.
Economic Expansion and Colonial Ventures
Economic transformations accelerated through colonial expansion, highlighted by English settlements such as Jamestown (1607) in North America, initiating extensive colonial activity. English immigration, particularly indentured servants, became prominent, with approximately seventy percent of arrivals between 1630–1660 as indentured labor. Trading companies, notably the East India Company (1600) and the Dutch East India Company (VOC, 1602), expanded global commerce, with London, Amsterdam, and Bristol emerging as key international trade hubs.
Scientific Revolution and Intellectual Growth
The era witnessed significant scientific breakthroughs and intellectual advancements. Figures like Francis Bacon, Robert Boyle, and Isaac Newton revolutionized natural philosophy, laying foundations for modern science. Institutions such as the Royal Society (1660) systematically promoted scientific inquiry and innovation.
Cultural Flourishing and Artistic Achievements
Cultural developments flourished significantly during this period. England’s literary scene was dominated by figures like William Shakespeare, contributing profoundly to drama and literature during the Elizabethan era, a period often regarded as England's golden age. Artistic accomplishments, notably by Dutch Golden Age painters like Rembrandt van Rijn and Johannes Vermeer, significantly influenced European art.
Norse Territories and Scandinavian Shifts
Iceland, under Danish-Norwegian control, formally adopted Lutheranism by 1550 following the execution of Catholic Bishop Jón Arason. The island continued facing severe economic and climatic challenges, significantly affecting societal structures and stability.
Environmental Challenges and the Little Ice Age
The Little Ice Age continued to exert considerable environmental pressures, severely impacting agricultural productivity across Northwest Europe. Societies adapted by diversifying economies, enhancing trade networks, and developing technological innovations to mitigate these stresses.
Social Unrest and Economic Pressures
Socio-economic disparities intensified, exacerbating rural and urban tensions, leading to frequent local uprisings and unrest. Economic shifts, agricultural crises, and urbanization pressures contributed significantly to social instability, prompting governmental interventions and reforms.
Legacy of the Age
By 1683 CE, Northwest Europe had experienced profound religious conflicts, political transformations, economic expansions, and cultural achievements. These dynamic developments deeply influenced regional identities, governance structures, economic conditions, and cultural traditions, firmly establishing frameworks that shaped modern Europe.
He also hopes to obtain another son in case something should happen to Edward.
Anne proves a dull, unattractive woman and Henry declines to consummate the marriage.
He quickly divorces her, and she remains in England as a kind of adopted sister to him.
So he marries again, to a nineteen-year-old named Catherine Howard, but when it becomes known that she was neither a virgin at the wedding, nor a faithful wife afterwards, she ends up on the scaffold and the marriage declared invalid.
His sixth and last marriage is to Catherine Parr, more a nursemaid to him than anything else, as his health is failing (it had declined ever since the jousting accident in 1536).
The war nets England the city of Boulogne, but nothing else, and the French retake it in 1549.
Scotland also declares war and at Solway Moss is once again totally defeated.
Henry's paranoia and suspicion worsen in his last years.
The total number of executions during his thirty-eight-year reign numbers in the tens of thousands.
He dies in January 1547 at the age of fifty-five and is succeeded by his son, Edward VI.
Northumberland makes plans to place Lady Jane Grey on the throne and marry her to his son, so that he can remain the power behind the throne.
His plot fails in a matter of days, Jane Grey is beheaded, and Mary I (1516–1558) takes the throne amidst popular demonstration in her favor in London, which contemporaries describe as the largest show of affection for a Tudor monarch.
Mary had never been expected to hold the throne, at least not since Edward was born.
She is a devoted Catholic who believes that she can turn the clock back to 1516, before the Reformation began.