The act ruled that all “Lesser monasteries”. (Monasteries with an income of £200 or less) had to be closed. This was then followed by another act which was passed in parliament the “Greater act “of 1536 which specified that all monasteries became the property of the King. As previously stated the Catholic churches and Monasteries pre-reformation had been central to every sphere of society. Therefore, their destruction produced wide reaching consequences to the English landscape and how people lived. These acts had been out by Thomas Cromwell for Henry …show more content…
The Lay peerage also saw a dramatic transformation during the sixtieth century, as the 25 out of the 39 families who had been elevated to nobility during the reign of the first two Tudors owed their rise to pollical or administrative services to the crown. There, were, however by the Reign of Elizabeth 1 this declined to 26 out of 61. It is also interesting to note, that until the reign of James 1 there had not been a majority of peers in the house of