Archpriest Controversy

The Archpriest Controversy was the debate which followed the appointment of an archpriest by Pope Clement VIII to oversee the efforts of the Roman Catholic Church's missionary priests in England, at the end of the sixteenth century.

The discussion became an acrimonious church intrigue, active approximately from 1598 to 1603. The English government saw advantage in its continuation, and supported one side, the appellants or opponents of the archpriest; the controversy is also widely known as the Appellant Controversy, and the most obvious public form it took was a pamphlet literature. Interpretations of its underlying content have differed: one question to the fore was the allegiance of recusants to the English crown, but it is now argued that internal church matters were central. Other factors were the role of the Jesuits in the English mission, and tensions between Catholic clerics and laymen.

Read more about Archpriest Controversy:  Background, Appointment of Blackwell, Resistance To Blackwell, Official Resolution, The Protestation of Allegiance, Richard Bancroft and The Appellants

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