Daily schedule
Seminars meet each weekday morning after breakfast.
After lunch, afternoons are free for individual study or exploring the many places of interest in and around the city. Optional plenary excursions and social activities including walking tours will also be available.
The course fee includes breakfasts Monday-Saturday (residential guests only), lunches Sunday-Friday, and three-course dinners Sunday-Thursday. All meals are taken in Christ Church’s spectacular dining hall.
On Friday, there will be a special four-course gala dinner to celebrate the closing of the week.
Seminars
Monday seminars
Introduction: This first session traces Wolsey’s origins and education and his early career at Oxford. We will then then look at Wolsey’s early work for Henry VII, and his appointment to the council of Henry VIII.
Tuesday seminars
Wolsey and Henry: We consider Wolsey’s work to get Henry on to the international stage from war in 1513 to the Field of Cloth of Gold in 1520 and the effort to keep Henry at the forefront of Europe thereafter until Wolsey’s fall in 1529.
Wednesday seminars
Lord Chancellor: In these sessions we will review the work Wolsey did in law reform and increasing the effectiveness of the king’s justice; star chamber and ‘poor men’s causes’ and the consequences for him and the state, of his reforms. We try to see how significant his work in these areas was for Henry and his subjects.
Thursday seminars
Cardinal Legate: Today we examine the complex nature of Wolsey’s authority over the Church in England, his relations with the international Church and his status as a Cardinal. We focus on the use he made of his authority to enhance royal, not papal, power.
Wolsey and Christ Church. After coffee we have an internal ‘field trip’, looking at Wolsey’s college, and some of the foundation documents of Cardinal College.
Friday seminars
Wolsey’s Greatest Matter: This session considers the complexities of the king’s wish for an annulment of his marriage to Katherine of Aragon. We look at the canon law of the case and the international context which always made a favourable verdict for Wolsey and Henry unlikely.
A Great Fall: We examine the reasons why, after twenty years of loyal service to Henry VIII, Cardinal Wolsey fell from power so swiftly after the failure of the annulment campaign. We review his final year of life and ponder whether there was any truth to the accusation of treason levelled against him.