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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:New_men
rdfs:label
New men
rdfs:comment
New men is a term referring to various groups of the socially upwardly mobile in England during the House of Lancaster, House of York and Tudor periods. The term may refer to the new aristocracy, or the enriched gentry. It is used by some historians when referring to middle class professionals who held important positions in government, most notably during the reign of Henry VII.
dcterms:subject
dbc:16th_century_in_England dbc:15th_century_in_England
dbo:wikiPageID
2002024
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
1089521486
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Social_mobility dbr:Wars_of_the_Roses dbr:Kingdom_of_England dbr:Henry_VII_of_England dbr:Richard_Foxe dbr:House_of_Lancaster dbr:John_Morton_(archbishop) dbr:Treason dbr:Reginald_Bray dbr:Paradigm_shift dbr:English_Reformation dbr:Middle_class dbr:Thomas_Wolsey dbr:Professional dbr:Edmund_Dudley dbr:Dissolution_of_the_Monasteries dbr:Tudor_period dbr:Richard_Empson dbr:Cardinal_(Catholicism) dbr:House_of_York dbc:16th_century_in_England dbr:Peerage dbr:Roman_Republic dbc:15th_century_in_England dbr:List_of_French_monarchs dbr:Novus_homo
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dbt:Dubious dbt:About dbt:Refimprove dbt:Short_description
dbp:date
August 2012
dbp:reason
Were the New Men corrupt or were the king's policies just harsh?
dbo:abstract
New men is a term referring to various groups of the socially upwardly mobile in England during the House of Lancaster, House of York and Tudor periods. The term may refer to the new aristocracy, or the enriched gentry. It is used by some historians when referring to middle class professionals who held important positions in government, most notably during the reign of Henry VII. In the late Middle Ages social mobility was not generally seen as a good thing, and could be regarded as dangerous to the social order. There had always been social mobility, as the economy expanded continuously, but much of it was in the church, which was more acceptable. In the 15th century the heavy losses from the Wars of the Roses at the top of society, followed in the 16th by much more rapid economic growth and the English Reformation, after which fewer clergy worked in administrative roles, and which liberated in the Dissolution of the Monasteries vast quantities of assets for the agile nobility and gentry to acquire, all worked to greatly increase upwards mobility at the top of society.
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wikipedia-en:New_men?oldid=1089521486&ns=0
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4027
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wikipedia-en:New_men