After the monasteries were dissolved, almshouses and hospitals had an increased importance of looking after those unable to do so themselves. The motivation was different, with people in charge of these establishments wanting to increase their renown or image rather than viewing it as a religious mission or vocation.
The monks who lived there and the Catholic Church which received some of the revenues from the monasteries and churches.
the many monstaries were around 40
The dissolution of the monastries was when Henry the eight destroyed all monastries and nunarys and killed most nuns and monks to reastablish his power
Buried at Greyfriars Church, Leicester. It is said that after the dissolution of the Monasteries, his body was thrown into the River Soar
Yes they did. For travellers they offered a room in the monasteries .If you were sick it was often a monk who helped you.
no one the peolple had no help .
The dissolution of the monasteries was nothing to do with supressing Protestants (Monasteries were Catholic) and it was Henry VIII not Henry VII.
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It Depends if they were protestent or catholic.
Henry VII
The monks who lived there and the Catholic Church which received some of the revenues from the monasteries and churches.
The Protestants where very unhappy with the monasteries, they stayed protestants through out the fight of the monasteries even when the new Catholic queen came!
the many monstaries were around 40
Henry VII!! Hope This helps!! xxx
The Dissolution of the Monasteries, and in favour of Protestantism as the state religion.
I looked up the word "dissolution" in a dictionary.
Winners in the dissolution of monasteries were the monarchy, which gained wealth and power by taking control of the lands and assets of the dissolved monasteries. Losers were monks, nuns, and members of the clergy who lost their homes, livelihoods, and religious communities. Many common people also lost access to charitable services provided by the monasteries.