The Corporation Act of 1661, designed for …

Years: 1661 - 1661
December

The Corporation Act of 1661, designed for the express purpose of restricting public offices in England to members of the Church of England, is passed in December 1661.

Parliament is at this time entirely reactionary.

The Cavaliers are in power, and they aim at nothing short of restoring England to its state before the time of the Commonwealth.

It requires all the prudence of the Earl of Clarendon, the chancellor, to restrain them.

The Corporation Act represents the limit to which he is prepared to go in endeavoring to restrict the power of the Presbyterians.

They are influentially represented in the government of cities and boroughs throughout the country, and this act is designed to dispossess them.

This first of the four statutes which are to make up the Clarendon Code requires all municipal officials to take Anglican communion, and formally reject the Solemn League and Covenant of 1643.

The effect of this act is to exclude nonconformists from public office.

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