De vera obedientia (About True Obedience) is a treatise written in 1535 by the Bishop of Winchester Stephen Gardiner in support of the annulment of Henry VIII of England's marriage to Katherine of Aragon. It stresses the obedience of the individual within a society's hierarchy as put in place by God: wives to husband, servants to masters, and subjects to their King.[1]
According to Cardinal Reginald Pole, "Gardiner's book is written with the highest art, but... the arguments are weak."[2]
References
edit- ^ Ferriby, David (2015). The Tudors: England 1485 - 1603. London: Hodder Education. p. 77. ISBN 978-1-4718-3758-6.
- ^ Letters and Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII, ed. James Gairdner. Vol. X, no. 276.