Object
Treason Act
Margaret Pole invokes the Treason Act during Cromwell's confrontation at L’Erber, naming it a law that criminalizes envisioning any future beyond Henry VIII’s reign. Cromwell seizes this reference, wielding the act as an attainder threat to shatter family resistance. No physical document appears; characters reference it verbally amid tense exchanges with Geoffrey Pole, Eustache Chapuys looming in correspondence, and Mary Tudor's fate in balance.
3 appearances
Purpose
Criminalizes treasonous imagination of the king's death or any succession excluding his line, enabling attainder without trial
Significance
Cromwell deploys it to coerce Margaret Pole's letter betraying Mary, crushing Pole defiance and cementing his control over court factions through legal terror
Appearances in the Narrative
When this object appears and how it's used