Object
Lordship of Ripon
Cromwell cites the Lordship of Ripon during a tense chapel exchange at Greenwich, naming it a royal financial asset that generates about 260 pounds yearly. Henry listens briefly then dismisses its worth with mild disappointment, waving off Cromwell's pragmatic accounting as he turns to other distractions. The holding emerges not as land underfoot but as a ledger entry in their verbal spar, underscoring the king's casual command over such revenues.
1 appearances
Purpose
Generate annual income of approximately 260 pounds for the crown
Significance
Cromwell deploys it to ground Henry in fiscal realities, but the king's light rejection marks these assets as trifles amid his larger preoccupations, exposing Cromwell's struggle to pierce royal detachment and highlighting the fragility of administrative influence.
Appearances in the Narrative
When this object appears and how it's used