The major pieces of legislation from the first Parliament of Elizabeth included:
Act of Supremacy 1558 This act gave full ecclesiastical authority to the monarchy and abolished the authority of the Pope in England. This act restored a law previously enacted by Henry VIII's
English Reformation Parliament in 1534, partially repealed by Mary I in 1555.
Act of Uniformity 1558 This re-introduced the English
Book of Common Prayer, but with the order of prayer amended to make the Reformed book more acceptable to traditional Catholic worshippers and clergy. It also established that all English subjects were required to attend Church at least once a week, or suffer a
fine.
Treason Act 1558 This declared that directly saying, publishing, declaring, or holding the opinion that the Queen or her heirs were not the rightful monarch of England was an act of
Treason. All persons so convicted would lose their property to the Crown and could be imprisoned for the rest of their lives.
First Fruits and Tenths Act 1558 This Act restored the “First and Tenths”, a tax on the clergy of England. The clergy would pay a portion of their first year’s earnings, and thereafter pay a tenth of their revenue once per year. This tax had originally been established by Henry VIII to claim money intended for the papacy. ==See also==