Popish soap
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Popish soap was a derisive name applied to soap manufactured under a patent granted by Charles I. Because the board of the manufacturing company included Catholics, the term Popish Soap (after The Pope) was applied to this monopoly commodity. It was said by anti-Catholics to be particularly harmful to linen and washerwomen's hands.{{cite web |url=https://www.questia.com/magazine/1G1-209900360/dr-trelawney-s-cabinet-of-historical-curiosities |title=Dr Trelawney's Cabinet of Historical Curiosities: This Month's Subject: Soap |publisher= |author=Justin Pollard |access-date= |archive-date=4 March 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304130551/https://www.questia.com/magazine/1G1-209900360/dr-trelawney-s-cabinet-of-historical-curiosities |url-status=dead }}
During the personal rule of the English King Charles I (1629–1640), one of the ways in which he attempted to raise money was through the granting of patents. This came about as a result of a loophole in the statute forbidding such action.
One such patent was granted to a soap corporation.Martz, Dorilyn Ellen, and College of William and Mary. Department of History. Charles I and "Popish Soap": An Exercise in Factional Court Politics. 2000.{{efn|The statute forbade grants of monopolies to individuals but Charles circumvented the restriction by granting monopolies to companies.{{harvnb|Coward|2003|p=167}}; {{harvnb|Gregg|1981|pp=215–216}}; {{harvnb|Hibbert|1968|p=138}}; {{harvnb|Loades|1974|p=385}}.}}
The soap industry was overseen by Lord Treasurer Portland and his friends, all of whom displayed Catholic character{{clarify|date=October 2020}}. When Portland died, Laud and Cottington contended over the company, which increased annual profits to the crown to nearly 33,000 pounds by the end of the 1630s.
It was alleged that popish soap scarred the soul as well as skin and fabric.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}}
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Bibliography
- {{Citation |last=Coward |first=Barry |title=The Stuart Age |date=2003 |edition=3rd |place=London |publisher=Longman |isbn=978-0-582-77251-9 |author-link=Barry Coward}}
- {{Citation |last=Gregg |first=Pauline |title=King Charles I |date=1981 |place=London |publisher=Dent |isbn=0-460-04437-0 |author-link=Pauline Gregg}}
- {{Citation |last=Hibbert |first=Christopher |title=Charles I |date=1968 |place=London |publisher=Weidenfeld & Nicolson |author-link=Christopher Hibbert}}
- {{Citation |last=Loades |first=D. M. |title=Politics and the Nation |date=1974 |place=London |publisher=Fontana |isbn=0-00-633339-7 |author-link=David Loades}}
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Category:Anti-Catholicism in England
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