The
Test Acts were a series of
English penal laws that served as a religious test for public office and imposed various civil disabilities on
Roman Catholics and
Nonconformists. The principle was that none but people taking communion in the established
Church of England were eligible for public employment, and the severe penalties pronounced against
recusants, whether Catholic or Nonconformist, were affirmations of this principle. In practice Nonconformists were often exempted from some of these laws through the regular passage of
Acts of Indemnity. After 1800 they were seldom enforced, except at
Oxbridge, where nonconformists and Catholics could not matriculate (Oxford) or graduate (Cambridge). The Tory government repealed them in 1828 with little controversy.