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    The Lost Tudor Princess

    Page 60
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      80. CSPD Elizabeth 44, 38

      81. CSPF 8, 1902

      82. CSPF 8, 1875

      83. CSPD Elizabeth 46, 11; Strickland LQS 2, 115. Norrington, 30, places this letter in January 1564.

      84. Stedall SC, 44

      85. CSP Murdin, 764; Macauley, 195

      86. Camden, 91; Strickland LQS 2, 115; Marshall QMW, 119; Borman, 286

      87. It survives in draft, partly in Lennox’s hand, as CUL Oo.vii.47; the text is printed as an appendix in Mahon.

      88. Macauley, 196

      89. NAS GD 406/1, 26

      90. Warden of the Middle Marches.

      91. CSP Scotland 2, 677

      92. Cecil Papers 1, 1186; Lettres 2, 102–3, 106

      93. CSP Scotland 2, 771

      94. CUL DdIII, ff.17–18; Macauley, 200. There was to be a third version, too, A Remembrance after what sort the late King of Scots, son to me, the Earl of Lennox, was used by the Queen his wife (CUL Oo. vii.47, ff.30–1), a far more concise document than its predecessors, which presents a much better case.

      95. Relations Politiques de la France et de l’Espagne avec l’Ecosse au XVIieme Siecle 2, 390–91

      96. CSP Scotland 2, 832

      97. CSP Scotland 2, 850

      98. CSP Simancas 2, 52

      99. CSPF 8, 1812

      100. CSP Scotland 2, 894

      101. CSP Scotland 2, 906

      102. John Phillips

      18. “Business Most Vile”

      1. CSPF 9, 68

      2. Ashdown RT, 149; Strickland LQS 2, 116

      3. Perry WP, 149–50

      4. Cecil Papers 1, 1377

      5. Schutte, 214

      6. CSPF 9, 507

      7. CSPF 9, 513

      8. CSP Simancas 2, 174

      9. Cecil Papers 1, 1469

      10. CSP Scotland 3, 95

      11. CSPF 9, 655

      12. Strickland LQS 2, 116

      13. Stow. What became known as Old Somerset House was demolished in 1775 and replaced with the present Somerset House.

      14. CSP Scotland 3, 110; Original Letters 2, 333–34

      15. Regnans in Excelsis

      16. CSP Simancas 2, 180

      17. CSPF 9, 713

      18. Ridley EI, 172

      19. CSPF 9, 818

      20. CSPF 9, 839

      21. Cannon and Hargreaves

      22. Merriman ODNB

      23. Hardy, 11, states that she served as Elizabeth’s chief lady, but I can find no contemporary evidence to support this.

      24. CSPF 9, 855

      25. CSP Scotland 3, 195

      26. CSP Scotland 3, 196

      27. CSPF 9, 870; CSP Scotland 3, 207

      28. CSP Scotland 3, 228; CSPF 9, 910

      29. CSPF 9, 911; CSP Scotland 3, 230

      30. NA SP 52/18, f.41

      31. CSP Scotland 3, 214, 215

      32. CSP Simancas 2, 198

      33. CSPF 9, 918

      34. CSP Scotland 3, 244

      35. Cecil Papers 1, 1490

      36. His heir, Francis, having died, his third son, Richard, inherited Pocklington, which was later purchased by the Dolmans, whose forebears had also served the Lennoxes.

      37. CSPF 9, 1026

      38. CSP Scotland 3, 289, 304

      39. CSP Scotland 3, 340

      40. CSP Scotland 3, 344, 350

      41. CSP Scotland 3, 356

      42. CSP Scotland 3, 402

      43. CSPF 9, 1097

      44. Tytler

      45. Schutte, 216

      46. CSPF 9, 1149

      47. CSP Scotland 3, 415

      48. CSP Simancas 2, 209

      49. CSP Scotland 3, 437

      50. CSPF 9, 1206

      51. Macauley, 223

      52. CSP Scotland 3, 434

      53. CSP Scotland 3, 446; NA SP 53/5, f.128; William Fraser 1, 450

      54. CSP Scotland 3, 468, 469; CSPF 9, 1266; NA SP 52/19, f.98

      55. William Fraser 1, 451

      56. CSPF 9, 1262; CSP Scotland 3, 465

      57. William Fraser 1, 450–51

      58. Additional MS. 19,401, f.105

      59. CSP Scotland 3, 478

      60. CSP Scotland 3, 496

      61. CSPF 9, 1286

      62. CSPF 9, 1328; CSP Scotland 3, 519

      63. CSP Scotland 3, 508

      64. Chancellor of the Exchequer.

      65. CSPD Elizabeth 74, 9

      66. NAS GD 149/265, f.1; CSP Scotland 3, 349; endorsed, “Delivered to her in presence of the Queen of England viijvo Nobris 1570; Robertson 3, 237–38

      67. Robertson 3, 238

      68. CSP Scotland 3, 584

      69. CSPF 9, 1525

      70. CSP Simancas 2, 233

      71. CSPF 9, 1572

      72. CSPD Elizabeth 77, 39

      73. CSP Scotland 3, 627

      74. Strickland LQS 2, 118

      75. CSP Simancas 2, 247; CSPF 9, 1638

      76. CSP Simancas 2, 247; CSPF 9, 1647

      77. Merriman ODNB

      78. CSP Simancas 2, 273

      79. Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland 12, 240

      80. CSP Scotland 3, 764

      81. CSP Scotland 3, 777; CSPF 9, 1759

      82. CSP Scotland 3, 821

      83. CSPF 9, 1985

      84. His mother had been Margaret’s bastard half sister, Janet Douglas.

      85. CSP Scotland 3, 816; CSPF 9, 1819

      86. CSPF 9, 1841

      87. CSPF 9, 1847

      88. CSP Scotland 3, 841

      89. Strickland LQS 2, 118

      90. CSPF 9, 1908, 2080, 2085

      91. CSP Scotland 3, 856; CSPF 9, 1909

      92. Fénélon 4, 180

      93. Mann

      94. Willey

      95. Fielding

      96. Records of the Court of Augmentations and the Augmentation Office. Barber’s Barn was later demolished and replaced by a three-storied gabled house built around 1590–91 (Lysons). That house was demolished probably in the 1790s.

      97. CSP Scotland 3, 884

      98. CSPF 9, 1936; CSP Scotland 3, 888

      99. CSPF 9, 1943

      100. CSPF 9, 1945

      101. CSP Scotland 3, 904

      102. CSP Scotland 3, 911

      103. He was a younger son of Patrick, Lord Ruthven, who had taken part in the murder of Rizzio and died in exile in 1566.

      104. CSP Scotland 3, 917

      105. Strickland LQS 2, 118

      106. John Phillips

      107. CSPF 9, 2027; CSP Scotland 3, 921

      108. CSP Scotland 3, 921; CSPF 9, 2026

      109. Ibid.

      110. CSPF 9, 2027

      111. CSPF 9, 2014; CSP Scotland 3, 912, 921

      112. CSPF 9, 1983, 1997; CSP Scotland 3, 913; NA SP 52/21, f.69

      113. CSP Scotland 3, 912, 921

      114. William Fraser 1, 416

      115. William Fraser 1, 416; Lisle TFS, 347; Guy MHIMO, 508

      116. Strickland LQS 2, 118

      117. Spottiswood 2, 166

      118. The Historie and Life of King James the Sext, 93

      119. Spottiswood 2, 166; William Fraser 1, 416; Marshall ODNB; Merriman; Schutte, 222

      120. William Fraser 1, 417

      121. Ibid.

      122. CSPF 9, 2010

      123. A diurnal of remarkable occurrents, 249

      124. Calderwood 3, 139

      19. “Treason Bereft Me”

      1. William Fraser 1, 418

      2. William Fraser 1, 453; Strickland LQS 2, 119

      3. Ibid.

      4. CSP Scotland 4, Appendix, 7; Stedall SC, 135

      5. John Phillips

      6. NA SP 52/21, f.184

      7. CSPF 9, 1997

      8. Merriman ODNB

      9. Holinshed 5; Marshall ODNB

      10. It was then believed that the legendary Brutus of Troy had founded the ancient kingdom of Britain and was the ancestor of all its kings.

      11. Holinshed 5

      12. CSPF 9, 2026

      13. CSPF 9, 1989

      14. CSPF 9, 2027

      15. CSPF 9, 2023

      16. CSPF 9, 2028

      17. CSP Scotland 3, 921

    &
    nbsp; 18. CSP Scotland 3, 924

      19. CSP Scotland 4 Appendix, 3

      20. CSPF 9, 2023

      21. CSP Scotland 4 Appendix, 7

      22. CSP Scotland 4 Appendix, 8

      23. CSPF 9, 2051; CSP Scotland 3, 956

      24. CSP Simancas 2, 279

      25. CSP Simancas 2, 280

      26. CSPF 9, 2059; CSP Scotland 4, 2

      27. CSP Scotland 4 Appendix, 10

      28. CSP Scotland 4 Appendix, 15

      29. CSP Scotland 4 Appendix, 26

      30. Chalfant; Strickland LQS 2, 120

      31. Canonbury Tower was rebuilt by Spencer in the 1580s and ’90s. Sir Francis Bacon, Oliver Goldsmith and Washington Irving were among the famous persons who later lived there. In 1795 the house was again largely rebuilt and the south range of Prior Bolton’s building was demolished. It served as the Tower Theatre from 1953 to 2003, and is now a Masonic research center. Only parts of the walls survive from the house Margaret knew. The tower and three-story wing to the south date from ca.1580.

      32. CSPD Elizabeth 83, 5; Strickland LQS 2, 120

      33. CSP Simancas 2, 279

      34. Schutte, 222–23

      35. CSP Scotland 4, 326

      36. Reproduced in Durant and credited to the National Portrait Gallery, although it cannot be traced there.

      37. Zurich Letters, 231; CSP Scotland 5, 89; Ashdown RT, 165; Hardy, 12

      38. Not an island, but perhaps regarded as one because of its situation on the banks of the Clyde.

      39. CSP Scotland 4 Appendix, 36

      40. CSP Scotland 4, 61; CSPF 9, 2136

      41. CSP Scotland 4 Appendix, 57

      42. CSPF 10, 824

      43. CSP Scotland 4, 122; CSPF 10, 99

      44. NA C.142/165/126; Erskine and Paton

      45. Mann

      46. By 1758 the east side of the southern courtyard of Brooke House was derelict; it was rebuilt and became a mental asylum. The house was bombed in the Blitz of 1940, and the east range of the northern courtyard, comprising a range of what were probably Tudor offices, was destroyed. The remains of Brooke House were acquired by the London County Council in 1944, but deemed too damaged to be restored. After a careful record was made of what survived, the house was demolished in 1954–55. Hackney Community College now stands on the site (Brooke House; Tudor Hackney; Eden et al.).

      47. Tudor Hackney

      48. Eden et al.

      49. CSP Scotland 4, 127

      50. CSP Scotland 4, 139

      51. CSP Scotland 4, 211

      52. CSPF 10, 253; Hardy, 21

      53. CSP Scotland 4, 299; CSPF 10, 329

      54. CSP Scotland 4, 326

      55. CSP Scotland 4 Appendix, 61

      56. CSP Scotland 4 Appendix, 71

      57. CSP Scotland 4, 428

      58. CSP Scotland 4, 448

      59. CSP Scotland 4, 474; CSPF 10, 632

      60. Lettres 5, 31

      61. Sitwell, 354; Jenkins EL, 199

      62. CSP Scotland 5, Introduction

      63. Lisle TFS, 350; Guy MHIMO, 382; Stedall CC, 433

      64. The Last Testament of the Earl of Bothwell

      65. Guy MHIMO, 382

      66. NA SP 53/10, f.71

      67. Chalmers 2, 243

      68. MacNalty, 145

      69. CSP Scotland 5, 38

      70. Sitwell, 354

      71. CSPF 10, 738

      72. CSPF 10, 754

      73. CSPF 10, 780

      74. CSPF 10, 824

      75. CSP Scotland 4, 596

      76. CSP Scotland 4, 605

      77. CSP Scotland 4, 703

      78. CSP Scotland 4, 713; CSPF 10, 1119

      79. CSPF 10, 1117

      80. CSP Scotland 4, 720; CSPF 10, 1133; Campling

      81. Register of the Privy Council of Scotland 2, 247, 330

      82. A Survey of the Manor of Settrington

      83. CSP Scotland 5, 21

      20. “The Hasty Marriage”

      1. Lovell, 259

      2. Lovell, 200

      3. CSP Scotland 5, 66

      4. Lovell, 240

      5. A Collection of Letters, and State Papers, 255–57

      6. Ibid.

      7. Durant, 8

      8. Handover, 48

      9. Lisle TFS, 349; Ashdown RT, 169–70; Hardy, 14

      10. A Collection of Letters, and State Papers, 255–57

      11. Gristwood, 16

      12. CSP Simancas 2, 403

      13. Ashdown RT, 167; Hardy, 16

      14. CSPD Elizabeth 99, 12

      15. Ibid.

      16. APC 8, 293

      17. CSP Simancas 2, 403

      18. A Collection of Letters, and State Papers, 255–57

      19. CSPD Elizabeth 99, 12; Sandeford, 143; Strickland LQS 2, 122–23

      20. A Collection of Letters, and State Papers, 255–57

      21. CSPD Elizabeth 99, 12; Strickland LQS 2, 122–23

      22. Lovell, 242

      23. CSPD Elizabeth 99, 12; Strickland LQS 2, 122–23

      24. A Collection of Letters, and State Papers, 255–57

      25. CSPD Elizabeth 99, 12; Strickland LQS 2, 122–23

      26. Ibid.

      27. A Collection of Letters, and State Papers, 255–57

      28. What remains of the house and abbey after much of it was demolished in the 1950s is an imposing ruin set in a country park.

      29. A Collection of Letters, and State Papers, 255–57

      30. Cited Gristwood, 12–13

      31. Jenkins EL, 201

      32. Hardy, 14

      33. Handover, 50

      34. In the 1950s, before Rufford Abbey was partly demolished, the chapel was still hung with tapestries and contained armorial glass commemorating the marriage.

      35. A Collection of Letters, and State Papers, 255–57

      36. Durant, 6–7, 14–15

      37. Norrington, 24

      38. MacNalty, 145

      39. A Collection of Letters, and State Papers, 255–57

      40. Lovell, 245–46

      41. CSPD Elizabeth 99, 12; Strickland LQS 2, 122–23

      42. Ibid.

      43. CSPD Elizabeth 99, 13

      44. CSP Scotland 5, 66; Hardy, 18

      45. CSP Simancas 2, 408

      46. CSPD Elizabeth 99, 13

      47. Lovell, 247

      48. Strickland LQS 2, 123

      49. Durant, 9; Lovell, 247

      50. Strickland LQS 2, 123; Lefuse, 14

      51. Hardy, 19

      52. For Sir William Livingston, see Kilsyth, a Parish History. Morton was found guilty and beheaded on “the Maiden,” an early guillotine he had himself introduced into Scotland.

      53. CSP Scotland 5, 89

      54. CSP Scotland 5, 68

      55. CSP Scotland 5, 21. Fowler’s interrogation by Walsingham is listed under July 1574, but it clearly took place after Charles Stuart’s marriage, probably in December.

      56. Ashdown RT, 171

      57. Strickland LTP, 94

      58. Hardy, 125; Gristwood, 15; Lefuse, 15–16

      59. Lovell, 249

      60. Borman, 295, 296

      61. Gristwood, 19

      62. Lettres 7, 243

      63. CSP Scotland 5, 89, 94

      64. Gristwood, 19; Lefuse, 17

      65. A Survey of the Manor of Settrington

      66. Cavendish-Talbot MS. X.d.428, f.108; Hardy, 19

      67. Cecil Papers Addenda, 123

      68. William Fraser 1, 459

      69. Harleian MS. 289, ff.200, 202; Archaeologia 32, 81; Strickland LTP, 94; Hardy, 19

      70. John Phillips

      71. CSP Scotland 5, 210

      72. This was the first recorded mention of Arbella in contemporary sources (Durant, 10).

      73. CSP Scotland 5, 210

      74. Ashdown RT, 172; Strickland LTP, 95

      21. “Till Death Do Finish My Days”

      1. Strickland LTP, 94

      2. John Phillips

      3. NA PROB 12 Langley. Most of the church was demolished in 1798, and only the tower survives.

      4. Holinshed, 5

      5. CSP Scotland 5, 227; CSPF 11, 755


      6. Clarke; Borman, 297

      7. Lisle TFS, 352; Marshall QMW, 122; Schutte, 233

      8. Durant, 15

      9. Strickland LQS 2, 124 (no source cited)

      10. Hardy, 22

      11. Harleian MS. 289, f.202; Macauley, 86

      12. Harleian MS. 289, f.202

      13. Harleian MS. 289, f.198

      14. A Survey of the Manor of Settrington

      15. Davey SLJG, 286

      16. Strickland LTP, 95; Robertson 2, Appendix

      17. APC 10, 161

      18. Schutte, 232

      19. A Survey of the Manor of Settrington

      20. Durant, 14

      21. Strickland LTP, 95; Durant, 14

      22. CSP Scotland 5, 290

      23. CSP Scotland 5, 277, 290

      24. CSP Scotland 5, 291

      25. Strickland LTP, 96

      26. Lettres 4, 397–8

      27. Durant, 14; Lisle TFS, 352

      28. Hardy, 24

      29. CSP Scotland 5, 370

      30. CSP Scotland 5, 295

      31. Norrington, 25

      32. Folger Shakespeare Library L.a.249

      33. Varlow, 54

      34. MacNalty, 153

      35. Nichols 2, 522. A casting bottle was used for sprinkling scented water.

      36. Lettres 6, 51–7

      37. Lovell, 314–15; Borman 314–15

      38. A Survey of the Manor of Settrington

      39. NA PROB 11/60/174. The will is dated 1577, but the new year of 1578 did not officially begin until Lady Day, March 25.

      40. It has been suggested that the tablet given to Leicester is perhaps to be identified with a girdle book containing a portrait of the King now in the British Library (Stowe MS. 956) and once in the possession of the descendants of William Seymour, Duke of Somerset, the man Arbella married; and that Arbella was briefly betrothed to Leicester’s heir, the “noble imp,” Robert Dudley, Lord Denbigh, in childhood; and that the tablet came to her at this time (Lisle TFS, 414), but there is no proof of the betrothal.

      41. Eden et al.; NA PROB 11/60/174. The will was witnessed and sealed by Dr. Robert Huicke, the Queen’s physician, Dr. Richard Caldwell, Sir Robert Bowes, N. Paine, Robert Weldoms, Margery Williams, John Wolfe, Laurence Nesbit and William Mompesson, in the presence of William Drury, Doctor of Law and commissary of the Prerogative Court of Canterbury.

      42. Durant, 15; Lovell, 275

      43. John Phillips

      44. The date is given in her tomb epitaph and by Holinshed, although John Phillips gives March 9.

      45. John Phillips

      46. Marshall ODNB

      47. Elizabeth Throckmorton, wife of Sir Walter Raleigh.

      48. Peck

      49. Miller, 143

      50. Naunton; Sitwell, 101; Jenkins EL, 293

      51. Lemprière, 446

      52. Leicester’s Commonwealth, 18

      53. Following Leicester’s death in 1588, he entered the service of James VI. He died in 1590 in Edinburgh.

     


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