[49]
L & P
, II, no. 1501. A total of eighteen courtiers took part in this performance.
[50]
S. J. Gunn,
Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk
(1988) , pp. 35- 8.
[51]
L & P
, II, no. 125, 6 February 1515.
[52]
Cal. Ven
., II, nos. 594, 596, 635.
[53]
For a full discussion of Wolsey’s manoeuverings at this juncture, see P. Gwynn,
The King’s Cardinal
(1990), pp. 613-8.
[54]
L & P
, II, nos. 1309, 1573, and p. 1470.
[55]
Ibid, no. 1277.
[56]
State Papers of Henry VIII
, (1830–52), II, 35, 49, 58. D. B. Quinn, ‘Henry VIII and Ireland, 1509–1534’,
Irish Historical Studies
, 12, 1961, p. 331.
[57]
L & P
, II, no. 1517.
[58]
Ibid, nos. 3756, 3783.
[59]
Garrett Mattingly,
Catherine of Aragon
. For Catherine’s jointure, see
L & P
, II, no. 1363.
[60]
Cal. Ven
., II, 1074. Scarisbrick,
Henry VIII
, p. 71.
[61]
There were violent protests against the intrusion of a foreigner. Charles had been born in Ghent, and brought Netherlandish advisers with him, who were much resented. The revolt is known as the
Comuneros
.
[62]
L & P
, II, nos. 4469, 4475.
[63]
L & P
, III, no. 70. The danger lay in the fact that Charles now controlled three of Francis’s five possible frontiers – the Low Countries, Germany and Spain. The fourth was the English Channel, and the fifth, where conflict was most likely, was in northern Italy.
[64]
BL. Cotton Vitellius B xx, ff.165, 170.
L & P
, III, nos. 240, 241. Scarisbrick,
Henry VIII
, pp. 98-101.
[65]
L & P
, III, no. 306.
[66]
Ibid, no. 702. J. G. Russell,
The Field of Cloth of Gold
(1969), p. 57.
[67]
Cal. Ven
., III, no. 108.
[68]
Wolsey appears to have been attempting to impute some disloyalty to Sir Thomas early in 1515, although nothing came of it.
L & P
, II, nos. 124, 125. On the promise of the comptrollership, see ibid, III, no. 223.
[69]
L & P
, III, no. 1004, 1011. Surrey tended to take the Irish side in this dispute.
[70]
Ibid, no. 1762.
[71]
Ibid, no. 1994.
[72]
Hall,
Chronicle
, p. 462. D. Loades,
The Tudor Navy
(1992), pp. 105-6.
[73]
L & P
, III, nos. 2333, 2481.
[74]
Ibid, no. 3008.
[75]
Ibid, no. 2982. Helen Miller,
Henry VIII and the English Nobility
(1986), p. 19.
[76]
L & P
, III, no. 3213. Wolsey wrote that Charles was ‘encouraged’ by the efforts of Bourbon, but Henry was expecting the latter to advance on Paris.
[77]
S. J. Gunn, ‘The Duke of Suffolk’s March on Paris in 1523’,
English Historical Review
, 101, 1986, pp. 596-634.
[78]
State Papers of Henry VIII
, VI, pp. 221, 233
Cal. Span., Further Supplement
, p. 318.
[79]
L & P
, III, no. 3386.
[80]
L & P
, IV, no. 137.
[81]
State Papers
, IV, pp. 120 et seq. Scarisbrick,
Henry VIII
, p. 133.
[82]
Ibid, p. 138.
[83]
Ibid, p. 140.
[84]
G. W. Bernard,
War, Taxation and Rebellion in Early Tudor England
(1986), p. 99.
[85]
Hall,
Chronicle
, pp. 699, 701-2.
[86]
L & P
, IV, no. 1298.
[87]
TNA SP1/55, ff.14-15.
L & P
, IV, no. 5807. Miller,
Henry VIII and the English Nobility
, pp. 20-21.
[88]
D. Loades,
Mary Tudor; the Tragical History of the First Queen of England
(2006), pp. 22-3.
[89]
L & P
, IV, no. 1939.
[90]
J. Gairdner, ‘Mary and Anne Boleyn’, and ‘The Age of Anne Boleyn’, in
English Historical Review,
8, 1893, pp. 53-60 and
EHR
, 10, 1895, p. 104.
[91]
E. W. Ives,
The Life and Death of Anne Boleyn
(2004), pp. 15-17. G. W. Bernard,
Anne Boleyn; Fatal Attractions
(2010), pp. 5-6.
[92]
G. de Boom,
Marguerite d’Autriche-Savoie et la Pre-Renaissance
(Paris, 1935), p. 118. Ives,
Life and Death
, p. 16.
[93]
Letters and Papers
, I, no. 3348 (3), 3357.
[94]
L & P
, II, I, no. 224. S. J. Gunn.
Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk
(1988). pp. 35-38.
[95]
L & P
, I, nos. 826, 827. Scarisbrick,
Henry VIII
, pp. 57-8.
[96]
Claude had been born on 13 October 1499. Lancelot de Carles in Ascoli,
L’Opinion
, lines 37-42.
[97]
Cal. Ven., 1509–1519
, no. 1235. Giustinian and Surian to the Signory, 16 June 1519.