The Boleyns (42 page)

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Authors: David Loades

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[411]
Conyers Read, ‘Queen Elizabeth’s seizure of Alba’s pay ships’,
Journal of Modern History
, 5, 1933, pp. 443-464. D. Loades,
The Cecils; Privilege and Power behind the Throne
(2007), pp. 88-9.

 

[412]
Loades,
Elizabeth I
, pp. 165-6.

 

[413]
MacCaffrey,
The Shaping of the Elizabethan Regime
, p. 229.

 

[414]
Conyers Read,
Mr. Secretary Cecil and Queen Elizabeth
(1965), pp. 331-3.

 

[415]
Cal. SP. Dom., 1547–1580
, p. 348. This was followed up by a royal proclamation, issued at Windsor on 24 November, Hughes and Larkin,
Tudor Royal Proclamations
, II, p. 323.

 

[416]
Cal. SP. Dom
, p. 346.

 

[417]
The 1569 Rebellion
, edited by Sir Cuthbert Sharp (1840, reprint 1965), pp. 64-5. Conyers Read,
Mr. Secretary Cecil
, pp. 458-68.

 

[418]
Loades,
Elizabeth I
, p. 167.
The 1569 Rebellion
, pp. 83-4. On 30 November Sir Ralph Sadler wrote to Cecil ‘the rebels are returned into the Bishopric’.

 

[419]
The Earl of Sussex to Sir William Cecil, 1 January 1570, ibid, pp. 130-32.
Cal. SP. Dom
, p. 356.

 

[420]
The 1569 Rebellion
, pp. 133-4.

 

[421]
Read,
Mr. Secretary Cecil
, pp. 445-6.

 

[422]
The 1569 Rebellion
, pp. 124-5.

 

[423]
Cal. SP., Scotland, 1569–71
, p. 54.
Cal Dom. Addenda
,
1566– 79
, pp. 193, 241.

 

[424]
Elizabeth I: Collected Works
, pp. 125-6.

 

[425]
Cal. SP., Scotland
, I, pp. 329, 331.

 

[426]
Cal. SP., Dom., 1547–1580
, p. 360.

 

[427]
Rebellion of 1569
, Appendix, pp. 343-9.

 

[428]
Ibid, pp. 250-52. That he was a member of this commission may be ascertained from the number of pardons issued to offenders in whose conviction he had had a part. For example,
Cal. Pat., 1569–72
, p. 290. The commission itself does not appear to be recorded.

 

[429]
G. E. Cockayne, ed. Vicary Gibbs,
The Complete Peerage
(1910–59).

 

[430]
Cal. Pat
.
, 1569–72
, p. 212.

 

[431]
Ibid, p. 289
. Cal. SP. Dom., 1547–1580
, p. 370.

 

[432]
Cal. Pat
.
, 1572–5
, p. 169. Conyers Read,
Mr. Secretary Cecil
, pp. 409-10.
Cal. Scot
.
, 1563–69,
pp. 530, 534, 540.

 

[433]
Cal. Pat
.,
1572–5
, p. 328.

 

[434]
Captain Cockburn to Lord Burghley, 4 November 1575.
Cal. Scot
.
,
I, p. 393.

 

[435]
A. Weikel, ‘The Marian Council Revisited’ in J. Loach and R. Tittler
, The Mid Tudor Polity, 1540–1560
(1980). W. MacCaffrey,
Queen Elizabeth and the Making of Policy, 1572–1588,
(1981) pp. 436-7.

 

[436]
Acts of the Privy Council, 1577–96
, passim.

 

[437]
Cal. Pat
.
, 1578–80
, p. 121.

 

[438]
P. W. Hasler,
The History of Parliament: The House of Commons, 1558–1603
(1981), sub George Carey.

 

[439]
ODNB. Cal. SP. Dom., 1581–1590
.

 

[440]
Raphael Holinshed,
Chronicle
(ed. 1807–8), IV, p. 536. Loades,
Elizabeth I
, pp. 222-3.

 

[441]
Cal. SP. Dom
.,
1581–1590
, p. 139.

 

[442]
Ibid, p. 161.

 

[443]
Conyers Read,
Lord Burghey and Queen Elizabeth
(1965), pp. 233-5.

 

[444]
Ibid, p. 289.

 

[445]
Ibid.

 

[446]
Cal. SP. Scot
., II, p. 473.

 

[447]
J. H. Pollen,
Mary Queen of Scots and the Babington Pl
ot, Scottish Historical Society, 1922. J. Wormald,
Mary Queen of Scots: a study in failure
(1988).

 

[448]
Cal. SP. Dom
.
, 1581–90
, p. 164. Walsingham to Burghley, 12 June 1584.

 

[449]
Ibid, p. 278.

 

[450]
Ibid, p. 463. Howard to Walsingham, 14 February 1588.

 

[451]
Read,
Lord Burghley and Queen Elizabeth
, p. 422.

 

[452]
Cal. SP. Dom
.,
1581–90
, pp. 517, 534.

 

[453]
F. C. Dietz,
English Public Finance
,
1558–1641
(1964), pp. 96-9. For Elizabeth’s ‘Golden speech’ of 1601, see
Elizabeth I: Collected Works
, pp. 355-59.

 

[454]
Cal. SP. Dom., 1591–94
, p. 268. Report of 11 September 1592.

 

[455]
Ibid, 1594–97, p. 162.

 

[456]
Elizabeth did not, as far as I am aware, leave any record of her emotional reaction to Lord Hunsdon’s death, but her attitude towards his family after his death suggests a warm attachment, as did her loyalty to him during his life. In that respect he resembled Lord Burghley, for whom her feelings are better known.

 

[457]
Cal. SP. Dom
.
, 1594–7
, pp. 309, 314. On 11 June 1597 the Queen granted to Hundson’s old friend Charles Howard, the Lord Admiral his office of Chief Justice in Eyre South of the Trent, with a fee of £100 a year. It is not clear when Hunsdon had acquired this office.

 

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