[506]
Conyers Read,
Lord Burghley and Queen Elizabeth
, pp. 464- 86.
[507]
Devereux,
Earls of Essex
, I, p. 184.
[508]
R. B. Wernham,
The Expedition of Sir John Norris and Sir Francis Drake to Spain and Portugal, 1589
(1988), p. 133.
[509]
Ibid, p. 134.
[510]
W. MacCaffrey,
War and Politics
,
1588–1603
(1992), pp. 161- 2.
[511]
Ibid, p. 472.
[512]
S. and E. Usherwood,
The Counter Armada
,
1596
:
The Journal of the Mary Rose
(1983), pp. 118-9.
[513]
L. B. Smith,
Treason in Tudor England
, pp. 226-7. MacCaffrey,
War and Politics
, p. 522.
[514]
Smith,
Treason in Tudor England
, pp. 232-3.
[515]
Ibid, pp. 255-6.
[516]
Camden,
Elizabeth
, pp. 602-3.
[517]
Loades,
The Cecils
, pp. 217-8.
[518]
For a discussion of the origins of this game, see A. Kelly, ‘Eleanor of Aquitaine and her courts of love’,
Speculum
, 12, 1937.
[519]
G. R. Elton,
The Tudor Revolution in Government
(1953), p. 84.
[520]
These negotiations failed because the King was unwilling to subscribe to the Confession of Augsburg. One of the consequences of that failure was the Cleves marriage. Loades,
Henry VIII
, (2011) p. 285.
[521]
The form of acting in the King’s name was strictly observed, but Edward was a child and had no control over their actions. M. L. Bush,
The Government Policy of Protector Somerset
(1975).
[522]
He received a few modest grants, such as that of Jane Rochford’s ‘stuff’ at Blickling in September 1542, but there is no indication of significant patronage.
L & P
, XVII, no. 119.
[523]
Cal. Span
., XI, p. 393.
[524]
Statute 1 Mary, sess.3, cap.3. Jennifer Loach,
Parliament and the Crown in the reign of Mary Tudor
(1986), pp. 96-7.
[525]
David Starkey, ‘Intimacy and Innovation; the rise of the Privy Chamber, 1485–1547’ and Pam Wright, ‘A Change of Direction; the ramifications of a female household, 1558–1603’ in D. Starkey, ed.,
The English Court from the Wars of the Roses to the Civil War(
1987).
[526]
Loades,
Elizabeth I
, p. 142.
[527]
G. E. Cockayne,
The Complete Peerage
.