Read The History of England - Vols. 1 to 6 Online
Authors: David Hume
[x]Stowe, p. 584. Herbert, Burnet, Buchanan.
[y]Sadler’s Letters, p. 161. Spotswood, p. 71. Buchanan, lib. 15.
[z]John Knox, History of the Reformation.
[a]Sir Ralph Sadler’s Letters.
[d]Buchanan, lib. 15. Drummond.
[f]Rymer, vol. xiv. p. 768. vol. xv. p. 2.
[g]They who were worth in goods twenty shillings and upwards to five pounds, paid
four pence of every pound; from five pounds to ten pounds, eight pence; from ten pounds to twenty pounds, sixteen pence; from twenty and upwards, two shillings.
Lands, sees, and annuities, from twenty shillings to five pounds, paid eight pence in the pound; from five pounds to ten pounds, sixteen pence; from ten pounds to twenty pounds, two shillings; from twenty pounds and upwards, three shillings.
[l]Memoires du Bellay, lib. 10.
[o]Herbert. Stowe, p. 588. Baker, p. 292.
[p]Goodwin’s Annals. Stowe, p. 588.
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[s]Buchanan, lib. 15. Drummond.
[t]Beleair. Memoires du Bellay.
[u]Those who possessed goods or money, above five pound and below ten, were to
pay eight pence a pound: Those above ten pound, a shilling.
[w]A chauntry was a little church, chapel, or particular altar in some cathedral church,
&c. endowed with lands or other revenues for the maintainance of one or more priests, daily to say mass or perform divine service, for the use of the founders, or such others as they appointed: Free chapels were independant on any church, and endowed for much the same purpose as the former. Jacob’s Law Dict.
[y]Hall, fol. 261. Herbert, p. 534.
[b]Burnet, vol. i. p. 343, 344. Antiq. Brit. in vita Cranm.
[d]Fox, vol. ii. p. 578. Speed, p. 780. Baker, p. 299. But Burnet questions the truth of
this circumstance; Fox, however, transcribes her own paper, where she relates it. I must add, in justice to the king, that he disapproved of Wriotheseley’s conduct, and commended the lieutenant.
[e]Burnet, vol. i. p. 344. Herbert, p. 560. Speed, p. 780. Fox’s Acts and Monuments,
vol. ii. p. 58.
[f]Burnet, vol. i. p. 348. Fox.
[g]Lanquet’s Epitome of Chronicles in the year 1541.
[h]See his will in Fuller, Heylin, and Rymer, p. 110. There is no reasonable ground to
suspect its authenticity.
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[x]Hall, fol. 234. Stowe, p. 515. Hollingshed, p. 947.
[y]Hall, fol. 235. Hollingshed, p. 547. Stowe, p. 577.
[a]14 and 15 Hen. VIII. c. 15.
[h]Stowe, 505. Hollingshed, 840.
[i]Le Grand, vol. iii. p. 232.
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[r]1 Hen. VIII. c. 14. 6 Hen. VIII. c. 1. 7 Hen. VIII. c. 7.
[x]6 Hen. VIII. c. 5. 7 Hen. VIII. c. 1.
[b]22 Hen. VIII c. 12. 22 Hen. VIII. c. 5.
[c]21 Hen. VIII c. 12. 25 Hen. VIII. c. 18. 3 & 4 Edw. VI. c. 20. 5 & 6 Edw. VI. c. 24.
[f]Wood’s Hist. & Antiq. Oxon. lib. i. p. 245.
[h]Epist. ad Banisium. Also epist. p. 368.
[i]Strype’s Memor. vol. ii. p. 457.
[l]Heylin, Hist. Ref. Edw. VI.
[m]Collier, vol. ii. p. 218. Burnet, vol. ii. p. 6. Strype’s Mem. of Cranm. p. 141.
[n]Strype’s Mem. of Cranm. p. 141.
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[r]Burnet, vol. ii. Records, No 6.
[w]Collier, vol. ii. p. 228. Fox, vol. ii.
[x]Mem. Cranm. p. 146, 147, &c.
[z]Collier, vol. ii. p. 228. ex MS. Col. C. C. Cantab. Bibliotheca Britannica, article
GARDINER.
[NOTE [R]]
Spotswood, p. 75. The same author, p. 92. tells us a story, which confirms this character of the popish clergy in Scotland. It became a great dispute in the university of St. Andrews, whether the
pater
should be said to God or the saints. The friars, who knew in general that the reformers neglected the saints, were determined to maintain their honour with great obstinacy, but they knew not upon what topics to found their doctrine. Some held that the
pater
was said to God
formaliter,
and to saints
materialiter;
others, to God
principaliter,
and to saints
minus principaliter;
others would have it
ultimate
and
non ultimate:
But the majority seemed to hold, that the
pater
was said to God
capiendo stricte,
and to saints
capiendo large.
A simple fellow, who served the sub prior, thinking there was some great matter in hand, that made the doctors hold so many conferences together, asked him one day what the matter was; the sub-prior answering,
Tom,
that was the fellow’s name,
we cannot
agree to whom the paternoster should be said.
He suddenly replied,
To whom, Sir,
should it be said, but unto God?
Then said the sub-prior,
What shall we do with the
saints?
He answered,
Give them Aves and Creeds enow in the devil’s name; for that
may suffice them.
The answer going abroad, many said,
that he had given a wiser
decision than all the doctors had done with all their distinctions.
[f]Knox’s Hist. of Ref. p. 44. Spotswood.
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[h]The famous Scotch reformer, John Knox, calls James Melvil, p. 65, a man most
gentle and most modest. It is very horrid, but at the same time somewhat amusing, to consider the joy and alacrity and pleasure, which that historian discovers in his narrative of this assassination: And it is remarkable that in the first edition of his work, these words were printed on the margin of the page,
The godly Fact and Words
of James Melvil.
But the following editors retrenched them. Knox himself had no hand in the murder of Beaton; but he afterwards joined the assassins, and assisted them in holding out the castle. See Keith’s Hist. of the Ref. of Scotland, p. 43.
[i]Sir John Haywood in Kennet, p. 279. Heylin, p. 42.
[m]Patten. Hollingshed, p. 986.
[u]Burnet, vol. ii. p. 59. Collier, vol. ii. p. 241. Heylin, p. 55.
[x]Burnet, vol. ii. p. 6o. Collier, vol. ii. p. 241. Heylin, p. 55.
[a]Beagué, hist. of the Campagnes 1548 and 1549, p. 6.
[d]Burnet, vol. ii. p. 83. Buchanan, lib. xv. Keith, p. 55. Thuanus, lib. v. c. 15.
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[f]Stowe, p. 595. Hollingshed, p. 994.
[h]Hayward, p. 301. Heylin, p. 72. Camden. Thuanus, lib. vi. c. 5. Haynes, p. 69.
[l]Haynes, p. 95, 96, 102, 108.
[n]Burnet, vol. ii. Coll. 31. 2 & 3 Edw. VI. c. 18.
[NOTE [S]
at the end of the chapter.
[u]Burnet, vol. ii. p. 3. Rymer, tom. xv. p. 181.
[w]Burnet, vol. ii. coll. 35. Strype’s Mem. Cranm. p. 181.
[x]Burnet, vol. ii. p. 112. Strype’s Mem. Cranm. p. 181.
[z]Strype, vol. ii. Repository Q.
[a]Burnet, vol. ii. p. 115. Strype, vol. ii. p. 171.
[b]Hayward, p. 292. Hollingshed, p. 1003. Fox, vol. ii. p. 666. Mem. Cranm. p. 186.
[d]Stowe’s Annals, p. 597. Hayward, p. 295.
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[f]Heylin, p. 76. Hollingshed, p. 1026.
[g]Stowe, p. 597. Hollingshed, p. 1030–34. Strype, vol. ii. p. 174.
[l]Thuan. King Edward’s journal, Stowe, p. 597.
[m]Burnet, vol. ii. p. 132, 175.
[q]Heylin, p. 72, 73. Stowe’s Survey of London. Hayward, p. 303.
[r]Stowe, p. 597, 598. Hollingshed, p. 1057.
[t]Burnet, vol. ii. book i. coll. 46. Hayward, p. 308. Stowe, p. 601. Hollingshed, p.
1059.
[u]Heylin, p. 85. Rymer, tom. xv. p. 226.
[w]Heylin, p. 84. Hayward, p. 309. Stowe, p. 603.
[b]Burnet, vol. ii. p. 148. Hayward, 310, 311, 312. Rymer, vol. xv. p. 211.
[c]Hayward, p. 318. Heylin, p. 104. Rymer, tom. xv. p. 293.
[e]Collier, vol. ii. p. 305, from the council books. Heylin, p. 99.
[f]Fox, vol. ii. p. 734, & seq. Burnet, Heylin, Collier.
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[g]Goodwin de praesul Angl. Heylin, p. 100.
[h]Collier, vol. ii. p. 307, from the council books.
[i]Wood, hist. & antiq. Oxon. lib. 1. p. 271, 272.
[l]Fox, vol. ii. Collier, Burnet.
[q]Hayward, p. 326. Heylin, p. 108. Strype’s Mem. vol. ii. p. 295.
[t]Hayward, p. 320, 321, 322. Stowe, p. 606. Hollingshed, p. 1067