Thomas Cromwell: Servant to Henry VIII (39 page)

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3.
Richard Taverner,
The Confession of the Faith of the Germans
(1536),
RSTC
909. Prefatory letter.

4.
Philips was allegedly employed by someone in London who may have been Stephen Gardiner. For his subsequent career, see the correspondence of various English agents on the Continent. Daniell,
Tyndale
,
pp. 361–73.

5.
Treasonable words, spoken 17 January 1538,
L & P
,
XIII, i,
no. 35. Schofield,
Thomas Cromwell.
The fragility of his position is demonstrated in a proclamation issued on 16 November 1538, which Cromwell drafted and the king corrected. All the king’s additions are in the direction of severity. J. Strype,
Memorials of Cranmer
,
Appendix, document VIII, where the king’s corrections are shown.

6.
Daniell,
The Bible in English
, pp. 200–1. Hutchinson,
Thomas Cromwell
,
p. 190.

7.
Hughes and Larkin,
Tudor Royal Proclamations
,
I, pp. 286–7.

8.
Schofield,
Thomas Cromwell
,
pp. 46–62.

9.
L
&
P
,
XIV, i, no. 103 (2). Merriman,
Life and Letters
,
II, pp. 174–5.

10.
L & P
, XIV, i, no. 1137.

11.
Ibid
., no. 1193. Retha Warnicke,
The Marrying of Anne of Cleves
(2000), pp. 84–5.

12.
R. J. Knecht,
Francis I
,
pp. 295–7.

13.
Warnicke,
The Marrying of Anne of Cleves
,
pp. 155–7.

14.
Patricia Crawford,
Blood, Bodies and Families in Early Modern England
(2004), pp. 29–30. J. Strype,
Ecclesiastical Memorials
(1822), II, p. 462. Loades,
The Tudor Queens of England
(2009), p. 110.

15.
Warnicke,
The Marrying
,
p. 151.

16.
Scarisbrick,
Henry VIII
,
pp. 372–3.

17.
Schofield,
Thomas Cromwell
,
p. 238. On the circumstances under which William had inherited Gelderland, see Warnicke,
The Marrying
,
p. 238.

18.
Elton, ‘Thomas Cromwell’s decline and fall’ in
Studies in Tudor and Stuart Politics and Government
,
I (1974), p. 203.
L & P
, XIV, i, no. 672.

19.
TNA SP1/140, f. 197.
L
&
P
,
XIV, i, nos 634, 645. Chistopher More to Cromwell, March 1539.

20.
Alasdair Hawkyard, ‘The Court, the Household and Parliament in the Mid-Tudor Period’,
The Court Historian
,
16, 2011, pp. 159–75.

21.
Cromwell was not taken by surprise by the royal agenda for this parliament. Among his remembrances for early March is a note for ‘a device in the parliament for the unity in religion’
. L & P
, XIV, i, no. 655. Elton, ‘Decline and fall…’, pp. 205–7.

22.
Statute 31 Henry VIII, c. 14.
Statutes of the Realm
,
III, pp. 739–43.

23.
Foxe,
Acts and Monuments
(1583), p. 1192.

24.
Lords Journals
,
I, pp. 128–9, where it is rendered in Latin, although delivered in English. The translation is from Elton, ‘Decline and Fall…’, p. 216.

25.
Ibid
., pp. 217–8.

26.
Lords Journals
,
I, p. 133.

27.
R. S. Schofield, ‘Taxation and the political limits of the Tudor State’ in
Law and Government under the Tudors
,
pp. 257–66. Schofield, ‘Parliamentary Lay Taxation, 1485–1547’ (Cambridge Univerisity PhD, 1963).

28.
Elton, ‘Decline and Fall…’, pp. 219–20.

29.
Loades,
Cardinal Wolsey
(2008), pp. 28–32. P. J. Gwyn,
The King’s Cardinal
,
pp. 630–2.

30.
Merriman,
Life and Letters
,
I, p. 285. P. Van Dyke,
Renascence Portraits
(1905), pp. 237
et seq
.

31.
Sadler did, however, bare Cromwell’s last letters to Henry. F. S. Stoney,
Life and Times of the Right Honourable Sir Ralph Sadler
(1877), p. 68.

32.
More strictly, he was under house arrest.
State Papers
,
1, pp. 627–8.

33.
Elton, ‘Decline and Fall…’, p. 192

34.
L & P
,
XII, no. 27, XIII, no. 143. Elton, ‘Decline and Fall…’, pp. 220–1.

35.
Schofield,
Thomas Cromwell
,
pp. 296–9.

36.
Ibid
., p. 297. For Norfolk’s attitude to Irish affairs, see Ellis,
Tudor Ireland
,
p. 123.

37.
L &
P
,
XII, ii, no. 249.

38.
TNA SP1/105, f. 245.
L & P
, XI,
no. 233. It is alleged that one of the factors turning Norfolk against Cromwell in 1540 was the dissolution of Thetford Abbey in February, while the duke was in France.

39.
TNA SP1/106, f.157.
L & P
,
XI, no. 434.

40.
TNA SP1/106, f.183.
L & P
,
XI, no. 470.

41.
L &
P.
,
XI, no. 576.

42.
Elton, ‘Decline and Fall…’, p. 195.

43.
The letter was actually drafted by Wriothesley, which makes Cromwell’s role in its contents all the more obvious.
L &
P
, XI, nos 777, 809, 810, 863.

44.
L & P
, XII, ii, no. 291. Elton, ‘Decline and Fall…’ p. 196 and n. 4

45.
L
&
P
,
XIV, i, no. 541.

46.
Elton, ‘Decline and Fall…’ pp. 196–7.

47.
G. Redworth,
In Defence of the Church Catholic
,
pp. 59–61. J. A. Muller,
Stephen Gardiner and the Tudor Reaction
(1926), pp. 55
et seq
.

48.
The nature of Cromwell’s relationship with Gardiner is fairly reflected in the former’s letter of 5 July 1536. BL Add. MS 25114, f. 175. Merriman,
Life and Letters
,
pp. 19–21.

49.
L & P
, IX, no. 1039. Merriman,
Life and Letters
,
I, pp. 439–40.
Ibid
., II, p. 20.

50.
12 June 1537.
L & P
,
XII, ii, no. 78.

51.
Cromwell to Gardiner, 15 February 1538. BL Add. MS 25,114, f. 286. Merrimen,
Life and Letters
,
II, pp. 115–6.

52.
Burnet,
History of the Reformation
,
1, p. 425.

53.
A view held by Chapuys,
L
&
P
,
X, nos 351, 688, XI, no. 40; and Castillon,
Ibid
., XIII, i, nos 995,1101–2. 1135. Merriman,
Life and Letters
,
I, pp. 233–4.

54.
Elton, ‘Decline and Fall…’, p. 219.

55.
Merriman, I, p. 287.

56.
L & P
, XV,
nos 334, 425.

57.
Ibid.
, no. 486.

58.
Ibid
., no. 429.

59.
L & P
,
XV,
no. 437. Elton, ‘Decline and Fall…’, pp. 215–6. Schofield,
Thomas Cromwell
,
pp. 374–5.

60.
L & P
, XV,
nos 540–1. Edward Hall,
Chronicle
,
p. 838. For the idea that this was a deliberate snub to Norfolk, see D. Head,
Ebbs and
Flows of Fortune; the Life of Thomas Howard, third Duke of Norfolk
(1995), p. 170.

61.
Marillac to Francis I, 1 June 1540.
L & P
, XV,
no. 736. Sampson was arrested some time between 25 and 28 May.

62.
L & P
,
XV,
no. 373

63.
L & P
,
XIV, i,
nos 1108, 1152, 1156. M. St Clare Byrne,
The Lisle Letters
(1983), pp. 476–99.

64.
L & P
,
XV,
nos 766–7.

65.
The Emperor and the King of France were also members of the Order Schofield,
Thomas Cromwell
,
pp. 392–3. Hutchinson,
Thomas Cromwell
,
pp. 238–9. Although he did not speak for him, Ralph Sadler did at least bear Cromwell’s final plea for mercy to the king. This may have contributed to a loss of favour, because he spent a period in the Tower in 1541. A. J. Slavin,
Politics and Profit
(1966).

66.
Scarisbrick,
Henry VIII
,
pp. 372–3. Wamicke,
Marrying of Anne of Cleves
,
pp. 202–3. Wriothesley’s deposition, made after Cromwell’s fall.
L & P
,
XV,
no. 850 (II), printed by Strype,
Ecclesiastical Memorials
,
I, Records, cxiv, no. 9.

67.
Hutchinson,
Thomas Cromwell
,
pp. 222–3. Loades,
Catherine Howard
(2012), pp. 96–7.

68.
L & P
,
XV, n. 766. Henry VIII to Marillac. Schofield,
Thomas Cromwell
,
pp. 391–2.

69.
Elton, ‘Decline and Fall…’, pp. 225–6.

70.
Schofield,
Thomas Cromwell
,
p. 392.

71.
Hall,
Chronicle
,
p. 838.

72.
State Papers
,
VIII, pp. 364–5.

73.
L & P
,
XV,
no. 364. T. B. and T. J. Howell,
Complete Collection of State Trials
(1828), I, p. 455.

74.
L & P
,
XV,
no. 785.
State Papers
,
VIII, p. 264.

75.
BL Cotton MS Titus B 1, f. 273. Merriman,
Life and Letters
,
II, pp. 264–7.

76.
Schofield,
Thomas Cromwell
,
p. 403.

77.
L & P
,
XV,
no. 823. Merriman,
Life and Letters
,
pp. 268–73.

78.
Elton, ‘Decline and Fall…’, p. 221.

79.
The Act is printed in full by Burnet,
History of the Reformation
,
IV, p. 415

80.
Ibid
., clause 3.

81.
Ibid
., clause 10.

82.
Elton, ‘Decline and Fall…’, p. 225.

83.
L & P
,
XV,
no. 804.

84.
Richard Hilles to Bullinger,
L &
P
,
XVI, p. 270

85.
Burnet,
History of the Reformation
,
I, i, bk iii, p. 206.

86.
R. A. Rebholtz,
The Complete Poems of Thomas Wyatt
(1978), p. 86.

87.
L &
P
,
XV, no. 498. S. E. Lehmberg,
The Later Parliaments of Henry VIII, 1536

1547
(1977), p. 111.

88.
Schofield,
Thomas Cromwell
,
p. 408.

89.
Ibid
., p. 415.

8 Cromwell and the State

1.
Reginald Pole, ‘Apologia ad Carolum Quint Caesarem’,
Epistolarum… Pars Prima
,
ed. Qurini (1744), p. 133. G. R. Elton, ‘The Political Creed of Thomas Cromwell’,
Studies in Tudor and Stuart Politics
and Government
(1974), II, pp. 216–8.

2.
Pole, ‘
Apologia
’, p. 133.

3.
England in the Reign of King Henry the Eighth
, ed. S. J. Herrtage and J. M. Cooper (EETS, 1878), p. xv.

4.
In the Reformation statutes he was always careful to emphasise that the law so created was consistent with the law of God – although not, of course, with the canon law, which was merely of human invention.

5.
Elton, ‘The Political Creed…’, pp. 228–9.

6.
Ibid
., p. 230. Henry, Lord Morley, wrote to Cromwell in February 1539, sending him a copy of the
History of Florence
(in Italian), and commending
The Prince
to his attention, in case he was unfamiliar with it.
L
&
P
,
XIV, i, no. 285.

7.
Schofield,
Thomas Cromwell
,
pp. 110–24.

8.
Cromwell to the Council of Calais, 27 May 1539. Merriman,
Life and Letters
,
II, pp. 222–4. See also,
ibid
., p. 112.
Lords Journals
,
I, p. 128.

9.
Alexander Alesius,
Of the authoritie of the word of god against
the
bishop of London
(?1540),
RSTC
292
. Letters and Papers
,
XII, i,
no. 790.

10.
Lords Journals
,
I, p. 128. For a full consideration of the punishments which he inspired, see G. R. Elton,
Policy and Police
,
pp. 327–83.

11.
Cromwell to Fisher, February 1534. Merriman,
Life and Letters
,
I, p. 376.

12.
Cromwell’s use of attainder was attacked by no less a Common Lawyer than Sir Edward Coke, who certainly did not regard it as a gesture of respect! G. R. Elton,
The Tudor Constitution
,
p. 172.

13.
While it is true that the common law did not recognise slander as an offence, there was nevertheless a form of action devised called ‘trespass on the case’, whereby the offender was deemed to have trespassed upon the plaintiff’s reputation. Marjorie Blatcher,
The Court of King’s Bench 1450–
1550
(1978), p. 25.

14.
Elton,
Tudor Constitution
,
p. 340.

15.
Letters and Papers
,
XIII, i, no. 120. F. Schultz, ‘Bracton on Kingship’,
English Historical Review
,
60, 1945.

16.
All that is known of this story comes from the depositions collected by the commissioners. TNA SP1/131, ff. 23–31.
L
&
P
,
XIII, i, no. 686.

17.
Ibid.

18.
Elton,
Policy and Police
,
p. 93.

19.
The discontented monk informed Lord Stourton, who passed the matter on to Cromwell. TNA SP1/76, f. 84.
L & P
,
VI, no. 510.

20.
Henry Ellis,
Original Letters relating to the English Reformation
(1846), 11, ii, p. 130. A letter from his brother Alan.

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