Read Tudors (History of England Vol 2) Online
Authors: Peter Ackroyd
Henry Imperial
(ship),
ref 1Heresy Act (1555),
ref 1heretics: condemned and executed,
ref 1
,
ref 2
,
ref 3
; growing numbers,
ref 1
; suppressed,
ref 1
,
ref 2
,
ref 3Hertford, Edward Seymour, 1st earl of
see
Somerset, 1st duke ofHertford, Edward Seymour, earl of (son of above),
ref 1Hever (house), Kent,
ref 1Hexham abbey, Northumberland,
ref 1Heywood, John,
ref 1Higden, Ranulph:
Polychronicon
,
ref 1Hilliard, Nicholas,
ref 1history: effect of Reformation on,
ref 1Hoby, Lady Elizabeth,
ref 1Holinshed, Raphael,
ref 1
,
ref 2Holt Castle, Worcestershire,
ref 1Holy League: formed against France,
ref 1Hooker, John,
ref 1Hooker, Richard:
Of the Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity
,
ref 1Hooper, John, bishop of Gloucester,
ref 1
,
ref 2
,
ref 3
,
ref 4Horsey, William,
ref 1hospitals,
ref 1Hours of the Blessed Virgin
,
ref 1Howard de Walden, Thomas Howard, 1st baron (
later
1st earl of Suffolk),
ref 1Howard of Effingham, 2nd baron
see
Nottingham, 1st earl ofHoward, Lady Mary,
ref 1Howard, Lord Thomas,
ref 1Humble Supplication unto God
,
ref 1Humfrey, John,
ref 1Hunne, Richard,
ref 1Hunsdon, George Carey, 2nd baron,
ref 1Hunsdon, Henry Carey, 1st baron,
ref 1
,
ref 2
,
ref 3imperium
,
ref 1Institution of a Christian Man, The
(
The Bishops’ Book
),
ref 1Ireland: Catholic soldiers land in,
ref 1
; Philip promotes rebellion in,
ref 1
; lord lieutenancy,
ref 1
,
ref 2
; Tyrone’s revolt (1598),
ref 1
,
ref 2
; Essex leads army in,
ref 1
; Mountjoy’s campaign in,
ref 1Isabella, queen of Castile,
ref 1
,
ref 2James V, king of Scotland,
ref 1
,
ref 2James VI, king of Scotland (James I of England): birth and appearance,
ref 1
; at Stirling Castle as infant,
ref 1
; as prospective successor to Elizabeth,
ref 1
,
ref 2
,
ref 3
; proclaimed king of Scotland,
ref 1
; Elizabeth moves to recognize,
ref 1
,
ref 2
; exempted from reprisals in Bond of Association,
ref 1
; and Treaty of Berwick,
ref 1
; Elizabeth writes to denying involvement in Mary’s death,
ref 1
; inaction during Spanish Armada engagement,
ref 1
; Essex appeals to,
ref 1
; succeeds on death of Elizabeth,
ref 1Jane Seymour, Queen of Henry VIII: Henry courts,
ref 1
; marriage,
ref 1
; traduced in ballad,
ref 1
; in Corpus Christi procession,
ref 1
; death following birth of son,
ref 1
,
ref 2
; son Edward keeps mementoes,
ref 1
; in royal family portrait,
ref 1Jericho (house), Essex,
ref 1Jesuits: missionaries in England,
ref 1
,
ref 2
; captured and tortured,
ref 1
; put to death,
ref 1Jesus Christ: and real presence in Eucharist,
ref 1Jewel, John, bishop of Salisbury:
The Apology of the Church of England
,
ref 1Joan of Kent (Joan Bocher),
ref 1
,
ref 2John of Austria, Don,
ref 1Jonson, Ben:
Bartholomew Fair
,
ref 1Joye, George,
ref 1Julian of Norwich, Dame,
ref 1Julius III, pope,
ref 1Katherine of Aragon, queen of Henry VIII: marriage to Henry and coronation,
ref 1
; and Henry’s infidelity,
ref 1
; stillbirths and false pregnancies,
ref 1
; favours war against France,
ref 1
; Henry blames for failure of Spanish expedition,
ref 1
; and defeat of Scots (1513),
ref 1
; Henry’s disenchantment with,
ref 1
,
ref 2
; Henry seeks divorce from,
ref 1
,
ref 2
,
ref 3
,
ref 4
,
ref 5
,
ref 6
; popular support for,
ref 1
; Henry withdraws from and renounces,
ref 1
; marriage to Henry declared invalid,
ref 1
; status reduced,
ref 1
; Clement VII declares marriage to Henry still valid,
ref 1
; on execution of Fisher and More,
ref 1
; death,
ref 1
; Mary repudiates,
ref 1
; supported by Observant friars,
ref 1
; Edward VI requests to hand royal jewels to Somerset’s wife,
ref 1
; discusses rituals with daughter Mary,
ref 1
; marriage ruled legitimate,
ref 1Katherine Howard, queen of Henry VIII: marriage to Henry,
ref 1
; infidelity and lovers,
ref 1
; executed,
ref 1Katherine Parr, queen of Henry VIII: favours religious reform,
ref 1
,
ref 1
; marriage to Henry,
ref 1
; as regent in Henry’s absence,
ref 1
; and upbringing of prince and princesses,
ref 1
; influence suspected,
ref 1
; under suspicion for religious views,
ref 1
; Gardiner intrigues against,
ref 1
,
ref 2
; Henry prevents arrest,
ref 1
; nurses Henry,
ref 1
; marriage to Thomas Seymour,
ref 1
; death,
ref 1
; Elizabeth enters and leaves household,
ref 1
;
The Lamentations of a Sinner
,
ref 1Kenilworth Castle, Warwickshire,
ref 1
,
ref 2Kenninghall, Norfolk,
ref 1Kent, Nun of
see
Barton, ElizabethKett, Robert,
ref 1King’s Book, the
see Necessary Doctrine, AKingston, Sir William,
ref 1
,
ref 2Kirk o’Field (house),
ref 1Knollys, Sir Francis,
ref 1
,
ref 2Knollys, Sir William,
ref 1Knox, John,
ref 1
,
ref 2
,
ref 3
;
The First Blast of the Trumpet against the Monstrous Regiment of Women
,
ref 1
,
ref 2Lambert, John,
ref 1land: change of use and ownership,
ref 1
,
ref 2
; in Church hands,
ref 1Langland, William,
ref 1Langley priory,
ref 1Langside Hill, battle of (1568),
ref 1Lanoy, Cornelius,
ref 1Latimer, Hugh: preaching,
ref 1
,
ref 2
,
ref 3
,
ref 4
,
ref 5
; joins court,
ref 1
; appointed bishop of Worcester,
ref 1
; attends Reformation Parliament,
ref 1
; attacked by clergy,
ref 1
; disparages rebels,
ref 1
; encourages education of children,
ref 1
; reads sermon at John Forrest’s execution,
ref 1
; resigns from Worcester,
ref 1
; released under Edward VI,
ref 1
; on Thomas Seymour in Tower,
ref 1
; on social and economic unrest,
ref 1
; on behaviour in church,
ref 1
; detained and interrogated,
ref 1
; degraded and burnt at stake,
ref 1
; on religion in England,
ref 1law: changes,
ref 1
; and canon law,
ref 1Lee, Henry,
ref 1Le Havre,
ref 1Leicester, Lettice, countess of (
earlier
countess of Essex), marriage to Leicester,
ref 1
,
ref 2Leicester, Robert Dudley, earl of: appointed Master of the Horse,
ref 1
; relations with Elizabeth,
ref 1
,
ref 2
,
ref 3
,
ref 4
,
ref 5
; as prospective husband for Elizabeth,
ref 1
; wife Amy’s death,
ref 1
; and Elizabeth’s illness,
ref 1
; supports radical religious reformers,
ref 1
; Elizabeth proposes as husband for Mary Stuart,
ref 1
; earldom,
ref 1
; and Elizabeth’s marriage prospects,
ref 1
; as protector of Protestant faith,
ref 1
,
ref 2
; on imprisonment of Lanoy,
ref 1
; Elizabeth attacks,
ref 1
; hostility to Cecil,
ref 1
; supports Norfolk–Mary Stuart union,
ref 1
; and Elizabeth’s nervous collapse,
ref 1
; favours Puritan cause,
ref 1
; presents wristwatch to Elizabeth,
ref 1
; Elizabeth visits at Kenilworth,
ref 1
; on St Bartholomew’s Day massacre,
ref 1
; and Elizabeth’s refusal to head Protestant League,
ref 1
; dissuades Elizabeth from dismissing Grindal,
ref 1
; as prospective commander in Netherlands,
ref 1
; remarries (Lettice),
ref 1
,
ref 2
; opposes Elizabeth’s Anjou marriage,
ref 1
,
ref 2
; as patron of Campion,
ref 1
,
ref 2
; accompanies Elizabeth on 27th anniversary of accession celebrations,
ref 1
; commands in Netherlands,
ref 1
; on Mary Stuart’s letter to Elizabeth protesting innocence,
ref 1
; ague and death,
ref 1Leigh, Thomas,
ref 1Leith, Scotland: French force at,
ref 1Leland, John:
Itinerary
,
ref 1Lennox, Matthew Stuart, 4th earl of,
ref 1Lewes: priory destroyed,
ref 1
,
ref 2
; Marian martyrs,
ref 1Lewis, Hugh,
ref 1Leyton, Richard,
ref 1Lincolnshire: rebellion (1536),
ref 1Lisle, Honor, viscountess,
ref 1Little Waldingfield, Suffolk,
ref 1Lodge, Thomas,
ref 1London: anti-clericalism,
ref 1
; radicalism and unrest,
ref 1
,
ref 2
; low life and conditions,
ref 1
; plagues,
ref 1
,
ref 2
; Marian martyrs,
ref 1
; as financial and trade centre,
ref 1
; damaged by earthquake (1580),
ref 1
; unrest (1595),
ref 1London, Dr John,
ref 1London, treaty of (1518),
ref 1Lopez, Rodrigo,
ref 1Lord of Misrule: restored under Mary, 677
Louis XII, king of France,
ref 1Louth, Lincolnshire,
ref 1Low Countries
see
NetherlandsLucius I, ‘king’ (legendary hero),
ref 1
,
ref 2Lumley, John, 1st baron,
ref 1Luther, Martin: reform doctrines and teachings,
ref 1
,
ref 2
; declared heretical and books burned,
ref 1
; Henry reads and writes treatise against,
ref 1
,
ref 2
; tracts smuggled into England,
ref 1
,
ref 2
; influence on Tyndale,
ref 1
; denounced by English rebels,
ref 1
; told of Henry’s indifference to religion,
ref 1
; believes in real presence,
ref 1Lutheranism,
ref 1
,
ref 2
,
ref 3
,
ref 4luxuries: increase in,
ref 1McCabb, Melaghin,
ref 1Machyn, Henry,
ref 1Malory, Thomas,
ref 1manorial system,
ref 1Manox, Henry,
ref 1Mar, James Stuart, earl of,
ref 1Margaret of Navarre:
The Mirror of the Sinful Soul
,
ref 1Margaret Tudor, queen of James IV of Scotland,
ref 1Marlech Hill, Hertfordshire,
ref 1Marlowe, Christopher:
The Jew of Malta
,
ref 1Marprelate, Martin: tracts,
ref 1Marshall, Cicely,
ref 1Martyr, Peter,
ref 1Mary I (Tudor), queen: birth,
ref 1
; childhood betrothals,
ref 1
; as prospective successor to Henry,
ref 1
; released from betrothal to Charles V,
ref 1
; household,
ref 1
; dances before father,
ref 1
; illnesses,
ref 1
,
ref 2
,
ref 3
,
ref 4
,
ref 5
; stripped of princess title on birth of Elizabeth,
ref 1
; refuses oath of Succession,
ref 1
; mother reassures,
ref 1
; Anne Boleyn threatens,
ref 1
; learns of mother’s death,
ref 1
; and death of Anne Boleyn,
ref 1
; signs declaration of submission,
ref 1
; Pilgrimage of Grace demands legitimacy of,
ref 1
; frees Edward Courtenay,
ref 1
; education and learning,
ref 1
,
ref 2
; in family portrait,
ref 1
; Edward’s regard for,
ref 1
; interests and activities,
ref 1
; translates Erasmus,
ref 1
,
ref 2
; in succession to Henry,
ref 1
; on Katherine Parr’s marriage to Seymour,
ref 1
; hears Masses,
ref 1
; Thomas Seymour writes to from Tower,
ref 1
; rumoured involvement in Kett rebellion,
ref 1
; in plot against Somerset,
ref 1
; asked to submit to Act of Uniformity,
ref 1
; calls off flight abroad,
ref 1
; differences with Northumberland,
ref 1
; differences with Edward,
ref 1
; and Edward’s health decline,
ref 1
; declared illegitimate,
ref 1
; and Edward’s death,
ref 1
; accession,
ref 1
; promotes and restores Catholicism,
ref 1
,
ref 2
,
ref 3
; government and advisers,
ref 1
; as queen regnant,
ref 1
; marriage prospects,
ref 1
; relations with parliament,
ref 1
; betrothal to Philip of Spain,
ref 1
; piety and devotions,
ref 1
; and Wyatt’s rebellion (1554),
ref 1
; voice and manner,
ref 1
; and Elizabeth’s confinement in Tower,
ref 1
; marriage to Philip,
ref 1
; childlessness,
ref 1
,
ref 2
,
ref 3
; pregnancy,
ref 1
; welcomes Pole on return to England,
ref 1
; as head of Church of England,
ref 1
; religious persecutions under,
ref 1
,
ref 2
,
ref 3
,
ref 4
; relations with Elizabeth,
ref 1
,
ref 2
; and Philip’s departure from England,
ref 1
; armed conspiracy against (1555),
ref 1
; and burning of Cranmer,
ref 1
; supports Philip in war against France,
ref 1
; and fall of Calais,
ref 1
; makes will,
ref 1
; Knox attacks,
ref 1
; death,
ref 1
; embroiders image of cat,
ref 1
; reverses religious reforms,
ref 1