A Student's History of England, v. 2 (of 3) 1509-1689
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A Student's History of England, v. 2 (of 3) 1509-1689 - Samuel Rawson Gardiner
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Title: A Student's History of England, v. 2 (of 3)
1509-1689
Author: Samuel Rawson Gardiner
Release Date: July 10, 2012 [EBook #40192]
Language: English
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF ENGLAND ***
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A STUDENT'S
HISTORY OF ENGLAND
VOL. II.
WORKS
BY
SAMUEL RAWSON GARDINER.
HISTORY OF ENGLAND, from the Accession of James I. to the Outbreak of the Civil War, 1603-1642. With Maps. 10 vols. crown 8vo. 5 s. net each.
A HISTORY OF THE GREAT CIVIL WAR, 1642-1649. With Maps. 4 vols. crown 8vo. 5 s. net each.
A HISTORY OF THE COMMONWEALTH AND THE PROTECTORATE, 1649-1656. With Maps. 4 vols. crown 8vo. 5 s. net each.
THE LAST YEARS OF THE PROTECTORATE, 1656-1658. By
Charles Harding Firth
, M.A., Regius Professor of Modern History in the University of Oxford. With 3 Plans. 2 vols. 8vo. 24s. net.
A STUDENT'S HISTORY OF ENGLAND. From the Earliest Times to the Death of King Edward VII.
Vol. I.
B.C.
55-
A.D.
1509. With 173 Illustrations. Crown 8vo. 4s.
Vol. II. 1509-1689. With 96 Illustrations. Crown 8vo. 4s.
Vol. III. 1689-1910. With 112 Illustrations. Crown 8vo. 4s.
⁂ Complete in One Volume, with 381 Illustrations, crown 8vo. 12s.
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Crown 8vo. 1s.
SUMMARY OF ENGLISH HISTORY, based on S. R. Gardiner's 'Outline of English History.' Brought down to the Accession of Edward VII. By
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, D.C.L., LL.D. With 66 Coloured Maps and 22 Plans of Battles and Sieges. Fcp. 4to. 5s.
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1910. With 67 Woodcuts and 17 Maps. Fcp. 8vo. 2s. 6d.
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. With 7 Maps. Fcp. 8vo. 2s. 6d.
LONGMANS, GREEN, & CO., 39 Paternoster Row, London, New York, Bombay, Calcutta, and Madras.
A STUDENT'S
HISTORY OF ENGLAND
FROM THE EARLIEST TIMES TO THE DEATH OF KING EDWARD VII
BY
SAMUEL R. GARDINER, D.C.L., LL.D.
LATE FELLOW OF MERTON COLLEGE, OXFORD
ETC.
NEW EDITION (1902)
VOL. II.
A.D. 1509–1689
NEW IMPRESSION (1912)
REISSUE
LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.
39 PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON
FOURTH AVENUE & 30th STREET, NEW YORK
BOMBAY, CALCUTTA, AND MADRAS
1914
All rights reserved
CONTENTS
OF
THE SECOND VOLUME
PART V
THE RENASCENCE AND THE REFORMATION
1509-1603
CHAPTER XXIV
HENRY VIII. AND WOLSEY. 1509-1527
PAGE
The New King. 1509 361
Continental Troubles. 1508-1511 363
The Rise of Wolsey. 1512 363
The War with France. 1512-1513 364
Peace with France. 1514 364
Wolsey's Policy of Peace. 1514-1518 364
Wolsey and the Renascence 366
The Renascence in England 367
The Oxford Reformers 367
'The Utopia.' 1515-1516 367
More and Henry VIII. 368
The Contest for the Empire. 1519 369
The Field of the Cloth of Gold. 1520 369
The Execution of the Duke of Buckingham. 1521 369
Another French War. 1522-1523 369
The Amicable Loan. 1525 372
Closing Years of Wolsey's Greatness. 1525-1527 372
CHAPTER XXV
THE BREACH WITH THE PAPACY. 1527-1534
The Papacy and the Renascence 374
Wolsey and the Papacy 375
Wolsey's Legatine Powers 375
Henry VIII. and the Clergy 377
German Lutheranism 377
Henry's Controversy with Luther 379
Queen Catharine and Anne Boleyn 379
Henry's Demand for a Divorce. 1527-1528 382
The Legatine Court. 1529 382
The Fall of Wolsey. 1529-1530 383
The House of Commons and the Clergy. 1529 385
The Universities Consulted. 1530 385
The Clergy under a Præmunire. 1530-1531 385
The King's Supreme Headship acknowledged by the Clergy. 1531 386
The Submission of the Clergy. 1532 386
Sir Thomas More and the Protestants. 1529-1532 386
Resignation of Sir Thomas More. 1532 388
The First Act of Annates. 1532 388
The King's Marriage and the Act of Appeals. 1533 388
Archbishop Cranmer and the Court at Dunstable. 1533 389
Frith and Latimer. 1533 389
Completion of the Breach with Rome. 1533-1534 390
CHAPTER XXVI
THE ROYAL SUPREMACY. 1534-1547
The Act of Succession. 1534 392
The Acts of Treason and Supremacy. 1534 392
The Monks of the Charterhouse. 1534 393
Execution of Fisher and More. 1535 394
The Dissolution of the Smaller Monasteries. 1536 394
The Execution of Anne Boleyn. 1536 395
The Ten Articles. 1536 395
The Translation of the Bible authorised. 1536 396
The Pilgrimage of Grace. 1536-1537 396
Birth of a Prince. 1537 397
The Beginning of the Attack on the Greater Monasteries. 1537-1538 397
Destruction of Relics and Images. 1538 398
The Trial of Lambert. 1538 399
The Marquis of Exeter and the Poles. 1538 399
The Six Articles. 1539 399
Completion of the Suppression of the Monasteries. 1539-1540 400
Anne of Cleves and the Fall of Cromwell. 1539-1540 400
Catherine Howard and Catherine Parr. 1540-1543 401
Ireland. 1534 401
The Geraldine Rebellion. 1534-1535 402
Lord Leonard Grey. 1536-1539 402
Henry VIII. King of Ireland. 1541 404
Solway Moss. 1542 404
War with Scotland and France. 1542-1546 405
The Litany and the Primer. 1544-1545 409
The Last Days of Henry VIII. 1545-1547 410
CHAPTER XXVII
EDWARD
VI.
AND MARY
EDWARD
VI.
, 1547-1553. MARY, 1553-1558.
Somerset becomes Protector. 1547 412
The Scotch War. 1547-1548 412
Cranmer's Position in the Church of England. 1547 413
Ecclesiastical Reforms. 1547-1548 414
The First Prayer Book of Edward VI. 1549 415
The Insurrection in the West. 1549 415
Ket's Rebellion. 1549 415
The Fall of Somerset. 1549 416
Warwick and the Advanced Reformers. 1549 416
Latimer's Sermons. 1548-1550 417
Warwick and Somerset. 1550-1552 417
The Second Prayer Book of Edward VI. 1552 418
The Forty-two Articles. 1553 419
Northumberland's Conspiracy. 1553 421
Lady Jane Grey. 1553 421
Mary restores the Mass. 1553 422
Mary's First Parliament. 1553 422
Wyatt's Rebellion. 1554 423
The Queen's Marriage 423
The Submission to Rome. 1554 424
The Beginning of the Persecution. 1555 424
Death of Cranmer. 1556 425
Continuance of the Persecution. 1556-1558 426
The Queen's Disappointment. 1555-1556 426
War with France and the Loss of Calais. 1557-1558 427
Death of Mary. 1558 427
CHAPTER XXVIII
THE ELIZABETHAN SETTLEMENT IN CHURCH AND STATE
1558-1570
Elizabeth's Difficulties. 1558 428
The Act of Uniformity and Supremacy. 1559 429
The new Bishops and the Ceremonies. 1559-1564 429
Calvinism 430
Peace with France. 1559 431
The Reformation in Scotland. 1559 432
The Claims of Mary Stuart. 1559 432
The Treaty of Edinburgh. 1560 433
Scottish Presbyterianism. 1561 434
Mary and Elizabeth. 1561 435
The French War. 1562-1564 436
End of the Council of Trent. 1563 436
The Jesuits 436
The Danger from Scotland. 1561-1565 437
The Darnley Marriage. 1565 438
The Murder of Rizzio. 1566 438
The Murder of Darnley. 1567 439
The Deposition and Flight of Mary. 1567-1568 439
Mary's Case before English Commissioners. 1568-1569 440
The Rising in the North. 1569 441
The Papal Excommunication. 1570 441
CHAPTER XXIX
ELIZABETH AND THE EUROPEAN CONFLICT. 1570-1587
The Continental Powers. 1566-1570 442
The Anjou Marriage Treaty and the Ridolfi Plot. 1570-1571 443
Elizabeth and the Puritans 444
Elizabeth and Parliament. 1566 444
A Puritan Parliament. 1571 445
The Duke of Norfolk's Plot and Execution. 1571-1572 445
The Admonition to Parliament. 1572 446
Mariners and Pirates 446
Westward Ho! 447
Francis Drake's Voyage to Panama. 1572 448
The Seizure of Brill, and the Massacre of St. Bartholomew. 1572 449
The Growth of the Dutch Republic. 1572-1578 449
Quiet Times in England. 1572-1577 450
Drake's Voyage. 1577-1580 450
Ireland and the Reformation. 1547 451
Ireland under Edward VI. and Mary. 1547-1558 451
Elizabeth and Ireland. 1558-1578 452
The Landing at Smerwick, and the Desmond Rising. 1579-1583 452
The Jesuits in England. 1580 453
The Recusancy Laws. 1581 454
Growing Danger of Elizabeth. 1580-1584 454
The Association. 1584-1585 456
Growth of Philip's Power. 1584-1585 456
Babington's Plot, and the Trial of Mary Stuart. 1586 457
Execution of Mary Stuart. 1587 458
CHAPTER XXX
ELIZABETH'S YEARS OF TRIUMPH. 1587-1603
The Singeing of the King of Spain's Beard. 1587 458
The Approach of the Armada. 1588 458
The Equipment of the Armada. 1588 459
The Equipment of the English Fleet. 1588 460
The Defeat of the Armada. 1588 462
The Destruction of the Armada. 1588 462
Philip II. and France. 1588-1593 464
Maritime Enterprises. 1589-1596 464
Increasing Prosperity 464
Buildings 465
Furniture 465
Growing Strength of the House of Commons 468
Archbishop Whitgift and the Court of High Commission. 1583 468
The House of Commons and Puritanism. 1584 470
The Separatists 470
Whitgift and Hooker 472
Spenser, Shakspere, and Bacon 473
Condition of the Catholics. 1588-1603 475
Irish Difficulties. 1583-1594 475
O'Neill and the Earl of Essex. 1595-1600 475
Essex's Imprisonment and Execution. 1599-1601 476
Mountjoy's Conquest of Ireland. 1600-1603 478
Parliament and the Monopolies. 1601 478
The Last Days of Elizabeth. 1601-1603 479
PART VI
THE PURITAN REVOLUTION. 1603-1660
CHAPTER XXXI
JAMES I. 1603-1625
The Peace with Spain. 1603-1604 481
The Hampton Court Conference. 1604 481
James and the House of Commons 482
Gunpowder Plot. 1604-1605 483
The Post-nati. 1606-1608 483
Irish Difficulties. 1603-1610 483
Bate's Case and the New Impositions. 1606-1608 484
The Great Contract. 1610-1611 484
Bacon and Somerset. 1612-1613 486
The Addled Parliament. 1614 486
The Spanish Alliance. 1614-1617 488
The Rise of Buckingham. 1615-1618 488
The Voyage and Execution of Raleigh. 1617-1618 489
Colonisation of Virginia and New England. 1607-1620 489
The Beginning of the Thirty Years' War. 1618-1620 490
The Meeting of James's Third Parliament. 1621 490
The Royal Prerogative. 1616-1621 492
Financial Reform. 1619 492
Favouritism and Corruption 494
The Monopolies Condemned. 1621 494
The Fall of Bacon. 1621 495
Digby's Mission, and the Dissolution of Parliament. 1621 496
The Loss of the Palatinate. 1622 497
Charles's Journey to Madrid. 1623 497
The Prince's Return. 1623 498
The Last Parliament of James I. 1624 500
The French Alliance 501
Mansfeld's Expedition, and the Death of James I. 1624-1625 501
CHAPTER XXXII
THE GROWTH OF THE PERSONAL GOVERNMENT OF CHARLES I.
1625-1634
Charles I. and Buckingham. 1625 502
Charles's First Parliament. 1625 502
The Expedition to Cadiz. 1625 502
Charles's Second Parliament. 1626 503
The Forced Loan. 1626 505
The Expedition to Ré. 1627 506
The Five Knights' Case. 1627 506
Wentworth and Eliot in the Third Parliament of Charles I. 1628 508
The Petition of Right. 1628 508
Tonnage and Poundage. 1628 509
Buckingham's Murder. 1628 510
The Question of Sovereignty. 1628 510
Protestantism of the House of Commons. 1625-1628 511
Religious Differences. 1625-1628 511
The King's Declaration. 1628 512
The Second Session of the Third Parliament of Charles I. 1629 512
Breach between the King and the Commons. 1629 513
The Constitutional Dispute. 1629 513
The Victory of Personal Government. 1629-1632 514
Star Chamber Sentences. 1630-1633 514
Laud's Intellectual Position. 1629-1633 515
Laud as the Upholder of Uniformity 516
The Beginning of Laud's Archbishopric. 1633-1634 517
Laud and Prynne. 1633-1634 519
CHAPTER XXXIII
THE OVERTHROW OF THE PERSONAL GOVERNMENT
OF CHARLES I. 1634-1641
The Metropolitical Visitation. 1634-1637 520
Prynne, Bastwick, and Burton. 1637 521
Financial Pressure. 1635-1637 521
Ship-money. 1634-1637 523
Hampden's Case. 1637-1638 523
Scottish Episcopacy. 1572-1612 524
The Scottish Bishops and Clergy. 1612-1637 525
The Riot at Edinburgh and the Covenant. 1637-1638 525
The Assembly of Glasgow, and the Abolition of Episcopacy. 1638 526
The First Bishops' War. 1639 526
Wentworth in Ireland. 1633-1639 527
The Proposed Plantation of Connaught 528
The Short Parliament. 1640 528
The Second Bishops' War. 1640 529
The Meeting of the Long Parliament. 1640 529
The Impeachment of Strafford. 1641 530
Strafford's Attainder and Execution 530
Constitutional Reforms. 1641 531
CHAPTER XXXIV
THE FORMATION OF PARLIAMENTARY PARTIES AND THE
FIRST YEARS OF THE CIVIL WAR. 1641-1644
The King's Visit to Scotland. 1641 532
Parties formed on Church Questions. 1641 532
Irish Parties. 1641 533
The Irish Insurrection. 1641 533
The Grand Remonstrance. 1641 534
The King's Return. 1641 534
The Impeachment of the Bishops. 1641 535
The Impeachment of the Five Members. 1642 535
The Attempt on the Five Members. 1642 536
The Commons in the City. 1642 536
The Struggle for the Militia. 1642 536
Edgehill and Turnham Green. 1642 537
The King's Plan of Campaign. 1643 537
Royalist Successes. 1643 538
The Siege of Gloucester. 1643 538
The First Battle of Newbury. 1643 539
The Eastern Association. 1643 539
Oliver Cromwell. 1642-1643 539
The Assembly of Divines. 1643 540
The Solemn League and Covenant. 1643 540
The Irish War. 1641-1643 541
Winceby and Arundel. 1643-1644 542
The Committee of Both Kingdoms. 1644 542
The Campaign of Marston Moor. 1644 542
Presbyterians and Independents. 1644 543
Essex's Surrender at Lostwithiel. 1644 544
The Second Battle of Newbury. 1644 544
CHAPTER XXXV
THE NEW MODEL ARMY. 1644-1649
The Self-denying Ordinance and the New Model. 1645 545
Milton's 'Areopagitica.' 1644 545
The Execution of Laud. 1645 546
Montrose and Argyle. 1644 546
Montrose and the Highlands. 1644-1645 547
The New Model Army in the Field. 1645 547
The Battle of Naseby. 1645 548
The Results of Naseby. 1645 548
Charles's Wanderings. 1645 549
Glamorgan in Ireland. 1645-1646 549
The King's Flight to the Scots. 1646 550
Charles at Newcastle. 1646 551
The Removal of the King to Holmby. 1647 553
Dispute between the Presbyterians and the Army. 1647 553
Cromwell and the Army. 1647 554
The Abduction of the King. 1647 554
The Exclusion of the Eleven Members. 1647 555
The Heads of the Proposals. 1647 555
The King's Flight to the Isle of Wight. 1647 556
The Scottish Engagement, and the Vote of No Addresses. 1647-1648 556
The Second Civil War. 1648 556
Pride's Purge. 1648 557
The High Court of Justice. 1649 557
The King's Trial and Execution. 1649 559
Results of Charles's Execution. 1649 560
CHAPTER XXXVI
THE COMMONWEALTH AND THE PROTECTORATE. 1649-1660
Establishment of the Commonwealth. 1649 561
Parties in Ireland. 1647-1649 562
Cromwell in Ireland. 1649-1650 562
Montrose and Charles II. in Scotland. 1650 563
Dunbar and Worcester. 1650-1651 563
The Navigation Act. 1651 564
The Dutch War. 1652-1653 565
Unpopularity of the Parliament. 1652-1653 565
Vane's Reform Bill. 1653 566
Dissolution of the Long Parliament by Cromwell. 1653 566
The so-called Barebone's Parliament. 1653 566
The Protectorate, and the Instrument of Government. 1653 568
Character of the Instrument of Government 568
Oliver's Government. 1653-1654 569
The First Protectorate Parliament. 1654-1655 570
The Major Generals. 1655 570
Oliver's Foreign Policy. 1654-1655 571
The French Alliance. 1655 572
Oliver's Second Parliament, and the Humble Petition and Advice. 1656 572
The Dissolution of the Second Protectorate Parliament. 1658 573
Victory Abroad and Failure at Home. 1657-1658 573
Oliver's Death. 1658 574
Richard Cromwell. 1658-1659 574
The Long Parliament Restored. 1659 575
Military Government. 1659 575
Monk and the Rump. 1660 575
End of the Long Parliament. 1660 576
The Declaration of Breda. 1660 576
PART VII
THE POLITICAL REVOLUTION. 1660-1689
CHAPTER XXXVII
CHARLES II. AND CLARENDON. 1660-1667
Return of Charles II. 1660 578
King and Parliament. 1660 579
Formation of the Government. 1660 580
The Political Ideas of the Convention Parliament. 1660 580
Execution of the Political Articles of the Declaration of Breda. 1660 581
Ecclesiastical Debates. 1660 583
Venner's Plot and its Results. 1661 584
The Cavalier Parliament and the Corporation Act. 1661 585
The Savoy Conference, and the Act of Uniformity. 1661-1662 585
The Dissenters. 1662 585
The Parliamentary Presbyterians. 1662 586
Profligacy of the Court. 1662 586
Marriage of Charles II. and Sale of Dunkirk. 1662 587
The Question of Toleration Raised. 1662-1663 587
The Conventicle Act. 1664 588
The Repeal of the Triennial Act. 1664 588
Growing Hostility between England and the Dutch. 1660-1664 589
Outbreak of the First Dutch War of the Restoration. 1664-1665 589
The Plague. 1665 590
The Five Mile Act. 1665 590
Continued Struggle with the Dutch. 1665-1666 590
The Fire of London. 1666 592
Designs of Louis XIV. 1665-1667 592
The Dutch in the Medway, and the Peace of Breda. 1667 593
Clarendon and the House of Commons. 1667 593
The Fall of Clarendon. 1667 594
Scotland and Ireland. 1660 595
CHAPTER XXXVIII
CHARLES II. AND THE CABAL. 1667-1674
Milton and Bunyan. 596
Butler and the Dramatists. 596
Reason and Science. 598
Charles II. and Toleration. 1667 598
Buckingham and Arlington. 1667-1669 599
The Triple Alliance. 1668 599
Charles's Negotiations with France. 1669-1670 600
The Treaty of Dover. 1670 600
The Cabal. 1670 602
Ashley's Policy. 602
Buckingham's Sham Treaty. 1671 603
The Stop of the Exchequer. 1672 603
The Declaration of Indulgence. 1672 604
The Second Dutch War of the Restoration. 1672 605
'Delenda est Carthago.' 1673 606
Withdrawal of the Declaration of Indulgence. 1673 606
The Test Act. 1673 606
Results of the Test Act. 1673 607
Continuance of the Dutch War. 1673 607
The Duke of York's Marriage and Shaftesbury's Dismissal. 1673 608
Peace with the Dutch. 1674 608
CHAPTER XXXIX
DANBY'S ADMINISTRATION AND THE THREE SHORT
PARLIAMENTS. 1675-1681
Growing Influence of Danby. 1675 610
Parliamentary Parties. 1675 610
The Non-Resistance Bill. 1675 611
Charles a Pensionary of France. 1675-1676 611
Two Foreign Policies. 1677 612
The Marriage of the Prince of Orange. 1677 613
Danby's Position. 1677 613
The Peace of Nymwegen. 1678 614
The Popish Plot. 1678 615
Growing Excitement. 1678 615
Danby's Impeachment and the Dissolution of the Cavalier Parliament. 1678-1679 616
The Meeting of the First Short Parliament. 1679 616
The Exclusion Bill and the Habeas Corpus Act. 1679 617
Shaftesbury and the King. 1679 617
Shaftesbury and Halifax. 1679 618
The Divine Right of Kings. 1679 619
The Highland Host. 1677-1678 619
Drumclog and Bothwell Bridge. 1679 619
Petitioners and Abhorrers. 1680 620
The Second Short Parliament. 1680-1681 620
The Third Short Parliament. 1681 621
CHAPTER XL
THE LAST YEARS OF CHARLES II. 1681-1685
Tory Reaction. 1681 622
'Absolom and Achitophel.' 1681 623
The Scottish Test Act and the Duke of York's Return. 1681-1682 623
The City Elections. 1682 623
Flight and Death of Shaftesbury. 1682-1683 624
The Attack on the City. 1682-1683 624
The Remodelling of the Corporations. 1683-1684 625
The Rye House Plot. 1683 625
The Whig Combination. 1683 625
Trial and Execution of Lord Russell. 1683 625
Execution of Algernon Sidney. 1683 626
Parties at Court. 1684 626
Death of Charles II. 1685 627
Constitutional Progress. 1660-1685 627
Prosperity of the Country. 628
The Coffee Houses. 630
The Condition of London. 631
Painting. 631
Architecture. 631
Science. 632
Difficulties of Communication. 632
The Country Gentry and the Country Clergy. 633
Alliance between the Gentry and the Church. 633
CHAPTER XLI
JAMES II. 1685-1689
The Accession of James II. 1685 634
A Tory Parliament. 1685 636
Argyle's Landing. 1685 636
Monmouth's Landing. 1685 637
The Bloody Assizes. 1685 637
The Violation of the Test Act. 1685 638
Breach between Parliament and King. 1685 638
The Dispensing Power. 1686 638
The Ecclesiastical Commission. 1686 639
Scotland and Ireland. 1686-1687 639
The Fall of the Hydes. 1686-1687 640
The Declaration of Indulgence. 1687 640
The Expulsion of the Fellows of Magdalen. 1687 641
An Attempt to pack a Parliament. 1687 641
A Second Declaration of Indulgence. 1688 642
Resistance of the Clergy. 1688 642
The Trial of the Seven Bishops. 1688 643
Invitation to William of Orange. 1688 643
Landing of William. 1688 644
William's March upon London. 1688 645
A Convention Parliament Summoned. 1688 646
The Throne Declared Vacant. 1689 646
William and Mary to be Joint Sovereigns. 1689 647
Character of the Revolution. 647
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
FIG.
Page
Henry VIII. 368
(From a painting by Holbein about 1536, belonging to Earl Spencer)
Cardinal Wolsey 365
(From an original picture belonging to the Hon. Sir Spencer Ponsonby-Fane, K.C.B.)
The embarkation of Henry VIII. from Dover, 1520 370
(From the Society of Antiquaries' engraving of the original picture at Hampton Court)
Silver-gilt cup and cover, made at London in 1523; at Barber Surgeons' Hall, London 371
(From Cripps's 'College and Corporation Plate')
Part of Hampton Court; built by Cardinal Wolsey; finished in 1526 373
(From a photograph)
Portrait of William Warham, Archbishop of Canterbury, 1503-1532, showing the ordinary episcopal dress, with the mitre and archiepiscopal cross 376
(From a painting by Holbein, belonging to Viscount Dillon, F.S.A., dated 1527)
Tower of Fountains Abbey church; built by Abbot Huby, 1494-1526 378
(From a photograph by Valentine and Sons, Dundee)
Catharine of Aragon 380
(From a painting in the National Portrait Gallery)
The gatehouse of Coughton Court, Warwickshire; built about 1530 381
(From Niven's 'Illustrations of Old Warwickshire Houses')
Hall of Christchurch, Oxford; built by Cardinal Wolsey; finished in 1529 384
(From a photograph by W. H. Wheeler, Oxford)
Sir Thomas More, wearing the collar of SS. 387
(From an original portrait painted by Holbein in 1527, belonging to Edward Huth, Esq.)
John Fisher, Bishop of Rochester, 1504-1535 393
(From a drawing by Holbein in the Royal Library, Windsor Castle)
Edward Seymour, Earl of Hertford, brother of Jane Seymour, afterwards Duke of Somerset, known as 'the Protector,' at the age of 28, 1507-1552 395
(From a painting at Sudeley Castle)
Henry VIII. 403
(From a painting by Holbein, belonging to the Earl of Warwick)
Angel of Henry VIII., 1543 405
(From an original example)
Part of the encampment at Marquison, 1544, showing military equipment in the time of Henry VIII. 406
191. Part of the siege of Boulogne by Henry VIII., 1544, showing military operations 407, 408
(From the Society Of Antiquaries' engravings, by Vertue, of the now destroyed paintings formerly at Cowdray House, Sussex)
Armour as worn in the reign of Henry VIII.; from the brass of John Lymsey, 1545, in Hackney church 409
Margaret, wife of John Lymsey; from her brass in Hackney church, showing the costume of a lady circa 1545 409
(From Haines's 'Manual of Monumental Brasses')
Thomas Howard, third Duke of Norfolk, 1473(?)-1554 410
(From a painting by Holbein at Windsor Castle)
Thomas Cranmer, Archbishop of Canterbury, 1533-1556 414
(From a painting by Holbein dated 1547, at Jesus College, Cambridge)
Nicholas Ridley, Bishop of London, 1550-1553 417
(From the National Portrait Gallery)
King Edward VI. 419
(From a picture belonging to H. Hucks Gibbs, Esq.)
Queen Mary Tudor 422
(From a painting by Lucas de Heere, dated 1554, belonging to the Society of Antiquaries)
Hugh Latimer, Bishop of Worcester, 1535-1539, burnt 1555 425
(From the National Portrait Gallery)
A milled half-sovereign of Elizabeth, 1562-1568 435
(From an original example)
Silver-gilt standing cup made in London in 1569-70, and given to Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, by Parker 440
(From Cripps's 'College and Corporation Plate')
Sir Francis Drake in his forty-third year 448
(From the engraving by Elstracke)
Armour as worn during the reign of Elizabeth; from the brass of Francis Clopton, 1577, at Long Melford, Suffolk 451
(From Haines's 'Manual of Monumental Brasses')
Hall of Burghley House, Northamptonshire, built about 1580 455
(From Drummond's 'Histories of Noble British Families')
Sir Martin Frobisher, died 1594 459
(From a picture belonging to the Earl of Carlisle)
The Spanish Armada. Fight between the English and Spanish fleets off the Isle of Wight, July 25, 1588 461
(From Pine's engravings of the tapestry formerly in the House of Lords)
Sir Walter Raleigh (1552-1618), and his eldest son Walter at the age of eight 463
(From a picture dated 1602, belonging to Sir J. F. Lennard, Bart.)
A mounted soldier at the end of the sixteenth century 465
(From a broadside printed in 1596, in the Society of Antiquaries' collection)
Wollaton Hall, Nottinghamshire; built by Thorpe for Sir Francis Willoughby, about 1580-1588 466
(From a photograph by R. Keene, Derby)
Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire; built by Elizabeth, Countess of Shrewsbury, about 1597 467
(From a photograph by R. Keene, Derby)
E-shaped house at Beaudesert, Staffordshire; built by Thomas, Lord Paget, about 1601 469
(From a photograph by R. Keene, Derby)
Ingestre Hall, Staffordshire; built about 1601 471
(From a photograph by R. Keene, Derby)
Coaches in the reign of Elizabeth 473
(From 'Archæologia,' vol. xx. pl. xviii.)
William Shakspere 474
(From the bust on his tomb at Stratford-on-Avon)
Robert Devereux, second Earl of Essex, K.G., 1567-1601 476
(From a painting by Van Somer, dated 1599, belonging to the Earl of Essex)
Queen Elizabeth, 1558-1603 477
(From a painting belonging to the University of Cambridge)
William Cecil, Lord Burghley, K.G., 1520-1591 479
(From a painting in the Bodleian Library, Oxford)
Royal arms borne by James I. and succeeding Stuart sovereigns 482
(From Boutell's'English Heraldry')
North-west view of Hatfield House, Herts; built for Robert Cecil, first Earl of Salisbury, between 1605 and 1611 485
(From a photograph by Valentine and Sons, Dundee)
An unknown gentleman 487
(From a painting belonging to T. A. Hope, Esq.)
King James I. 491
(From a painting by P. Van Somer, dated 1621, in the National Portrait Gallery)
Civil costume, about 1620 492
(From a contemporary broadside in the collection of the Society of Antiquaries)
The banqueting-hall of the Palace of Whitehall (from the north-east); built from the designs of Inigo Jones, 1619-1621 493
(From a photograph)
Francis Bacon, Viscount St. Alban, Lord Chancellor 495
(From a painting by P. Van Somer in the National Portrait Gallery)
Costume of a lawyer 497
(From a broadside dated 1623 in the collection of the Society of Antiquaries)
The Upper House of Convocation 498
The Lower House of Convocation 499
(From a broadside dated 1623, in the collection of the Society of Antiquaries)
King Charles I. 504
(From a painting by Van Dyck)
Queen Henrietta Maria, wife of Charles I. 505
(From a painting by Van Dyck)
Tents and military equipment in the early part of the reign of Charles I. 507
(From the monument of Sir Charles Montague (died in 1625), in the church of Barking, Essex)
George Villiers, first duke of Buckingham, 1592-1628 509
(From the painting by Gerard Honthorst in the National Portrait Gallery)
Sir Edward and Lady Filmer; from their brass at East Sutton, Kent, showing armour and dress worn about 1630 515
(From Waller's 'Monumental Brasses')
Archbishop Laud 517
(From a copy in the National Portrait Gallery by Henry Stone, from the Van Dyck at Lambeth)
Silver-gilt tankard made at London in 1634-5; now belonging to the Corporation of Bristol 518
(From Cripps's 'College and Corporation Plate')
The 'Sovereign of the Seas,' built for the Royal Navy in 1637 522
(From a contemporary engraving by John Payne)
Soldier armed with a pike 527
Soldier with musket and crutch 527
(From a broadside printed about 1630, in the collection of the Society of Antiquaries)
–243. Ordinary civil costume, temp. Charles I., viz:—
A gentleman and a gentlewoman550
A citizen and a citizen's wife551
A countryman and a countrywoman552
(From Speed's map of 'The Kingdom of England,' 1646)
View of the west side of the Banqueting-House, Whitehall, dated 1713, showing the window through which Charles I. is said to have passed to the scaffold 558
(From an engraving by Terasson)
Execution of King Charles I., January 30, 1649 559
(From a broadside in the collection of the late Richard Fisher, Esq., F.S.A.)
A coach in the middle of the seventeenth century 564
(From an engraving by John Dunstall)
Oliver Cromwell 567
(From the painting by Samuel Cooper, at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge)
Charles II. 579
(From the portrait by Sir Peter Lely in Christ's Hospital, London)
Edward Hyde, first Earl of Clarendon, 1608-1674 581
(From an engraving by Loggan)
A mounted nobleman and his squire 582
(From Ogilby's 'Coronation Procession of Charles II.')
Dress of the Horseguards at the Restoration 583
(From Ogilby's 'Coronation Procession of Charles II.')
Yeoman of the Guard 583
(From Ogilby's 'Coronation Procession of Charles II.')
Shipping in the Thames, circa 1660 584
(From Pricke's 'South Prospect of London')
Old St. Paul's, from the east, showing its condition just before the Great Fire 591
(From an engraving by Hollar)
John Milton in 1669 597
(From the engraving by Faithorne)
Temple Bar, London, built by Sir Christopher Wren in 1670 601
(From a photograph)
Anthony Ashley-Cooper, first Earl of Shaftesbury, 1621-1683 604
(From the painting by John Greenhill in the National Portrait Gallery)
Ordinary dress of gentlemen in 1675 611
(From Loggan's 'Oxonia Illustrata')
Cup presented, 1676, by King Charles II. to the Barber Surgeons' Company 612
(From Cripps's 'College and Corporation Plate')
Steeple of the church of St. Mary-le-Bow, London, built by Sir Christopher Wren between 1671 and 1680 614
(From a photograph)
Dress of ladies of quality 628
(From Sandford's 'Coronation Procession of James II.')
Ordinary attire of women of the lower classes 628
(From Sandford's 'Coronation Procession of James II.')
Coach of the latter half of the seventeenth century 629
(From Loggan's 'Oxonia Illustrata')
Waggon of the second half of the seventeenth century 629
(From Loggan's 'Oxonia Illustrata')
Reaping and harvesting in the second half of the seventeenth century 630
(From Loggan's 'Cantabrigia Illustrata')
Costume of a gentleman 632
(From Sandford's 'Coronation Procession of James II.')
James II. 635
(From the painting by Sir Godfrey Kneller in 1684-5 in the National Portrait Gallery)
Yeomen of the Guard 636
(From Sandford's 'Coronation Procession of James II.')
Dress of a bishop in the second half of the seventeenth century 642
(From Sandford's 'Coronation Procession of James II.')
GENEALOGICAL TABLES
I
KINGS AND QUEENS OF ENGLAND (AFTER 1541 OF ENGLAND AND IRELAND) FROM HENRY VII. TO ELIZABETH.
II
KINGS OF SCOTLAND AND GREAT BRITAIN, FROM JAMES IV. OF SCOTLAND TO WILLIAM AND MARY.
III
KINGS OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND FROM JAMES I. TO GEORGE I.
IV
GENEALOGY OF THE KINGS OF FRANCE FROM LOUIS XII. TO LOUIS XIV., SHOWING THEIR DESCENT FROM LOUIS IX.
V
GENEALOGY OF THE KINGS OF SPAIN FROM FERDINAND AND ISABELLA TO CHARLES II.
VI
GENEALOGY OF THE GERMAN BRANCH OF THE HOUSE OF AUSTRIA FROM FERDINAND I. TO LEOPOLD I.
(The dates given are those during which an archduke was emperor.)
VII
GENEALOGY OF THE PRINCES OF ORANGE FROM WILLIAM I. TO WILLIAM III.
SHORTER AND SOMETIMES MORE DETAILED GENEALOGIES
will be found in the following pages.
PAGE
Genealogy of the Poles 399
children of Henry VIII.411
Greys421
last Valois kings of France433
Guises435
"of Mary and Darnley438
"of the descendants of Charles I.609
PART V
THE RENASCENCE AND THE REFORMATION 1509-1603
CHAPTER XXIV
HENRY VIII. AND WOLSEY. 1509-1527
LEADING DATES
Reign of Henry VIII., 1509-1547
Accession of Henry VIII. 1509
Henry's first war with France 1512
Peace with France 1514
Charles V. elected Emperor 1519
Henry's second French war 1522
Francis I. taken captive at Pavia 1525
The sack of Rome and the alliance between England and France 1527
Henry VIII.; from a painting by Holbein about 1536, belonging to Earl Spencer.
1. The New King. 1509.—Henry VIII. inherited the handsome face, the winning presence, and the love of pleasure which distinguished his mother's father, Edward IV., as well as the strong will of his own father, Henry VII. He could ride better than his grooms, and shoot better than the archers of his guard. Yet, though he had a ready smile and a ready jest for everyone, he knew how to preserve his dignity. Though he seemed to live for amusement alone, and allowed others to toil at the business of administration, he took care to keep his ministers under control. He was no mean judge of character, and the saying which rooted itself amongst his subjects, that 'King Henry knew a man when he saw him,' points to one of the chief secrets of his success. He was well aware that the great nobles were his only possible rivals, and that his main support was to be found in the country gentry and the townsmen. Partly because of his youth, and partly because the result of the political struggle had already been determined when he came to the throne, he thought less than his father had done of the importance of possessing stored up wealth by which armies might be equipped and maintained, and more of securing that popularity which at least for the purposes of internal government, made armies unnecessary. The first act of the new reign was to send Empson and Dudley to the Tower, and it was significant of Henry's policy that they were tried and executed, not on a charge of having extorted money illegally from subjects, but on a trumped up charge of conspiracy against the king. It was for the king to see that offences were not committed against the people, but the people must be taught that the most serious crimes were those committed against the king. Henry's next act was to marry Catharine. Though he was but nineteen, whilst his bride was twenty-five, the marriage was for many years a happy one.
2. Continental Troubles. 1508-1511.—For some time Henry lived as though his only object in life was to squander his father's treasure in festivities. Before long, however, he bethought himself of aiming at distinction in war as well as