The King's Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of Thomas Wolsey (Pimlico) (177 page)

147
Bodleian Library, MS Jesus Coll 74, fo.194; see also Pollard,
Wolsey
, p.288.

148
Bradford, pp.323-7 (
Sp Cal, iv
(i), pp.819-21);
Mil.Cal
., 832, a view he ascribes to those more friendly to Wolsey, ‘who attribute everything to the envy and fear of his rivals’.

149
Cavendish, p.150.

150
Ibid, p.156.

151
Ibid, p.137.

152
Sp. Cal
., iv (i), p.819.

153
Ibid, p.630.

154
PRO SP1/58/fo.135v (
LP
, iv, 6688).

155
BL Add. MS 48066, fos.184, 186-7;
St. P
, vii, pp.211-5 (
LP
, iv, 6733).

156
PRO SP1/58/fo.215 (
LP
, iv, 6763); also A.F. Pollard, p.295, n.3. His suggestion that the bond was extracted because the government was anxious to prevent anything coming out that would in some way jeopardize England’s relations with foreign powers could have some truth in it, but any embarrassment would have been much greater if they had learnt that the conspiracy they were supposed to be involved in was Henry’s invention!

157
Cavendish specifically mentions that between the Tempests and the Hastings; see Cavendish, p.145.

158
Pollard,
Wolsey
, p.297. For the belief that he would be unpopular but was not see
inter alia Sp. Cal
., iv (i), p.515;
LP
, iv, 6571;
Mil.Cal
., 817.

159
Inter alia, LP
, iv, 6330, 6377, 6510, 6523, 6578-9, 6663, 6666.

160
LP
, iv, 6475, 6554, 6555, 6571.

161
LP
, iv, 6302, 6335, 6344, 6545.

162
LP
, iv, 6329, 6341, 6344, 6447, 6545, 6571.

163
LP
, iv, 6571, 6582, 6583-8.

164
Inter alia St. P
, iv, 145, 152 (
LP
, iv, 662, 687).

165
St. P
, i, p.368 (
LP
, iv, 6582).

166
See p.615.

167
Mil.Cal
., 838.

168
Cavendish, p.156.

169
Ibid. p.165.

170
Ibid, p.166

171
Ibid, pp.167, 178.

172
Ibid, p.181-2.

173
Ibid, pp.178-81.

174
Ibid, p.178-9.

175
Ibid, p.179.

176
Bradford, p.336 (
Sp. Cal
., iv (i), p.833).

177
Mil.Cal
., 833.

178
Cavendish, p.179.

179
Bellay,
Correspondence
, p.20 (
LP
, iv, 5610).

N
OTES TO THE NOTES
 

I have deliberately geared the notes to the Calendars of the State Papers rather than to the documents themselves. This is not because the documents have not been consulted – and where a quote is only to be found in the original, or in the rare cases where the calendars are defective, or there is no calendar, the document reference is given – but because they provide the most readily available means for anyone to check my sources, and are in themselves the best finding list to the documents. Where no page reference is given a document number is to be assumed.

The secondary sources relate very precisely to the bibliography at the back. A single name indicates that only one work by that author is to be found there; initials distinguish one author with the same name from another; where there is no author, or for those authors with more than one work, short titles to the work, or to the periodical in which it appears, have been used.

 

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