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    The Lady in the Tower: The Fall of Anne Boleyn

    Page 49
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      54 Chronicle of King Henry VIII

      55 Privy Purse Expenses; SC; Hall; Lowinsky. The “Spanish Chronicle” incorrectly states that Mark was engaged by Anne Boleyn after Katherine of Aragon’s death (Chronicle of King Henry VIII).

      56 Ives

      57 Cavendish: Metrical Visions

      58 Guicciardini; Lowinsky

      59 Lowinsky

      60 Ibid

      61 Chronicle of King Henry VIII

      62 Cavendish: Metrical Visions

      63 Ibid

      64 LP; Privy Purse Expenses

      65 Royal manuscript 20, BXXI, fols. 2-3. This manuscript later came into the possession of Sir Thomas Wyatt, the poet, whose name is also written on it. See Thomson; Lowinsky.

      66 Ives: “Stress, Faction and Ideology,” and Wormald, for example

      67 Lowinsky

      68 Ibid. The choir book is manuscript 1070 of the Royal College of Music, London.

      69 Wyatt: Complete Poems

      70 Cavendish: Metrical Visions

      71 Warnicke

      72 LP

      73 Privy Purse Expenses

      74 Lowinsky

      75 Cavendish: Metrical Visions

      76 Warnicke

      77 Pollard: Henry VIII

      78 Ives: “Faction”

      79 Ives: “Fall Reconsidered”

      80 Warnicke: “Fall”

      81 LP

      82 Ives: “Fall Reconsidered;” Denny: Anne Boleyn

      83 Bernard

      84 Starkey: Six Wives

      85 “Triumphs of English”

      86 Cavendish: Metrical Visions

      87 Fox

      88 Hall

      89 LP

      90 Fox

      91 Cavendish: Metrical Visions

      92 LP; Froude, Note D, in Thomas (LP 911)

      93 Friedmann

      94 Fox

      95 “Triumphs of English;” LP; Bernard: “Fall;” Ives: “Fall Reconsidered”

      96 Forty-Six Lives

      97 Warnicke: “Fall”

      98 Ibid; Forty-Six Lives

      99 For this theory, see Warnicke: “Fall”

      100 Ibid; Additional manuscript 12,060, ff20b, 23b; Forty-Six Lives

      101 Excerpta Historica (LP 1107)

      102 Fox, citing Carley

      103 “Triumphs of English”

      104 Excerpta Historica (LP 1107)

      105 Warnicke

      CHAPTER 6: TURNING TRUST TO TREASON

      1 LP; Lisle Letters; SC; Ives

      2 Milherve

      3 Cavendish: Metrical Visions

      4 Aless

      5 Carles

      6 Chronicle of King Henry VIII

      7 Lisle Letters

      8 Carles

      9 Warnicke

      10 LP. The letter is mutilated.

      11 LP

      12 Ives

      13 Childs

      14 Cited by Smith: Henry VIII

      15 Aless

      16 LP

      17 Ibid

      18 Denny: Anne Boleyn

      19 Chronicle of King Henry VIII

      20 Wilson: Holbein; Constantine

      21 Wriothesley

      22 Constantine

      23 Wilson: Holbein

      24 Wriothesley

      25 LP

      26 Porter

      27 LP

      28 Ibid

      29 Baga de Secretis

      30 Ives

      31 Cavendish: Metrical Visions

      32 Lisle Letters

      33 Ives: “Faction;” Smith: Tudor Tragedy

      34 Carles

      35 Chronicle of King Henry VIII

      36 Carles

      37 Ives: “Faction”

      38 Constantine

      39 Cavendish: Metrical Visions

      40 Carles

      41 SC

      42 Sergeant

      43 LP

      44 Ibid

      45 Ibid

      46 Wriothesley; LP; Carles; Ashmole manuscripts; Histoire de la Royne Anne de Boullant

      47 Constantine

      48 LP

      49 Ibid

      50 SC

      51 Wriothesley; LP

      52 Ives

      CHAPTER 7: TO THE TOWER

      1 LP

      2 Deans

      3 Friedmann

      4 LP; Childs

      5 Denny: Anne Boleyn

      6 Lofts

      7 LP

      8 Sir John Hayward. Strickland confuses him with the playwright John Heywood.

      9 Ibid

      10 LP

      11 Wriothesley

      12 Sir John Hayward

      13 Lisle Letters

      14 Wriothesley

      15 LP

      16 Hall

      17 Clark

      18 Wriothesley

      19 Ibid

      20 Its name appears thus in a plan of the Tower drawn in ca. 1597, which is only known from an engraving of the lost original done in 1742, which is now in the possession of the Society of Antiquaries of London.

      21 Wriothesley

      22 Warnicke asserts that Aless heard the cannonfire on April 30, but no one was committed to the Tower on that day—none of the accused were sent there until May 2. She bases her assertion on Aless’s statement, in his previous paragraph, that he was at Greenwich late at night on April 30. However, he does not state when he returned to London. In the paragraph following the one in which he mentions hearing the cannon, he refers to news of the Queen’s arrest spreading “in the morning,” i.e., the morning of May 3. As she was imprisoned on the afternoon of May 2, he must have returned to Greenwich on that day. It is highly unlikely that the cannon was fired to mark the lowly Smeaton’s committal to the Tower, as Warnicke suggests.

      23 Fraser

      24 Wriothesley; George Wyatt

      25 George Wyatt

      26 Wriothesley

      27 Lofts

      28 Warnicke is mistaken in suggesting that Anne was imprisoned in the Beauchamp Tower, also known as the Cobham Tower, which is some distance from the palace; that old tradition was disputed by Elizabeth Benger as far back as 1821.

      29 Tower of London

      30 Fraser

      31 LP

      32 LP. See “Notes on Sources” under Sir William Kingston.

      33 Erickson: Anne Boleyn

      34 “Triumphs of English”

      35 LP

      36 LP; Warnicke

      37 LP

      38 Ibid

      39 Cavendish: Metrical Visions

      40 LP

      41 Richardson

      42 Hastings

      43 Fraser

      44 LP

      45 Ibid

      46 Ibid

      47 Carles

      48 LP; Friedmann

      49 Cavendish: Metrical Visions

      50 Lisle Letters

      51 SC; LP

      52 Friedmann

      53 LP

      54 Wriothesley

      CHAPTER 8: STAINED IN HER REPUTATION

      1 Du Cann

      2 Erickson: First Elizabeth

      3 Wriothesley (editorial notes)

      4 LP

      5 Ibid

      6 Ibid

      7 Ives

      8 LP

      9 Warnicke states incorrectly that this conversation with Weston had taken place a year earlier, but Kingston clearly stated that it occurred on “Whitsun Monday last,” i.e., April 24, 1536.

      10 LP

      11 Ibid

      12 Hume

      13 LP; Lisle Letters; Privy Purse Expenses; Ives

      14 LP

      15 Friedmann

      16 LP

      17 Warnicke

      18 Ibid

      19 Ives: “Fall Reconsidered”

      20 Warnicke: “Fall;” Ives

      21 Lindsey

      22 Lisle Letters

      23 LP

      24 Ibid

      25 Erickson: Great Harry

      26 SC; LP

      27 Now a school known as Carew Manor

      28 LP

      29 SC

      30 LP

      31 Constantine; Starkey: Six Wives

      32 Hammond

      33 Bell

      34 Ives; H
    amer; Strickland

      35 Histoire de la Royne Anne de Boullant. Anthony Anthony says that Wyatt was taken to the Tower at 9:00 A.M. on May 8, but he is not perhaps the most reliable observer, having almost certainly got the time of Smeaton’s arrival there wrong. The Lisle Letters refer to Page being in the Tower on May 8, not that he was taken there that day. Kingston’s second report to Cromwell, probably written on the evening of May 5, refers to the arrests of Wyatt and Page.

      36 LP; Lisle Letters

      37 Murphy

      38 Friedmann

      39 For Sir Thomas Wyatt, see Muir; Thomson and Wyatt: Complete Poems

      40 Rivals in Power

      41 Wyatt: Complete Poems; LP

      42 George Wyatt

      43 Ibid

      44 Ibid

      45 Ibid

      46 SC; LP

      47 Ives: “Faction”

      48 Ibid; Paul

      49 Denny: Anne Boleyn

      50 LP

      CHAPTER 9: THE MOST MISCHIEVOUS AND ABOMINABLE TREASONS

      1 Fox

      2 LP

      3 Ives; Carles

      4 LP

      5 Ives

      6 Starkey: Six Wives

      7 Ives

      8 LP

      9 Chronicle of King Henry VIII

      10 LP. The original is Cotton manuscript Otho CX 228.

      11 LP

      12 Love Letters of Henry VIII, ed. Ridley

      13 Love Letters of Henry VIII, ed. Savage

      14 Strickland

      15 Ibid

      16 LP

      17 Ibid

      18 Ibid

      19 Ibid

      20 Ibid

      21 Ibid

      22 Ibid

      23 Murphy

      24 Lisle Letters

      25 Ibid

      26 LP

      27 Ibid

      28 Baga de Secretis

      29 Miller

      30 Baga de Secretis. I am indebted to Glen Lucas for his translations of the indictments and summary of the offenses cited in both.

      31 Ibid

      32 Ives: “Faction”

      33 Warnicke: “Fall”

      34 Ives

      35 Ibid

      36 George Wyatt

      37 See Ives: “Fall Reconsidered”

      38 Bernard: “Fall: Rejoinder”

      39 LP

      40 Ives

      41 Bernard

      42 Ibid

      43 LP

      44 Ibid

      45 Lisle Letters

      46 Lindsey

      47 State Papers; Constantine; LP

      48 Ives; Lindsey

      49 Denny: Anne Boleyn

      50 Williams: Henry VIII and His Court

      51 LP; Fox

      52 Baga de Secretis

      53 LP

      54 Ibid

      55 Friedmann

      56 Ibid

      57 LP

      58 Friedmann

      59 SC

      60 Carles

      CHAPTER 10: MORE ACCUSED THAN CONVICTED

      1 Starkey: Six Wives

      2 Cited by Strickland

      3 Wriothesley; Starkey: Six Wives

      4 Wriothesley

      5 Baga de Secretis; Churchill

      6 LP

      7 Hamer; Denny: Anne Boleyn; Ives

      8 Friedmann

      9 Hastings

      10 Wriothesley

      11 Hastings

      12 Spelman

      13 Stow

      14 Baga de Secretis

      15 Spelman; SC

      16 Baga de Secretis

      17 Wriothesley (editorial notes)

      18 Spelman

      19 Wriothesley (editorial notes)

      20 Constantine

      21 Friedmann

      22 Wriothesley; Spelman; Baga de Secretis

      23 Carles

      24 Ibid

      25 Lisle Letters

      26 LP

      27 Ibid

      28 Lisle Letters

      29 Ives

      30 Complete Peerage

      31 Lisle Letters

      32 Cf LP

      33 LP

      34 Ibid

      35 Ibid

      36 Ibid

      37 Ibid

      38 Lisle Letters

      39 Carles

      40 Ibid

      41 Lisle Letters

      42 Ibid

      43 LP

      44 Wriothesley

      45 Lisle Letters

      46 Baga de Secretis

      47 Baga de Secretis; Friedmann. The latter lists only twenty-six peers.

      48 LP

      49 Ibid

      50 Ibid

      51 Ibid

      52 Ibid

      53 Ibid

      54 Ibid

      55 Ibid

      56 Ibid

      57 LP; Wriothesley; Starkey: Six Wives; Brayley, Brewer, and Nightingale; Lewis; Batey

      58 Roper

      59 SC

      60 Warnicke

      61 SC; Warnicke: “Fall”

      62 Wriothesley

      63 The original plan is lost, but a copy made in 1742 is now in the collection of the Society of Antiquaries of London.

      64 Wriothesley; Harleian manuscripts

      65 Benger

      66 Wriothesley

      67 Churchill; Miller

      68 Wriothesley; Harleian manuscripts; State Trials

      69 Constantine

      70 Complete Peerage

      71 Baga de Secretis

      72 Miller; Friedmann

      73 Wriothesley

      74 Loades: Henry VIII and His Queens

      75 Cavendish: Wolsey; LP; Percy manuscripts

      76 LP

      77 “Triumphs of English”

      78 Baga de Secretis; Friedmann; Complete Peerage; Dictionary of National Biography

      79 Baga de Secretis

      80 Murphy

      81 Friedmann

      82 Snowden

      83 LP

      84 Ibid

     


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