Footnote 831: L. and P., vi., 142.[(back)]

Footnote 832: Ibid., vi., 296.[(back)]

Footnote 833: Ibid., vi., 89.[(back)]

Footnote 834: Ibid., vi., 142, 160. The nuncio sat on Henry's right and the French ambassador on his left, this trinity illustrating the league existing between Pope, Henry and Francis.[(back)]

Footnote 835: Ibid., vi., 276, 311, 317, 491.[(back)]

Footnote 836: The germ of this Act may be found in a despatch from Henry dated 7th October, 1530; that the system of appeals had been subject to gross abuse is obvious from the fact that the Council of Trent prohibited it (Cambridge Modern Hist., ii., 671).[(back)]

Footnote 837: L. and P., vi., 1489.[(back)]

Footnote 838: Ibid., vi., 296.[(back)]

Footnote 839: Ibid., XII., ii., 952.[(back)]

Footnote 840: Cranmer, Works, ii., 237.[(back)]