Footnote 1121: L. and P., xvii., 124.[(back)]
Footnote 1122: Ibid.[(back)]
Footnote 1123: L. and P., xvi., 984, 991, 1042.[(back)]
Footnote 1124: Ibid., xvii., 124.[(back)]
Footnote 1125: For relations with Scotland see the Hamilton Papers, 2 vols., 1890-92; Thorp's Scottish Calendar, vol. i., 1858, and the much more satisfactory Calendar edited by Bain, 1898. A few errors in the Hamilton Papers are pointed out in L. and P., vols. xvi.-xix.[(back)]
Footnote 1126: This had been asserted by Henry as early as 1524; Scotland was only to be included in the peace negotiations of that year as "a fief of the King of England"; it was to be recognised that supremum ejus dominium belonged to Henry, as did the guardianship of James and government of the kingdom during his minority (Sp. Cal., ii., 680). For the assertion of supremacy in 1543 see the present writer's England under Somerset, p. 173; L. and P., xvii., 1033. In 1527 Mendoza declared that all wise people in England preferred a project for marrying the Princess Mary to James V. to her betrothal to Francis I. or the Dauphin (Sp. Cal., iii., 156) and that the Scots match was the one really intended by Henry (ibid., p. 192; cf. L. and P., v., 1078, 1286).[(back)]
Footnote 1127: L. and P., xvii., 731, 754, 771.[(back)]
Footnote 1128: Ibid., xvii., 996-98, 1000-1, 1037.[(back)]
Footnote 1129: See Hamilton Papers, vol. i., pp. lxxxiii.-vi.; and the present writer in D.N.B., s.v. "Wharton, Thomas," who commanded the English.[(back)]
Footnote 1130: L. and P., xvii., 1221, 1233.[(back)]