Footnote 4: Cited as Ven. Cal.; this correspondence diminishes in importance as the reign proceeds, and also, after 1530, the documents are epitomised afresh in L. and P.[(back)]

Footnote 5: Three series, viz., that edited by Thorp (2 vols., 1858), a second edited by Bain (2 vols., 1898) and the Hamilton Papers (2 vols., 1890-92).[(back)]

Footnote 6: Vol. i. of the Irish Calendar, and also of the Carew MSS.; see also the Calendar of Fiants published by the Deputy-Keeper of Records for Ireland.[(back)]

Footnote 7: Correspondance de MM. Castillon et Marillac, edited by Kaulek, and of Odet de Selve, 1888.[(back)]

Footnote 8: The most important of these is vol. i. of Lord Salisbury's MSS.; other papers of Henry VIII.'s reign are scattered up and down the Appendices to a score and more of reports.[(back)]

Footnote 9: E.g., Wriothesley's Chronicle, Chron. of Calais, and Greyfriars Chron.[(back)]

Footnote 10: E.g., Leadam, Domesday of Inclosures, and Transactions, passim.[(back)]

Footnote 11: Paderborn, 1893; cf. Engl. Hist. Rev., xix., 632-45.[(back)]

Footnote 12: Henry VIII. and the English Monasteries, 2 vols., 1888.[(back)]

Footnote 13: Of these the most important are Polydore Vergil (Basel, 1534), Hall's Chronicle (1548) and Fabyan's Chronicle (edited by Ellis, 1811). Holinshed and Stow are not quite contemporary, but they occasionally add to earlier writers on apparently good authority.[(back)]