Footnote 64: Sp. Cal., Suppl., p. 23.[(back)]

Footnote 65: Cf. A.O. Meyer, Die Englische Diplomatie, Breslau, 1901.[(back)]

Footnote 66: The conclusion of the maxim utpote cum lege regia quae de imperio ejus lata est, populus ei et in eum omne suum imperium et potestatem conferat (Ulpian, Digest, I., iv., 1), was conveniently forgotten by apologists for absolutism, though the Tudors respected it in practice.[(back)]

Footnote 67: Hist. de France, ed. 1879, ix., 301.[(back)]

Footnote 68: Fortescue, Governance of England, ed. Plummer, 1885.[(back)]

Footnote 69: Magna Carta may almost be said to have been "discovered" by the parliamentary opponents of the Stuarts; and in discovering it, they misinterpreted several of its clauses such as the judicium parium. Allusion was, however, made to Magna Carta in the proceedings against Wolsey for Præmunire (Fox, vi., 43).[(back)]

Footnote 70: Ven Cal., ii., 336.[(back)]

Footnote 71: The Duke was Buckingham, and the Marquis was Dorset.[(back)]

Footnote 72: See a description of Ferdinand's court by John Stile, the English envoy, in L. and P., i., 490.[(back)]

Footnote 73: See the present writer's England under Protector Somerset, p. 38.[(back)]