Footnote 522: See G.E. C[okayne]'s and Doyle's Peerages, s.v. "Richmond".[(back)]

Footnote 523: Sp. Cal., iii., 109; L. and P., iv., 2988, 3028, 3140.[(back)]

Footnote 524: L. and P., iv., 3051. In ibid., iv., 3135, Richmond is styled "The Prince".[(back)]

Footnote 525: Laemmer, Monumenta Vaticana, p. 29; L. and P., iv., 4881. It was claimed that the Pope's dispensing power was unlimited, extending even to marriages between brothers and sisters (ibid., v., 468). Campeggio told Du Bellay in 1528 that the Pope's power was "infinite" (ibid., iv., 4942).[(back)]

Footnote 526: L. and P., iv., 5072.[(back)]

Footnote 527: Sp. Cal., iii., 482.[(back)]

Footnote 528: L. and P., vi., 241.[(back)]

Footnote 529: E.L. Taunton, Wolsey, 1902, p. 173, where the words are erroneously given as "To the King's ten mistresses"; "the King's" is an interpolation.[(back)]

Footnote 530: L. and P., iv., 3748.[(back)]

Footnote 531: Ibid., iv., 4858.[(back)]