[70] Antoinette de Bourbon, widow of Claude de Lorraine.
[71] Labanoff, “Lettres de Marie Stuart.”
[72] State Papers (Elizabeth), Foreign Series.
[73] Calvin had died on 27 May, 1564.
[74] Renée de Bourbon, Abbess of Chelles, sister of Condé.
[75] Presumably Condé’s chaplain, Pérssel, whose name is sometimes written Pérocel.
[76] Françoise Marie d’Orléans, posthumous daughter of François d’Orléans, Marquis de Rothelin, a cadet of the House of Longueville, and Jacqueline de Rohan. The House of Longueville was a branch of the Royal House of France, descended from the celebrated Comte de Dunois—the “Bastard of Orleans”—son of Louis I., Duc d’Orléans. His nephew, Charles VII., gave him, in 1463, the county of Longueville, in the district of Caux, which had been ceded to Charles VI. by Bertrand du Guesclin, half a century earlier. Dunois’s grandson, François, was created a duke in 1505, and, in 1571, his successor, Léonor, brother to the second Princesse de Condé, received from Charles IX., for himself and his descendants, the title of Princes of the Blood.
[77] Brantôme.
[78] Ibid.
[79] Smith to the Earl of Leicester, 5 May, 1565. State Papers (Elizabeth), Foreign Series.