[23] “London Past and Present,” by Wheatley and Cunningham.
[24] Peter Cunningham’s “Life,” where it is stated that the register of St Bennet’s records his burial on the 26th June.
[25] Peter Cunningham’s “Inigo Jones,” p. 39.
[26] John Aubrey’s “Brief Lives,” ed. by Andrew Clark. Oxford, 1898, vol. ii. 10.
[27] One of this series is illustrated in Fig. 39.
[28] Those who desire to pursue the subject more fully are referred to two papers by the author—“The Burlington-Devonshire Drawings,” in the Journal of the Royal Institute of British Architects, Third Series, vol. xviii., No. 10, and “The Original Drawings for the Palace at Whitehall, attributed to Inigo Jones,” Architectural Review, June 1912.
[29] “State Papers, Domestic: Charles II.,” vol. v., Nos. 74, 74, i.
[30] It is the version published by Kent which is here dealt with, as being the best known.
[31] In an article by Mr. W. Grant Keith, published in the Burlington Magazine of January 1913, are given some reproductions of half a dozen drawings by Inigo Jones, which are among the most carefully finished specimens of his handiwork that survive. They include a ceiling for Wilton, 1649, and some decorative work at Oatlands Palace in Surrey.