[59] Archives du Royaume, Bruxelles. Régistre des Dépenses, etc., Nos. 1799, 1800, 1803.
[60] L. de Laborde, "Inventaire"; Henne, iv. 387-390.
[61] Henne, iv. 387-391.
[62] This painting is mentioned in one of Henry VIII.'s catalogues as "A table with the pictures of the three children of the King of Denmark, with a curtain of white and yellow sarcenet." In Charles I.'s inventory it is described as "A Whitehall piece, curiously painted by Mabusius, wherein two men children and one woman child are playing with some oranges in their hands by a green table, little half-figures upon a board in a wooden frame." At the sale of the King's effects it was called a Mabuse, and valued at £10. In 1743 the same picture hung in Queen Caroline's closet at Kensington Palace, and was described by Vertue as "Prince Arthur and his sisters, children of Henry VII." Five years later it was removed to Windsor and engraved under this name. Sir George Scharf was the first to correct this obvious error and restore the original title (see "Archæologia," xxxix. 245). Old copies of the picture, mostly dating from the seventeenth century, are to be seen at Wilton, Longford, Corsham, and other places.
[63] Altmeyer, "Isabelle d'Autriche," 52.
[64] Lanz, i. 283; Henne. iv. 337.
[65] Lanz, i. 408; Gachard, "Analecta Belgica," i. 378.
[66] Schlegel, 126; Altmeyer, "Relations," etc., 186.
[67] Altmeyer, "Relations," 190.
[68] T. Juste, "Les Pays-Bas sous Charles V.," 35.