[300] 32 Hen. VIII., c. 14.
[301] This proclamation, issued Feb. 26, 1539, decreed that for seven years ‘straungers shall paye like custome and subsidy as the kinges subiects.’ British Museum, Titus B. i. 572.
[302] Cal. xiii. (ii) 57, 84, 91.
[303] Letters, 273.
[304] Dixon, vol. ii. p. 83.
[305] Dixon, vol. ii. p. 83.
[306] Letters, 159.
[307] Letters, [106], [116], [124], [129], 186, 206.
[308] Cooper, vol. i. pp. 374, 375. In the Calendar, ix. 615, these injunctions are apparently attributed to Cromwell. But Cooper expressly states that the King promulgated them, while Strype (Ecclesiastical Memorials, vol. i. (i) p. 322, and vol. i. (ii) pp. 218, 219) seems to think that they were drawn up by Legh and Ap Rice, though he admits that they were issued in the King’s name. It seems very improbable then that Cromwell wrote them, and I have not placed them among the letters.