Fortescue, Sir John, Chief Justice, [24], [59]; conversations with Edward of Lancaster, [61], [62], [63], [64], [65]; with Margaret, [67], [69]; pardoned after Tewkesbury, [77]; Fuller's praise of him, [119]; on the condition of English labouring class, [123]

Fortescues followed the Earl of Devon to Towton, [24]

Fotheringhay Castle, birthplace of Richard III., [1], [3]; its history, [1]; description, Dukes of York resided at, [2]; subsequent history, [2] n.; funeral of the Duke of York, [39]; monuments, [40] n.

Fox, Dr. Richard, an agent of Morton, secretary to Henry Tudor, [149]; made Bishop of Winchester, [149] n.; decoyed Tyrrel into Henry's power, [273]; notice of, [273] n.

French Chancellor, assertion that the princes were murdered, [242], [243]; proved to be false, [244]

Fulford, Sir Baldwin, beheaded at York, [34]

Fulford pardoned after Tewkesbury, [77]

Fulfords followed the Earl of Devon to Towton, [24]

Gainsborugh, [130]

Gairdner, James, C.B., LL.D., reason for thinking Richard may have been a murderer at [19], [188] n.; on the obit of Henry VI., [198] n.; on the grant to Buckingham, [224] n.; on the letter of Elizabeth to the Duke of Norfolk, [230] n.; on the executions by Henry Tudor after Bosworth, [247]; on the treatment of the Queen Dowager, [257]; proved that the king's Attorney General was loyal to the last, [145] n.; suggests that the death of Clarence was due to his knowledge of Edward's marriage contract, [95]; his view of the government of Henry VII., [249]; his view of the extent of Richard's guilt, [281], [282]; his method stated in his preface, [282], [283]; remarks on his views, [283], [284]; his admissions, [285]; on the deformity, [285]; surprise that Rivers should make Richard supervisor of his will, [285]; Richard's acts do not harmonise with the Tudor stories, [286]; his ideas about the death of young Edward at Tewkesbury, [286-288]; views respecting King Edward's treatment of prisoners after the battle, [289-290]; views about the death of Henry VI., [290-294]; acknowledges that Richard interceded for his brother Clarence, [294]; reply to his remarks about Richard's supposed remorse, [295]; has nothing to say against Richard's marriage, [295]; he admits, assuming they were not tried, that the sentence of Rivers and his companions was not more severe than the law might authorise, [296]; he thinks that Edward's precontract with Lady Eleanor Butler may be true, [296]; yet he still believes in the slander of the Duchess of York, [297]; his defence of the assertion that Richard murdered his nephews, [298-299]