----, for necessaries for, [217].
----, paid to the keeper of, for mowing the brakes, [265]. See Brakes.
Gresham Richard, mercer of London, [7], [116], [261].
Father of the celebrated Sir Thomas Gresham, the founder of the Royal Exchange, and, whom Mr. Lodge happily terms, "the great patriarch of commerce and of commercial finance." This Richard Gresham was a mercer in London, and, according to the same elegant writer, was "agent for the crown with the trading interest, or, as it was called, king's merchant, an office of the highest importance and trust, inasmuch as it united the duty of raising money for the royal occasions by private loans, with that of protecting and cherishing the sources from which they were derived." He was knighted, and became Mayor of London in 1537, and died in 1548. See also Ward's Gresham Professors.
Greyhounds brought to the king, [19], [65], [70], [148], [161], [223], [236], [242], [245], [247], [256], [257], [275].
Greyhounds, chaste, [58], [174]. See Chaste.
----, to ten men that rowed in the, [127].
----, for waiting with the, [228].
A boat so named.