The woman who kept the inn with the sign of the Lion at Sittingbourne, at which Henry seems to have stopped on the 19th Nov. 1532, on his return to Greenwich from Calais.
Lisle Lord, [112], [166], [271].
It is very difficult to say who was the personage to whom this title is here attributed, but most probably Arthur Plantagenet, natural son of King Edward IV. though the patent creating him Viscount Lisle was not dated until the 26th April, 1533.
Liveries, badges on, [16].
----, for, [8], [12], [15], [30], [31], [38], [39], [41], bis, [49], [53], [70], [71], [81], [101], [115], sæpe, [120], [179], [187], [201], [203], [205], [208], [209], [214], [217], [226].
Lock William, mercer of London, [14], [45], [74], [78], [87], [128], [144], [163], bis, [261], [276], [282].
Locks, paid for, [111].
----, paid the smith that carries the locks about with the king, [238], [244], [281].
Like bolts, locks seem to have been carried for the king's chamber door by the smith of the household wherever His Majesty went.
Lodge in Greenwich Park, the, [194].