[498] Philip’s marriages had this peculiarity about them, that his second wife (Mary) had been betrothed to his father, and his third wife had been betrothed to his son.

[499] Strype, Memorials of Queen Mary’s Reign, III. ii. 215.

[500] Gee and Hardy, Documents, etc. p. 385.

[501] In the days of Henry VIII., Bishop Gardiner had published a book under this title, in which the papal jurisdiction in England was strongly repudiated. Someone, probably Bale, when Gardiner was aiding the Queen to restore that supremacy, had translated the book into English, and had printed at the bottom of the title-page, “A double-minded man is inconstant in all his ways.”

[502] Gee and Hardy, Documents, etc. p. 384, The Act de hæretico comburendo will be found on p. 133.

[503] Ibid. p. 380.

[504] Bonner’s Articles of Inquiry are printed in Strype’s Historical Memorials, Ecclesiastical and Civil, etc. III. ii. p. 217.

[505] Gairdner’s The English Church in the Sixteenth Century, etc. (London, 1902) p. 339.

[506] Strype, Memorials, Ecclesiastical and Civil, etc. III. i. 221, 223.

[507] Ibid. III. ii. 556.