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Memoirs of the Court of King Charles the First

 By Lucy Aikin

Contents

13
hakewill, buckingham, gondomar
29
buckingham, blainville, digges
128
recusants, billeting, manwaring
147
179
cottington, recusants, ingratiated
195
prynn, heylyn, windebank
216
heylyn, panzani, whitelock
283
mountnorris, hampden, galway
307
prynn, traquair, bastwick

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Places mentioned in this book

La Rochelle - Page 157
despair by the rigor with which they found themselves treated after the loss of La Rochelle their tower of strength, made one more application to the ...
more pages: 95 114 122 148
Galway - Page 287
But these calumnies must not stay me humbly to offer to your majesty's wisdom this fit opportunity, that as that cantoned government of Galway begun, ...
more pages: 283 285
Canterbury - Page 118
The church might also boast of one confessor in the cause of the constitution, and he of no less eminence than Abbot archbishop of Canterbury. ...
more pages: 79 162 191 225
Madrid - Page 238
By the infidelity of Cottington this plot was revealed to the court of Madrid, which thus acquired fresh proof of that bad faith with which it had ...
more pages: 20 21 23 252
Leicester - Page 265
which whilst it served as the cement of a truly fraternal intimacy between the earls of Leicester and Northumberland, rendered her the mother of a ...
more pages: 49 147 155
Bristol - Page 92
Nothing could be plainer, lhan that the charge thus brought against Bristol for acts which, if any offences at all, had been expressly covered by ...
more pages: 20 22 104 126
Pembroke - Page 192
The death of Pembroke left vacant the office of chancellor of the university of Oxford, which he had sustained with dignity and applause; ...
more pages: ix 77 179
Oxford - Page 208
Disputes having about this time arisen at Oxford between the champions and opponents of the ecclesiastical innovations, Laud persuaded the king to ...
more pages: 65 70 192
Coventry - Page 314
Prynn himself has placed on record the following particu-lars connected with these transactions, t That on his journey he was visited both at Coventry ...
more pages: 129 183 317
Portsmouth - Page 157
Vague presages of approaching evil had haunted the minds of his nearest relations previously to his last journey to Portsmouth; mysterious warnings to ...
more pages: 123 147 149
York - Page 202
The company at the christening was York on foot that morning ; he refused to preach without leave from the chancellor, Dr. ...
more pages: 103 245 314
Edinburgh - Page 331
one commanding the people to their homes, another directing the removal of the supreme court of justice from Edinburgh to Linlithgow, and a third for ...
more pages: 222 329 333
Rome - Page 208
he should always give the preference to such as lived in celibacy ; but this proved to be too daring an approach towards Rome ; and the general murmur ...
more pages: 35 254 319
Dunkirk - Page 32
After the commencement of the war with Spain, the Channel was likewise infested by the privateers of Dunkirk, who made many captures off the coasts of ...
more pages: 237 258
Greenwich - Page 110
This ambassador was met by the master of the ceremonies at Gravesend, and by the earl of Dorset with the king's barge near Greenwich; but Charles, ...
more pages: 82 169 223
London - Page 58
Preparations had been made in the city of London to celebrate the expected entry of the king and queen with the accustomed pomps and pageants ...
more pages: 158 204 205
Windsor - Page 260
this occasion a dispute arose worthy of such an assemblage ; and it was ordered " that the officers of the garter who at Windsor the last year eat La.
more pages: 65
Newport - Page 123
when he should have been found a month before in the bay at Rochelle ; and here his brother Mountjoy, afterward earl of Newport, and the lord Conway, ...
more pages: 173 318
Lambeth - Page 243
he was scarcely enthroned at Lambeth when he procured an order in council for the exact observance of the liturgy with all its rites and ceremonies by ...
more pages: 255
Glasgow - Page 329
Andrews and Glasgow to recommend themselves by a proof of zeal at the court whither they were hastening, added to the great preponderance of ...
more pages: xii 221 331
Chichester - Page 252
These persons having associated to themselves Montague bishop of Chichester, lost no time in proposing to Panzani a scheme of reconciliation between ...
more pages: 158
Paris - Page 21
who gives it on the authority of queen Henrietta Maria, with whom she had much confidential intercourse at Paris during the civil wars of England, ...
more pages: 54 77 269
Amiens - Page 55
as well as the queens mother, thought proper to accompany the royal bride as far as Amiens, and the facilities of inter-course afforded by the journey ...
Cambridge - Page 305
there j but in Cambridge, he found cause to complain, that two chapels remained unconsecrated, and that the wearing of surplices was sometimes ...
more pages: 73 98 183
Dublin - Page 247
At his instigation, Wentworth caused the communion table to be restored to the station and name of the Romish altar, in the chapel of Dublin castle ...
Florence - Page 213
and that it was written wilh a serious design to serve the cause of monarchy, by the noted projector eir Robert Dudley, then an exile al Florence. ...
more pages: 321
Marseilles - Page 309
and to have our subjects thus ravished from us, and at after to be from Rochelle driven over land in chains to Marseilles, all this under the sun, ...
Andover - Page 99
the duke carried it but by three votes from my lord Andover, whom we voluntarily set up against him, without any motion on his own behalf, ...
Norwich - Page 209
At Norwich he placed the witty and jovial Corbet, irreconcilably opposed by temper and manners to Calvinstic gloom and austerity, and endeared to Laud ...
more pages: 301
Messina - Page 32
It is mentioned by sir Thomas Roe, sent ambassador to Constantinople in 1621, that touching at the port of Messina in his way, he found in the galleys ...
Kensington - Page 23
the most favored of his adherents, Henry Rich, now created lord Kensington and soon after earl of Holland, as ambassador extraordinary to Louis XIII. ...
Salisbury - Page 284
thousand pounds against the earl of Salisbury, nineteen thousand against the earl of Westmoreland, twelve thousand against sir Christopher Hatton. ...
Dover - Page 113
and he was already at Dover, waiting for a fair wind, when Bucking-ham sent to entreat him to return in order to confer with him at Canterbury. ...
more pages: 57
Manchester - Page 318
Walter Montague, a younger son of the earl of Manchester, lord privy seal, at an early age, during his travels in France and Italy, had been induced ...
more pages: 182
Genoa - Page 62
to be employed against Genoa ; but afterwards suspecting that it was designed to use them in the blockade of the hugonot fortress of Rochelle, ...
Warwick - Page 298
the earl of Warwick of an exten-sive grant of land in a wide wilderness then called Virginia, but which now forms a part of the State of Connecticut. ...
Ashford - Page 301
There are still about Ashford and Egerton divers Brownists and other sepa-ratists. But they are so very poor and mean people that we know not what to ...
Brussels - Page 214
Charles to the queen-mother, then at Brussels, averted for the present, the obvious mischiefs of her presence in a court and ...
Southampton - Page 284
By these proceedings the earl of Southampton sustained an almost ruinous loss ; being despoiled of his manor of Beawley in the New Forest; ...
Northampton - Page 119
One Sibthorp, an obscure but aspiring clergyman, had ingratiated himself with the ruling party by an assize-sermon preached at Northampton, ...
Ipswich - Page 309
which the sentence of the star-chamber had assigned him, resumed his warfare upon the "Luciferian prelates," in a tract called "News from Ipswich. ...
Venice - Page 189
there was nothing to impede an amicable arrangement with that court, which was concluded, by the mediation of Venice, in April 1629. ...
Maidstone - Page 244
As a preliminary he addressed to the French church in Canterbury and the Dutch ones in Sandwich and Maidstone, three questions :—Whether they did not ...
Gloucester - Page 262
It was here that he formed an acquaintance with Laud then dean of Gloucester, which ripened into a lasting and affection-ate friendship ; but we do ...
Croydon - Page 225
Canterbury in his ordinary garb riding from Croydon to Bagshot, with forty or fifty gentleman all mount-ed attending upon him ; -two or three coaches, ...
Lancaster - Page 311
the prisoners should lose their ears, pay a fine of 50001. each, and be perpet-ually imprisoned in the castles of Caernarvon, Cornwall, and Lancaster. ...
Sunderland - Page 266
memorable offspring,—Algernon Sidney, »nd Waller's Sacha- rissa, who became countess of Sunderland. Algernon Percy, born in 1602, had been called up ...
Palatine - Page 20
the English favorite received from the elector Palatine secret offers of friendship, and even of an alliance between their children, on condition of ...
more pages: 19 219 252 254
Lome - Page 339
Antrim like-wise laying claim to certain estates held by Lome on the western coast of Scotland, opposite to his own possessions in Ulster. ...
Perth - Page 220
Perth for the adoption of five articles taken from the English ritual ; and had erected a court of high-commission for the protection of these ...
St. Louis - Page 56
She is reminded of the devotion of her ancestor St. Louis, and exhorted to be, like him, firm and zealous in her religion, and never to listen to ...
Berkeley - Page 321
It was an error, judge Berkeley said, to maintain that by the fundamental policy of this kingdom the king could be restrained from taking money ...