History of the reign of king Henry vii, with notes by J.R. Lumby |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 84
Page vii
... Earl of Essex , for his part in which he has been severely censured , or in those matters which brought about his fall . But it is due to the memory of so great a man to record that the latest and most complete examinations into his ...
... Earl of Essex , for his part in which he has been severely censured , or in those matters which brought about his fall . But it is due to the memory of so great a man to record that the latest and most complete examinations into his ...
Page xix
... Earl of Warwick beheaded Prince Edmund died XVI . Death of Cardinal Morton XVII . Earl of Suffolk leaves England Marriage of Prince Arthur with 29 Nov. - - 12 June , 1500 . Oct. ― Aug. 1501 . XVIII . XIX . XX . XXI . XXII ...
... Earl of Warwick beheaded Prince Edmund died XVI . Death of Cardinal Morton XVII . Earl of Suffolk leaves England Marriage of Prince Arthur with 29 Nov. - - 12 June , 1500 . Oct. ― Aug. 1501 . XVIII . XIX . XX . XXI . XXII ...
Page xx
... Earl of Suffolk Death of Prince Arthur Sir James Tirrell executed Marriage of Princess Margaret to King James IV . Prince Henry created Prince of Wales Henry's seventh Parliament Death of Queen Isabella of Spain English Ambassadors at ...
... Earl of Suffolk Death of Prince Arthur Sir James Tirrell executed Marriage of Princess Margaret to King James IV . Prince Henry created Prince of Wales Henry's seventh Parliament Death of Queen Isabella of Spain English Ambassadors at ...
Page 3
... EARL of CHESTER , etc. IT MAY PLEASE YOUR HIGHNESS , IN part of my acknowledgment to your Highness , I have endeavoured to do honour to the memory of the last King of England , that was ancestor to the King your father and yourself ...
... EARL of CHESTER , etc. IT MAY PLEASE YOUR HIGHNESS , IN part of my acknowledgment to your Highness , I have endeavoured to do honour to the memory of the last King of England , that was ancestor to the King your father and yourself ...
Page 5
... earl of Richmond , thenceforth styled Henry the seventh . The King , immediately after the victory , as one that had been bred under a devout mother , and was in his nature a great observer of religious forms , caused Te Deum laudamus ...
... earl of Richmond , thenceforth styled Henry the seventh . The King , immediately after the victory , as one that had been bred under a devout mother , and was in his nature a great observer of religious forms , caused Te Deum laudamus ...
Common terms and phrases
affection afterwards ambassadors Anne of Brittany arms Bacon battle better bishop blood Britain Brittany called Cambridge Castile cause Charles common continued council court crown danger daughter death desire doubt duke earl Edward England English Examination father forces fortune France French French King give given hand hath Henry Henry VII History honour Ireland Italy James John kind King King Henry King's kingdom lady land late Latin likewise lived London lord manner March marriage married matter Maximilian means nature nevertheless parliament party passed peace Perkin person Pope present Price Prince principal Queen reason rebels received reign Richard says Scotland sent side soon statute subjects taken things Thomas thought took town treaty University unto York
Popular passages
Page 270 - He being thus lorded, Not only with what my revenue yielded. But what my power might else exact, — like one Who having unto truth, by telling of it, Made such a sinner of his memory, To credit his own lie...
Page 221 - He was born at Pembroke castle, and lieth buried at Westminster, in one of the stateliest and daintiest monuments of Europe, both for the chapel and for the sepulchre. So that he dwelleth more richly dead, in the monument of his tomb, than he did alive in Richmond, or any of his palaces.
Page 155 - ... creation, as in St. George's Fields, where his own person had been encamped. And for matter of liberality, he did, by open edict, give the goods of all the prisoners unto those that had taken them; either to take them in kind, or compound for them, as they could. After matter of honour and liberality, followed matter of severity and execution. The lord Audley was led from Newgate to Tower-Hill, in a paper coat painted with his own arms; the arms reversed, the coat torn, and he at Tower-Hill beheaded.