Index of Gardiner's History of England
James I. (King of England, 1603-1625), (King of Scotland, 1567-1625),
- character of,
- restores the jurisdiction of the bishops,
- defeats the Northern Earls,
- negotiates with the ministers,
- is insulted by Melville,
- breaks with the clergy,
- asks for fresh powers over the clergy,
- summons Black before the Council,
- exacts conditions from Huntly,
- offers terms to the clergy,
- banishes Black,
- conduct of, during the tumult in Edinburgh,
- leaves Edinburgh,
- reduces Edinburgh to submission,
- summons an assembly at Perth,
- establishment of the authority of,
- makes fresh efforts to obtain for the clergy a representation in Parliament,
- speaks in the Basilicon Doron of his intention to restore episcopacy,
- urges the Assembly to allow the representatives of the clergy to be styled bishops,
- appoints bishops,
- maintains his claim to the English throne,
- is too eager to raise a party in England,
- supports the candidature of Bishop Chisholm for the cardinalate,
- has his signature surreptitiously obtained to a letter to the Pope,
- his views on toleration,
- his secret correspondence with Cecil,
- is proclaimed King of England,
- hears of the death of Elizabeth,
- leaves Scotland,
- confides in Cecil,
- receives an overture from Clement VIII,
- his language to Thomas Percy,
- his intentions about the Catholics,
- recalls the monopolies,
- orders the collection of the recusancy fines,
- is ready to make peace with Spain,
- requests Rosny not to appear in mourning for Elizabeth,
- makes a treaty with France for the defence of the Netherlands,
- promises to remit the recusancy fines,
- coronation of,
- receives fresh overtures from Clement VIII.,
- promises not to exact the recusancy fines,
- is annoyed at the discovery that his wife has received presents from the Pope,
- banishes the priests,
- receives the millenary petition,
- recommends the universities to support preaching ministers,
- touches for the King's evil,
- holds the Hampton Court Conference,
- issues a proclamation defining the persons who are to be members of the House of Commons,
- opens his first Parliament,
- gives his opinion on the treatment of Puritans and Catholics,
- enters into controversy with the Commons on Goodwin's case,
- his title recognised by Act of Parliament,
- answers the Commons' petition on purveyors,
- presses the Commons to forward the union with Scotland,
- wishes to be styled King of Great Britain,
- thanks the Commons for naming Commissioners for the Union,
- financial difficulties of,
- prorogues Parliament and scolds the Commons,
- causes of the misunderstanding between the Commons and,
- orders the enforcement of conformity on the Puritans,
- vacillation of, with regard to the Catholics,
- is alarmed at the increase of the Catholics,
- does not put in force the Act of 1604 against,
- is asked to mediate between Spain and the Dutch,
- prepares to open negotiations with Spain,
- accepts a treaty with Spain, in which he refuses to abandon the Dutch,
- swears to the treaty with Spain,
- Spanish marriage proposed for the son of,
- converses with the agent of the Duke of Lorraine on the Papal claims,
- appoints Commissioners to banish the priests,
- exacts the recusancy fines from wealthy Catholics,
- is annoyed at a rumour that he means to change his religion,
- resolves to put in force the penal laws against the Catholics,
- informed of the Gunpowder Plot,
- refuses to assent to the canons of 1606,
- financial difficulties of,
- promises to retrench,
- reported murder of,
- visit of the King of Denmark to,
- wishes to forbid the meetings of the General Assembly of the Scottish Church,
- appoints bishops in Scotland,
- compels the Scottish ministers to submit to his authority,
- summons Parliament in Scotland to enable him to endow the bishops,
- imprisons Andrew Melville,
- strives to have the bishops' authority accepted in Scotland,
- proposes the appointment of constant Moderators,
- causes of his success in Scotland,
- addresses Parliament in favour of a union with Scotland,
- orders the Commons to punish Pigott,
- addresses Parliament on the question of naturalisation,
- plots formed against,
- receives Tyrone and Tyrconnell,
- decides upon hearing the case of O'Cahan against Tyrone,
- offers to economise,
- fails to reduce his expenditure,
- entails the Crown lands,
- banishes the priests,
- wishes the Pope to excommunicate English rebels,
- considers the expectations of the Dutch exorbitant,
- offers a guarantee to the Dutch,
- writes an Apology for the Oath of Allegiance,
- contemplates a toleration for the Catholics,
- is annoyed by the assertion that he had made overtures to the Pope,
- orders Balmerino to be examined,
- writes A Premonition to all Monarchs,
- has an altercation with Coke,
- interferes in Fuller's case,
- loses his temper with Coke,
- postpones a decision on the prohibitions,
- disavows Cowell's Interpreter,
- forbids the Commons to discuss his claim to impositions,
- gives permission for the discussion,
- promises to put in force the laws against recusants,
- accepts the terms of the Commons on the Great Contract,
- answers the grievances of the Commons,
- resolves to intervene in Cleves,
- obtains from the General Assembly an acknowledgment of Scottish episcopacy,
- withdraws his claim to issue proclamations with the force of law,
- asks the Commons whether they mean to go on with the Contract,
- is dissatisfied with the Contract,
- breaks off the Contract,
- loses patience with the Commons,
- dissolves his first Parliament,
- grants money to his favourites,
- his conduct towards Arabella Stuart,
- his part in the burning of Legate and Wightman,
- issues a proclamation for the apprehension of Lord Sanquhar,
- wishes to marry his daughter to the Elector Palatine,
- desires to marry the Prince of Wales to the Infanta Anne,
- breaks off negotiations for a Spanish marriage,
- consents to the marriage of his daughter with the Elector Palatine,
- determines to dispense with a Secretary after Salisbury's death,
- expects Zuniga to ask for the Princess Elizabeth for the King of Spain,
- proposes to marry Prince Henry to the Princess Christina,
- thinks of appointing Sir H. Neville Secretary,
- favours the alliance between the Union and the Dutch,
- is at the head of a Protestant alliance,
- ill-treatment of the recusants by,
- brings about a marriage between the Earl of Essex and Lady Frances Howard,
- favours Lady Essex in her suit for a divorce,
- replies to Abbot's arguments,
- his conduct in supporting the divorce,
- proposes to Overbury a diplomatic employment,
- imprisons Overbury,
- increased financial difficulties of,
- is advised to call another Parliament,
- issues a proclamation against duels,
- accepts money from Sutton's executors,
- supports the making of the New River,
- learns the secret of the Spanish pensions,
- makes Somerset his sole confidant,
- aim of the foreign policy of,
- proposes to banish Donna Luisa de Carvajal,
- releases her,
- is desirous of carrying out Prince Charles's marriage with the Princess Christina,
- decides on summoning Parliament,
- appoints Winwood Secretary,
- opens Parliament,
- being angry with the Commons, consults Sarmiento,
- dissolves the Addled Parliament,
- imprisons members of Parliament,
- complains of the Commons to Sarmiento,
- proposes to take up the Spanish marriage,
- a benevolence offered by the bishops to,
- asks for a general benevolence,
- orders that the judges shall be consulted separately in Peacham's case,
- hears a deputation from the Irish Parliament,
- sends commissioners to investigate Irish grievances,
- decides against the Irish deputies,
- recalls Chichester,
- sends Wotton to negotiate the Treaty of Xanten,
- fails to obtain the execution of it by the Dutch and the Spaniards,
- continues to negotiate a marriage treaty with France,
- thinks of carrying out the proposed alliance with Spain,
- Somerset's favour with,
- Villiers presented to,
- expostulates with Somerset on his rudeness,
- visits Cambridge,
- assists the Duke of Savoy,
- makes Villiers a Gentleman of the Bedchamber,
- Is alarmed by the articles of the Spanish treaty,
- is afraid of assassination,
- offers to accept the Spanish treaty,
- refuses some of Somerset's requests,
- remonstrates with Somerset,
- orders Ellesmere to pass Somerset's pardon,
- withdraws his order,
- hears that Overbury has been murdered,
- orders Coke to examine into the murder,
- appoints a commission to conduct the examination,
- sees Somerset for the last time,
- refuses to alter the course of investigation,
- wishes to pardon Somerset,
- is threatened by Somerset,
- pardons the Countess of Somerset,
- keeps Somerset a prisoner, but finally pardons him,
- asks the Council how his finances can be brought into order,
- assures Sarmiento that he wishes to go on with the marriage treaty,
- wishes to summon Parliament,
- abandons the idea of calling a Parliament,
- releases Raleigh,
- enters upon a treaty for the sale of the cautionary towns,
- attempts to support the cloth manufacture against the rivalry of the Dutch,
- resolves to put an end to the French marriage treaty,
- sends Hay to Paris,
- gives up his requirement that Philip III. shall obtain the Pope's consent before the marriage treaty with Spain is opened,
- sells peerages,
- attempts in vain to obtain the execution of the Treaty of Xanten,
- does not wish to desert the Dutch,
- orders Coke not to give judgment on the effect of the writ de rege inconsulte till he has seen him,
- orders the judges not to proceed with the case of commendams,
- replies to a letter of the judges, and summons the judges before him,
- argues with Coke,
- obtains from eleven judges a declaration of submission to his opinion,
- addresses the judges in the Star Chamber,
- suspends Coke, and decides in favour of Chancery in its dispute with the common law judges,
- dismisses Coke,
- view of the Spanish claim to Guiana taken by,
- gives a commission to Raleigh,
- supports Savoy against Spain,
- is inclined to favour a proposed attack on Genoa,
- abandons the project,
- allows Raleigh to sail,
- orders a list of Raleigh's vessels to be given to Sarmiento,
- submits the marriage treaty to commissioners chosen from the Privy Council,
- sends Digby to Madrid to open formally the negotiation for the marriage,
- supports a proposal for an expedition against Algiers,
- his relations with the Privy Council,
- is unable to control his courtiers,
- places patronage in Buckingham's hands,
- receives a present from Yelverton,
- sets out for Scotland,
- finds fault with Bacon for interfering with the marriage of Sir John Villiers,
- receives Coke favourably,
- compares Buckingham to the Apostle John,
- is present at a feast at Hatton House,
- refuses to assent to the terms on which the Spaniards offer to consent to the Infanta's marriage,
- congratulates Louis XIII. on the murder of Ancre,
- calls for evidence against Raleigh,
- offers to send Raleigh to Spain,
- orders the rioters who had attacked a steward of Gondomar to be punished,
- directs Stukeley to act as a spy on Raleigh,
- his responsibility for Raleigh's proceedings,
- appoints commissioners to examine Raleigh,
- asks the commissioners how to dispose of Raleigh,
- rejects the commissioners' proposal,
- orders Raleigh's execution,
- orders Bacon to draw up a declaration of Raleigh's proceedings,
- speaks scornfully to Stukeley,
- his views on the negotiation with the Dutch on the East India Trade,
- claims rights over the herring fishery,
- mediates between the English and Dutch East India Companies,
- does not press the Dutch to make restitution to the English whale fishers,
- drives young Monson from Court,
- drinks the health of the Villiers family,
- sends Lady Suffolk into the country,
- detects Sara Swarton's perjuries, and sends for Lord Roos,
- pronounces sentence in the Star Chamber on the Lakes,
- is in want of money,
- proposes to retrench,
- orders the Countess of Buckingham to leave the Court,
- sale of honours by,
- his treatment of the Scottish Church,
- presses ecclesiastical changes upon it,
- proposes five articles,
- directs alterations to be made in the chapel at Holyrood,
- visits Scotland,
- orders that the communion shall be received on the knees in his chapel,
- his relations with the Scottish nobility,
- proposes an Act acknowledging his control over the external government of the Church,
- recommends the adoption of the five articles,
- threatens the ministers with the loss of their stipends if they refuse to adopt the articles,
- threatens the Assembly of Perth,
- finds the strict observance of the Sabbath enforced in Lancashire,
- asks Morton for advice,
- issues the Declaration of Sports,
- calls Selden to account for his History of Tithes,
- forbids Selden to reply to his accusers,
- sends deputies to the Synod of Dort,
- is asked to mediate in Bohemia,
- accepts the mediation,
- is urged by the Dutch to break with Spain,
- refuses to quarrel with Spain,
- renews his treaty with the Union,
- receives Christopher Dohna,
- orders naval preparations to be made to defend Venice,
- orders an expedition to be sent to Algiers,
- sends Doncaster to mediate in Bohemia,
- sends Wake to Turin,
- serious illness of,
- writes verses on his wife's death,
- visits London after his illness,
- attempts to find a wife for Christopher Villiers,
- gives instructions to Doncaster,
- abandons the plan of sending an expedition to Algiers,
- refuses to aid Frederick.
- rejects a suggestion to go to war in defence of the Bohemians,
- asks the advice of the Council whether he shall recommend Frederick to accept the Bohemian crown,
- declares that he will postpone his decision,
- sends Doncaster to congratulate the Emperor,
- cannot resolve to help either side,
- dissatisfaction felt at the hesitation of,
- writes two religious tracts,
- is asked to defend the Palatinate,
- investigates Frederick's title to Bohemia,
- does not give a positive reply to Gray's request to levy troops for Bohemia,
- permits the levy,
- sends to Denmark to borrow money for the Palatinate,
- welcomes Gondomar's return,
- receives Gondomar's explanations,
- sanctions the levy of volunteers for the Palatinate,
- refuses to give money to the German Union,
- hears a sermon at Paul's Cross,
- varying language of,
- offers to write a letter to Philip III. containing engagements to show favour to the Catholics,
- holds a double language with the Princes of the Union,
- assures Gondomar that he will not help his son-in-law,
- refuses to accept Dutch offers of co-operation,
- is irritated by the news of Dutch outrages in the East,
- agrees to Buckingham's proposal for the partition of the Netherlands,
- is convinced that Spinola wilt not invade the Palatinate,
- declares that his son-in-law can only be brought to reason by force,
- Is urged by the Dutch to defend the Palatinate,
- refuses to break with Spain,
- receives the news of the invasion of the Palatinate,
- speaks impatiently to Gondomar,
- declares that he will defend the Palatinate,
- appoints a commission to prepare for a Parliament,
- adheres to his resolution of sending a fleet against Algiers,
- acknowledges that Gondomar had never said that Spinola would not invade the Palatinate,
- rejects Bacon's draft of a proclamation for summoning Parliament,
- summons Parliament,
- receives the news of Frederick's defeat,
- calls a Council of War,
- refuses to enter upon a French marriage treaty,
- repels the advances of Cadenet,
- disgraces Naunton,
- complains Of disorderly alehouses,
- takes the monopoly of gold and silver thread into his own hands,
- recommends a plan for taking bonds,
- opens his third Parliament,
- holds a conversation with Gondomar on the reconciliation of the Churches,
- thanks the Commons for granting supply,
- defends his permission to Gondomar to export ordnance,
- refuses to persecute the Catholics,
- finds fault with the Commons for proceeding against the referees,
- orders the Commons to refrain from business till the Subsidy Bill is passed,
- proposes to refer Bacon's case to a new tribunal,
- abandons his proposal,
- addresses the Houses on the monopolies and Bacon's case,
- rejects Buckingham's request for a dissolution of Parliament,
- has an interview with Bacon,
- is on good terms with Parliament,
- asks for an additional supply,
- is vexed at the condemnation of the patent for alehouses,
- asks Parliament to punish Yelverton,
- leaves Yelverton to the judgment of the Peers,
- issues a proclamation against freedom of speech,
- insists on the punishment of an apprentice who had attacked a Spaniard,
- questions the jurisdiction of the Commons over Floyd,
- leaves Floyd's case to the Lords,
- directs the Houses to adjourn,
- offers a prorogation,
- orders the translation of the Commons' declaration for the defence of the Palatinate,
- is reluctant to give the bishopric of St. David's to Laud,
- refuses to blame Abbot for his unintentional homicide,
- issues a proclamation against monopolies,
- consents to the colonisation of New England by the Leyden Separatists,
- loses time in his mediation in Germany,
- complains of the behaviour of the Dutch in the East,
- refuses to inform the Dutch of his intentions about the Palatinate,
- inquires whether Philip IV. means to go on with the marriage treaty,
- sends money to Frederick,
- gives instructions to Digby for his mission to Vienna,
- orders Frederick to submit to the Emperor,
- wishes to break up the blockade of the Flemish ports,
- receives Digby's report,
- hastens the meeting of Parliament, and proposes fresh terms to the Emperor,
- assures Gondomar that he need not fear Parliament,
- orders the Commons to abstain from meddling with the Prince's marriage,
- orders the ambassadors' stools for a deputation of the Commons,
- refuses to admit the right of the Commons to discuss foreign affairs,
- declares that the privileges of the Commons are held by his permission,
- writes to explain his meaning,
- destroys the protestation of the Commons, and resolves to dissolve Parliament,
- imprisons the leaders of the Commons, and dissolves Parliament,
- falls into the New River,
- defends his conduct in dissolving Parliament,
- consents to Gondomar's plan for breaking the blockade of the Flemish ports,
- instructs Digby to propose to Spain a joint attack on the Netherlands,
- orders Oxford to seize two Dutch ships,
- imprisons the Earl of Oxford,
- turns Wray out of the bed-chamber
- takes part in the conferences with Fisher,
- welcomes De Dominis,
- becomes dissatisfied with him,
- is angry at the proposal of De Dominis to return to Rome,
- sends Doncaster to mediate between Louis XIII and the Protestants,
- sends Doncaster again to France, and receives commissioners from Rochelle,
- continued self-confidence of,
- unpopularity of,
- orders Pareus's Commentaries to be burnt,
- gives directions to alter the mode of studying divinity at Oxford,
- requires Frederick to renounce the crown of Bohemia,
- sends Weston to Brussels,
- fails to obtain influence over the armies in Germany,
- approves of Frederick's journey to the Palatinate,
- insists on Frederick's consenting to a truce,
- objects to the proposed assembly at Ratisbon,
- rejects a proposal made at Brussels for the sequestration of the towns in the Palatinate,
- issues directions to preachers,
- causes a reaction in favour of Puritanism,
- sets free Catholic prisoners,
- liberates Coke, Phelips, and Mallory,
- complains of the terms brought from Rome by Gage,
- contrast between the words and actions of,
- summons the King of Spain to obtain the restitution of Heidelberg,
- writes to the Pope,
- expects to obtain his objects with the aid of Spain,
- sends fresh instructions to Bristol
- refuses to summon Parliament, and asks the Prince of Orange to pay Mansfeld's troops,
- refuses to allow Spanish ships to take refuge in English ports,
- recalls Chichester,
- accepts the articles of marriage as amended in Spain,
- negotiates for the sequestration of Frankenthal,
- asks Frederick to agree to the sequestration,
- comparison between his religious and his commercial policy,
- is acquainted with the Prince's wish to visit Spain,
- consents to the journey,
- regrets his decision,
- gives a final permission,
- sends Carlisle to Paris,
- states his opinion on the Papal supremacy,
- directs Charles and Buckingham to appear in the robes of the garter on St. George's Day,
- sends chaplains to his son,
- exhorts his son not to be ashamed of his religion,
- asks Williams whether his son is likely to bring home the Infanta,
- creates Buckingham a duke
- hears that the dispensation is clogged with conditions,
- sends full powers to his son, but regrets the necessity of building a chapel for the Infanta,
- is distressed at hearing that the Infanta is not to accompany the Prince,
- urges Charles to marry and come home,
- despairs of seeing his son again,
- objects to some of the articles of the marriage treaty,
- replies to Williams's question whether he felt conscientious scruples about swearing to the treaty,
- asks the Privy Councillors whether they can swear to the marriage treaty,
- swears to the public articles,
- takes an oath to the private articles,
- explains the sense in which he understands the oath,
- complains of the expense to which he is put by the delay in sending the Infanta,
- opens negotiations for the sequestration of Frankenthal, and for a suspension of arms,
- engages that neither he nor his son-in-law shall disturb the peace of the Empire,
- impracticability of his diplomacy,
- proposes a joint English and Spanish attack on the Dutch Netherlands,
- remonstrates with the Dutch for blockading Dunkirk vessels at Leith and Aberdeen,
- determines to free the ports of Scotland from a Dutch blockade,
- sends powers to Buckingham and Bristol to treat for a partition of the Dutch territory,
- orders Captain Best to convoy the privateer at Leith to a Flemish port,
- speaks in friendly terms of the Dutch,
- orders Rutland to sail at once,
- discusses with the Spanish ambassadors the mode of relaxing the penal laws,
- agrees at Salisbury to a scheme in favour of the Catholics,
- refuses to give way to the further demands of the ambassadors,
- orders his son to return,
- signs the pardon and dispensation for the Catholics,
- receives his son at Royston,
- listens to a plan of the Spanish ambassadors for the pacification of Germany,
- proposes to Frederick to marry his son to the Emperor's daughter,
- is satisfied with Bristol's assurances that the Infanta will not take the veil,
- but expects to hear that Philip will provide for the restitution of the Palatinate,
- shrinks from making the restitution of the Palatinate an indispensable condition of his son's marriage,
- orders Bristol to obtain an explicit declaration from Philip, and proposes that the Electoral Prince shall be educated in England,
- acknowledges that he cannot expect Philip to take arms against the Emperor,
- lays the Spanish terms before Frederick,
- hesitates between peace and war,
- directs the issue of writs for a Parliament, and recalls Bristol,
- virtual end of his reign,
- character of the policy of,
- is determined to regain the Palatinate,
- sends ambassadors to form an alliance,
- agrees to send Kensington to Paris to talk about a French marriage,
- fresh offers made by the Spanish ambassadors to,
- consults the commissioners for Spanish affairs,
- refuses to give full information to the commissioners,
- cannot decide whether to go to war or not,
- refuses to agree to the education of the Electoral Prince at Munich, and refers the breach with Spain to Parliament,
- proposes to send Coke and Sandys to Ireland,
- opens Parliament with a request for advice, and explains his treatment of the Catholics,
- refers the complaint of the Spanish ambassadors against Buckingham to Parliament,
- disapproves of the Commons' petition against Spain,
- accepts Rudyerd's four points and declares that he is anxious for the restitution of the Palatinate,
- proposes to send aid to the German princes,
- tells Carondelet that he is anxious to remain at peace with Spain,
- refuses to declare war immediately against Spain,
- proposes a continental alliance for a war in Germany,
- allows Buckingham and Charles to explain away his answer,
- declares the treaties dissolved,
- announces that he will be guided in his military operations by the advice of a Council of War,
- informs Lafuente that he will not quarrel with Philip, if he will engage to support with arms a fair settlement in the Palatinate,
- receives Dutch commissioners favourably,
- sees Carondelet in private,
- complains that his son is led astray by Buckingham,
- sends a courier to Madrid to break off the treaties, but recalls him,
- asks the Spanish ambassadors to make good their charges against the Duke,
- sends off a despatch announcing the breach of negotiations with Spain,
- nature of Buckingham's influence over,
- motives which led him to break off the negotiations,
- engages to furnish men and money to Mansfeld,
- receives Lafuente's complaints against Buckingham,
- replies to the Commons' petition against the recusants, and confirms his son's engagement that the Catholics shall not benefit by the marriage treaty,
- orders inquiry to be made into Inojosa's charges against Buckingham,
- detains Inojosa in England,
- warns Charles and Buckingham of the consequences of the impeachment of Middlesex,
- places Bristol in confinement,
- will not allow him to demand a trial in Parliament,
- assents to the Monopoly Bill,
- criticises the Bills presented to him at the close of the session of 1624,
- is satisfied with Bristol's replies,
- forces the East India Company to pay 20,000l. to himself and Buckingham,
- threatens to take measures against the Dutch unless they do justice on the authors of the massacre of Amboyna,
- refuses to see Inojosa before he leaves England,
- refuses to allow the privileges of neutrality to Dunkirk privateers in the Downs,
- refuses to head a religious war,
- sends embassies to Denmark and Sweden,
- draws back from the French marriage treaty,
- agrees to write a letter promising relief to the Catholics,
- refuses to sign an article in favour of the Catholics,
- agrees to accept Richelieu's terms,
- is obliged to prorogue Parliament,
- disputes with Louis about Mansfeld's passage,
- accepts the full demands of the French,
- his mistake in thinking that he could regain the Palatinate without giving offence to Spain,
- summons the Infanta Isabella to surrender the Palatinate,
- objects to allow Mansfeld to take part in the relief of Breda,
- gives explanations to the agent of the Infanta Isabella,
- uses a stamp to ratify the marriage treaty,
- allows Mansfeld to march through Flanders,
- is unwilling to allow Mansfeld to land in Holland,
- talks of disbanding Mansfeld's troops,
- prohibits Mansfeld from relieving Breda,
- thinks that the demands of Gustavus are too high,
- proposes a congress at the Hague,
- adopts Christian's plan of operations, and asks Gustavus to co-operate,
- wishes to make war economically,
- is persuaded to lend ships for an attack on Genoa,
- is ready to lend ships to be used against Rochelle,
- rejects the condition which the Pope wishes to impose on the marriage of Henrietta Maria,
- last illness of,
- medicine administered by Lady Buckingham to,
- death of,
- character of,
- is buried in the tomb of Henry VII.,
- charge brought against Buckingham of administering medicine to,
- orders given for the enforcement of the Articles of Perth by,