Index of Gardiner's History of England
Gondomar, Count of,
- tries to throw obstacles in the way of the expedition against the pirates,
- favour shown by James to,
- asks for justice on Raleigh,
- leaves England,
- attack by a mob on one of the servants of,
- makes a report on English affairs,
- comments on Buckingham's letter,
- prepares to return to England,
- lands at Dover,
- his first audience,
- replies to Digby's remonstrance,
- answers James's question about the Spanish designs on the Palatinate,
- proposes the resumption of the marriage treaty,
- complains of James's proceedings,
- his opinion of the Prince,
- advises Philip to go on with the marriage treaty,
- pleads for Lake,
- listens to Buckingham's plan for the partition of the Netherlands,
- induces James to believe that Spinola will not attack the Palatinate,
- announces that the Palatinate must be conquered,
- asserts that he had never engaged that the Palatinate should not be attacked,
- tries to stop the expedition against Algiers,
- complains of Naunton,
- obtains from James an acknowledgment that he had not deluded him about the Palatinate,
- is ordered to amuse James about the marriage treaty,
- is alarmed by threats of assassination,
- advises James to submit to the Pope,
- is allowed to export ordnance,
- complains of Ward's caricature,
- is insulted in the streets,
- complains to the Lord Mayor,
- accompanies Buckingham in a litter,
- is assured by James that he need not fear Parliament,
- writes to James to complain of the insolence of the House of Commons,
- receives Buckingham's congratulations on the dissolution of Parliament,
- expresses his satisfaction at the dissolution, and urges James to punish the leaders of the Commons,
- policy of, contrasted with that of Digby,
- hires ships to break the blockade of the Flemish ports,
- asks for the recall of the Earl of Oxford,
- returns to Spain,
- persuades Prince Charles to promise to visit Madrid,
- is appointed a commissioner on the marriage treaty, and assures James that all difficulties will be removed,
- uses his influence in the junta on the marriage treaty against the acceptance of the Pope's terms,
- mediates between Bristol and the junta on the marriage,
- proposes a middle course between the English demands and those of the Spanish Council of State,
- informs Olivares of the Prince's arrival at Madrid,
- is created a Councillor of State,
- advises the Spanish Government to show confidence in Charles,
- quells a tumult caused by an assault on a priest by Sir E. Verney,
- desires that Frederick's son may be brought up as a Catholic,
- opposes the scheme of Olivares for the settlement of the Palatinate,
- resolution taken for his return to England,
- passes through Paris on his way to Brussels,