The Life of a Conspirator by Thomas Longueville

The Life of a Conspirator by Thomas Longueville

Author:Thomas Longueville [Longueville, Thomas]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9781507526644
Google: 3A11jgEACAAJ
Publisher: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
Published: 2015-03-25T03:05:24+00:00


FOOTNOTES:

[271] S.P. Dom. James I., Vol. xvi. No. 94.

[272] S.P. Dom. James I., Vol. xvi. No. 94.

[273] Papers or Letters of Sir E. Digby, n. 9.

[274] He afterwards “assisted in taking prisoners”of some of the conspirators. S. P. Dom. James I., Vol. xvi.; G. P. Bk., n. 142.

[275] Biographia Britannica, Vol. iii. p. 184.

[276] Stow’s Annales, p. 880.

[277] Examination of J. Fowes, S. P. Dom. James I., Vol. xvi. n. 19. Letter enclosed from the Sheriff and Justices of Warwickshire.

[278] S. P. Dom. James I., G. P. Bk., Part II. n. 135. H.

[279] Jardine, p. 111, footnote.

[280] S. P., Robert Winter’s Confession, 21 Jan, 1605-6.

[281] See the examination of Richard Hollis, S. P. Gunpowder Treason, 1605, Part II. No. 138.

[282] S. P. Gunpowder Plot Book, Part II. No. 121.

[283] Ib.

[284] P. 111.

[285] S. P. Gunpowder Plot Book, Part II. No. 138.

[286] For accounts of Bates’s visit to Coughton, see Bates’s Examination, Jan. 13, 1605-6; Hall’s Confession, Mar. 6, 1605-6; and Jardine’s G. P., pp. 167-8.

[287] S. P. Dom. James I., Vol. xviii. n. 87; Exam. of H. Garnet, Feb. 13, 1605-6. See Records S. J., Vol. iv. p. 146.

[288] "Father Garnet and the Gunpowder Plot," Pollen, p. 23.

[289] Narrative of the Gunpowder Plot, Gerard, p. 84.

[290] S. P. Gunpowder Plot Book, Part II. No. 121.

[291] The G. P., Jardine, p. 111.

[292] S. P. Gunpowder Plot Book, Part II. n. 121.

[293] “The mansion-house, which is moated round, but now in a very ruinous condition, having been much neglected ever since the gunpowder treason in 1606, in which plot the Winters were deeply concerned.” Nash’s Worcestershire, Vol. i. p. 592.

[294] “Like the gateway of the schools of Oxford, but of much more antient date.”Nash’s Worcestershire, Vol. i. p. 258.

[295] Possibly he may have remembered that a former owner of Grafton, Sir Humphrey Stafford, had been executed at Tyburn for treason, rather more than a century earlier.

[296] The greater part of Grafton was burned down about 1710. Nash, Vol. i. p. 158.

[297] Cal. Sta. Pa. Dom., 1603-10, p. 245.

[298] S. P. Gunpowder Plot Book, n. 43.

[299] Sir E. D.’s Letters, paper 3.

[300] Exam. of Bates, 13 Jan. 1606; G. P. Book, Gardiner’s Hist. Eng., Declaration of Morgan, 10 Jan.; G. P. Book; Vol. i. p. 260.

[301] A very curious house, said to have been built by John Habington, cofferer to Queen Elizabeth. Nash’s Worcestershire, Vol. i. p. 585. This house has been pulled down, and a large modern mansion has been built in its place by the Allsopp family, the head of which, Lord Hindlip, takes his title from it.

[302] G. P. Book, Vol ii. n. 197. Exam. of Oldcorne, Mar. 6, 1605, [6].

[303] Nevertheless, Abington was condemned to death, because Father Garnet was found in his house, a few weeks later. He was eventually reprieved; but his lands and goods were forfeited. See Narrative of the G. P., Gerard, p. 268. He was “confined to Worcestershire on account of the Gunpowder Treason Plot,”and became “The first Collector of Antiquities for that County. Died Oct.



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