41 Prescott, Mary Tudor, pp. 45-57; Loades, Mary Tudor , pp. 76-103.
42 Cal. S. P. Span ., 1534-35, p. 57 [ LP, vii.214]. Cf. a male courtier’s threat to Mary that ‘were she his daughter, he would beat her to death, or strike her head against the wall until he made it as soft as a boiled apple’: ibid., 1536-38 , p. 182 [ LP , xi.7].
72 Knecht, Renaissance Warrior and Patron, pp. 304-5.
73 See p. 33; for the following see Cal. S. P. Span., 1534-35, pp. 327-9, 330-3, 335-8, 339-40, 345, 376 [ LP , vii.1437, 1482, 1507, 1554; viii.48]; St. Pap., vii.584-7 [ LP, vii. 1483].
44 House of Commons , i.456; ‘I think it much unkindness in the king to put such about me as I never loved ... I would have had [those] of mine own privy chamber which I favour most’: Wolsey, ed. Singer, pp. 454, 457.
51 D. L. Hamilton, ‘The learned councils of the Tudor queens consort’, in State , Sovereigns and Society, pp. 87-8; LP, vii.352. Katherine’s auditor, Thomas Combes, remained in royal employ and so very probably continued to serve Anne., LP, viii. g149(36).
52 Latymer, ‘Treatyse’, ff. 22v-24 [Dowling, ‘Cronickille’, pp. 48-50].
54 Lisle Letters , i.xxxii, xxxiii [dated June 1529 to August 1532 by the addressee, ‘Lady Lisle’, and the usages, ‘my lady’ and ‘Lady Anne‘]. See p. 160.
55 Lady Lisle is not mentioned by name at the coronation but Lord Lisle served at the feast as chief panter; they arrived in Calais on 9 June: ibid., pp. 463-4,469.