Under the Bloody Flag (23 page)

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Authors: John C Appleby

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Notes

  
1.
  
CSPI 1509

73
, p. 151;
APC
1558

70
, p. 23;
CSPS 1558

67
, pp. 24–5; G.D. Ramsay,
The City of London in International Politics at the Accession of Elizabeth Tudor
(Manchester, 1975), pp. 113–4, 125–6;
Tudor Proclamations
, II, p. 101.

  
2.
  
CSPD 1547

80
, p. 136; J.H. Burton (ed.),
The Register of the Privy Council of Scotland, 1545

1569
(Edinburgh, 1877), pp. 430–2.

  
3.
  
APC 1558

70
, pp. 97–8;
CSPS 1558

67
, p. 61;
CSPF 1558

59
, pp. 228, 233, 585–6;
CSPF 1559

60
, p. 251.

  
4.
  
CSPF 1558

59
, p. 388;
Pays

Bas
, I, pp. 604–5; II, pp. 138, 635; HCA 1/38, ff. 94–5v.

  
5.
  
CSPS 1558

67
, p. 92.

  
6.
  Nichols (ed.),
Diary
, pp. 212–3;
CSPF 1559–60
, p. 4; HCA 1/38, f. 95v.

  
7.
  
CSPD 1547

80
, p. 144; Levy, ‘Strange Life and Death’, pp. 135–6.

  
8.
  
Calendar
, pp. 25–6 for Fobbe;
Pays

Bas
, I, p. 601; II, pp. 180–1, 415, 501–2, 569–75, 589–90.

  
9.
  
CSPS 1558

67
, pp. 150, 207;
Pays

Bas
, II, pp. 406–7;
Calendar
, p. 24.

10.
  
CSPF 1560

61
, p. 558;
CSPS 1558

67
, pp. 24–5, 37.

11.
  
CSPF 1560

61
, p. 558.

12.
  
CSPF 1560

61
, p. 559. J.D. Tracy, ‘Herring Wars: The Habsburg Netherlands and the Struggle for Control of the North Sea, c. 1520–1560’,
The Sixteenth Century Journal
, 24 (1993), pp. 256–66.

13.
  
CSPF 1560

61
, p. 56;
CSPF 1561

62
, pp. 134, 191–2, 276–7.

14.
  
CSPF 1561

62
, pp. 133, 149, 193.

15.
  
CSPF 1561

62
, pp. 134–5, 137, 193.

16.
  
CSPF 1561

62
, pp. 134–5.

17.
  
CSPF 1561

62
, pp. 143–4, 150;
CSPF 1560

61
, pp. 557–60.

18.
  
CSPF 1561

62
, pp. 133, 192.

19.
  
CSPF 1561

62
, pp. 192–3, 276–7;
CSPS 1558

67
, pp. 207, 211–2;
Tudor Proclamations
, I, pp. 171–2.

20.
  
CSPF 1562
, p. 162. Phetiplace or Fetiplace was also known as Petit–Pas,
Pays

Bas
, III, p. 626. Marychurch was pardoned in 1562,
CPR 1563

66
, p. 327.

21.
  
CSPF 1562
, p. 89.

22.
  
CSPF 1562
, pp. 162, 590–1.

23.
  
CSPF 1563
, pp. 61, 232, 259;
CPR 1560

63
, p. 502; J. Bain et al. (eds.),
Calendar of the State Papers relating to Scotland and Mary, Queen of Scots 1547

1603
, 13 vols. (Edinburgh, 1898–1969), II, p. 1.

24.
  
CSPF 1563
, p. 619. By January 1566 he was in Milford Haven, E.A. Lewis (ed.),
The Welsh Port Books (1550

1603)
(London, 1927), p. 315.

25.
  
CSPI 1509

73
, pp. 230–1;
CSPF 1564

65
, pp. 27, 79–80, 174. Phetiplace’s declaration presented his actions in northern Spain as a legitimate response to Spanish hostility, SP 63/10/22. In 1563 Cecil noted that piracy was ‘detestable and can not last’, R.H. Tawney and E. Power (eds.),
Tudor Economic Documents
, 3 vols. (London, 1924), II, p. 106.

26.
  Nichols (ed.),
Diary
, pp. 256, 281. A report of 1563 claimed there were at least 400 known pirates operating in the waters around the British Isles, Oppenheim,
Administration
, p. 177.

27.
  
Tudor Proclamations
, II, pp. 206–9; R.B. Wernham,
Before the Armada: The Growth of English Foreign Policy 1485

1588
(London, 1966), pp. 281–2.

28.
  
APC 1558

70
, pp. 136, 141;
CSPS 1558

67
, pp. 276, 299, 300, 322–3; Ramsay,
London
, pp. 134–5. William Hawkins was part–owner of a man–of–war with Stukely, Williamson,
Hawkins
, pp. 96–7.

29.
  J.A. Twemlow (ed.),
Liverpool Town Books
, 2 vols. (Liverpool, 1918–35), I, pp. 224–5;
CSPD 1547

80
, pp. 224, 228, 239;
CSPF 1563
, p. 431;
Tudor Proclamations
, II, pp. 228, 232; Rodger,
Safeguard of the Sea
, pp. 197–200.

30.
  
CSPS 1558

67
, pp. 349–51;
Tudor Proclamations
, II, pp. 235–6.

31.
  
CSPF 1563
, p. 132;
Pays

Bas
, III, pp. 384–5, 538, 540, 585–6.

32.
  
CSPS 1558

67
, pp. 345–6;
CSPF 1563
, pp. 414, 429. Trading vessels from Bristol were seized in Spanish ports as pirate ships during the early 1560s, J. Vanes (ed.),
Documents illustrating the Overseas Trade of Bristol in the Sixteenth Century
(Bristol Record Society, 31, 1979), pp. 154–6.

33.
  
CSPS 1558

67
, pp. 349–55;
CSPF 1563
, pp. 611–2, 619;
CSPF 1564

65
, pp. 9, 19, 27, 46, 79, 158–9, 174, 199–200.

34.
  
CSPS 1558

67
, pp. 376, 536, 572–3;
CSPF 1563
, pp. 598, 631;
CSPF 1564

65
, pp. 192, 201, 224; Ramsay,
London
, pp. 138–9.

35.
  
CSPF 1564

65
, p. 39. Phetiplace noted thirty English men–of–war off Belle Isle in October 1563, SP 63/10/22.

36.
  
CSPF 1564

65
, pp. 80, 158–9, 199–201, 224, 415;
Pays

Bas
, III, pp. 668–9.

37.
  
Tudor Proclamations
, II, pp. 245–6;
HMC Salisbury
, I, pp. 286–7;
Pays

Bas
, III, pp. 585–6, 645–6.

38.
  
CSPF 1564

65
, p. 46;
APC 1558

70
, pp. 186, 202–3, 212–3;
Pays

Bas
, III, p. 665; Ramsay,
London
, pp. 201–3.

39.
  
CSPD 1547

80
, pp. 244–6, 251;
APC 1558

70
, pp. 146–8, 151, 184, 202;
HMC Salisbury
, I, p. 299.

40.
  
CSPS 1558

67
, p. 376.

41.
  
APC 1558

70
, pp. 153–4, 164, 182, 186, 229–30.

42.
  
CSPS 1558

67
, pp. 402–3;
APC 1558

70
, pp. 175, 179.

43.
  
CSPD 1547

80
, p. 251;
APC 1558

70
, pp. 206–7, 209, 211, 215–6, 235–6.

44.
  
CSPF 1564

65
, p. 350;
Tudor Proclamations
, II, p. 252.

45.
  
CSPS 1558

67,
pp. 359–60, 397;
CSPF 1563
, p. 619;
Pays

Bas
, III, p. 514; D.B. Quinn,
Explorers and Colonies: America, 1500

1625
(London, 1990), pp. 260–2;
NAW
, II, p. 285;
ODNB
, ‘Thomas Stukely’.

46.
  
CSPF 1564

65
, p. 46;
CSPS 1558

67
, pp. 354–5.

47.
  
CSPS 1558

67
, pp. 359, 373–9.

48.
  
CSPS 1558

67
, pp. 373, 376, 440.

49.
  
CSPS 1558

67
, pp. 440–1, 449–50, 454–5, 472–3.

50.
  
CSPS 1558

67
, pp. 450, 454–5;
CSPS 1558

67
, p. 450.

51.
  
CSPS 1558

67
, pp. 454–5, 472–3. It has been argued that there is no evidence that benefit of clergy was allowed during the sixteenth century (M.J. Prichard and D.E.C. Yale (eds.),
Hale and Fleetwood on Admiralty Jurisdiction
(Selden Society, 108, 1992), pp. ccviii–ccx), though Marsden accepted that Cobham appeared to evade punishment by these means, R.G. Marsden, ‘Thomas Cobham and the Capture of the “St. Katherine”’,
EHR
, 23 (1908), pp. 290–1.

52.
  
CSPI 1509

73
, pp. 275, 341–2, 408, 466–72.

53.
  
CSPS 1558

67
, pp. 539, 552.

54.
  
APC 1558

70
, pp. 229–30, 240–1, 244–45, 251;
Calendar
, p. 25.

55.
  
APC 1558

70
, pp. 252–4, 256, 260, 273.

56.
  
CSPS 1558

67
, p. 496;
APC 1558

70
, pp. 260, 267, 272–3, 298.

57.
  
APC 1558

70
, pp. 273, 275, 293.

58.
  
CSPS 1558

67
, p. 496. Cobham remained at sea,
Calendar
, pp. 27–8.

59.
  
APC 1558

70
, pp. 278–90; Tawney and Power (eds.),
Tudor Economic Documents
, II, pp. 117–22.

60.
  
APC 1558

70
, pp. 278–90; P. Williams,
The
Tudor Regime
(Oxford, 1979), pp. 190, 416–7.

61.
  
APC 1558

70
, pp. 278–90; N. Williams,
The Sea Dogs: Privateers, Plunder and Piracy in the Elizabethan Age
(London, 1975), pp. 149–50.

62.
  
APC 1558

70
, p. 307.

63.
  
CSPD 1547

80
, p. 267;
APC 1558

70
, p. 325.

64.
  
APC 1558

70
, pp. 292–5, 312.

65.
  
CSPS 1558

67
, pp. 539, 552, 688.

66.
  J. McDermott,
Martin Frobisher: Elizabethan Privateer
(New Haven, 2001), pp. 50–66; R.G. Marsden, ‘The Early Career of Sir Martin Frobisher’,
EHR
, 21 (1906), pp. 538–44.

67.
  
APC 1558

70
, p. 317.

68.
  
APC 1558

70
, pp. 320–1;
CSPD 1547

80
, p. 276.

69.
  
CSPF 1566

68
, pp. 388, 450, 578, 583, 588, 592;
APC 1558

70
, p. 334, 348; Williamson,
Hawkins
, pp. 99–100; Hammer,
Elizabeth’s Wars
, pp. 80–1. Overseas retaliation included the arrest of Bristol shipping in Spain, evidently in response to the continued activities of Cobham, Vanes (ed.),
Overseas Trade of Bristol
, pp. 131–2.

70.
  K.R. Andrews,
Trade, Plunder and Settlement: Maritime Enterprise and the Genesis of the British Empire, 1480

1630
(Cambridge, 1984), pp. 102–15.

71.
  
PN
, VI, pp. 225, 229, 232–4.

72.
  
PN
, VI, pp. 235–52.

73.
  
PN
, VI, pp. 250–1.

74.
  Andrews,
Trade, Plunder and Settlement
, pp. 103–4, 122–3.

75.
  
PN
, VI, pp. 266–84. For an earlier venture which ran into trouble off the coast of Spain see K.R. Andrews, ‘Thomas Fenner and the Guinea Trade, 1564’,
MM
, 38 (1952), pp. 312–4.

76.
  Andrews,
Trade, Plunder and Settlement
, pp. 121–8; K.R. Andrews,
The
Spanish Caribbean:Trade and Plunder 1530

1630
(New Haven, 1978), pp. 108–33;
CSPS 1558

67
, pp. 470, 502–4;
PN
, VI, pp. 235–6; H. Kelsey,
Sir John Hawkins: Queen Elizabeth’s Slave Trader
(New Haven, 2003), chaps. 3 & 4.

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