Acat, the term, its origin, 11, Boleyn, Ann, her family arms,
Albury, Roman tomb at, In-
troduc. vii. note.
Almayne ryvet, what, 136,note. Alost described, 456. Anagram, a thief disguises his name by one, 463. Antwerp, described, 456. Argus, masque of, 92. Armada, the Spanish, account
of, 281, et seq. Armour, manufacture of, intro- duced into England by Hen- ry the Eighth, 136. Avenour, what, 99, note. Avery, what, ibid. Ayre, described, 461.
Badgers of Corn, what, 489. Bagpipes for a Masque, 89. Baldekin, what, 45. Banqueting houses of boughs
for the Court, 94, 102. Bards and bases for horses at
tiltings, 65, 66. Benevolences, or Privy Seals,
Bermondsey Church, ornaments
of, in the Romish times, 165. Bethune, described, 460. Bible of the largest volume placed in every church, 168,
note. Black Friars, London, the church of, granted to Sir Thomas Cawarden, 16. its appendages, and large di- mensions, 175. Bletchingley, curious old paro- chial account of, 162.
Bows and Arrows, legacy of,
Bridges (Bruges), described,
Brook, Mr. Christopher, con- fined within the Marshalsea for being concerned in Donne's marriage; his letter to the Lord Keeper Egerton, 306.
Bruxells (Brussels), described, 456.
Buckingham, Duke of, sells Titles of Peerage, 484. Bumbast, what, 71 note. Burleigh, Lord, his attention to the most minute matters, 304. Buttry, its etymology, 11, note. Calais, described, 453. Capel, in Surrey, the Minister of applies to the Magistrates and his parishioners for leave to marry, 253. Cats' tails used in a masque, 87. Cawarden, Sir Thomas, biogra- phical account of, 15. pected of being concerned in Wyatt's rebellion, 133. his armour seized 134. he is summoned before the Privy Council 139. petitions for redress of his grievances 140. his will, 175. his household expenses, charges of his fu- neral, and his wife's, 179 et seq. his epitaph, in brass, singularly preserved, 18.
Chaworth, Sir George, sent to condole with the Infanta Isabella on the death of her husband the Archduke Al- bert, 118. diary of his jour- ney preserved at Loseley,419. Chertsey, the Vicar of, put in
the stocks, 257. Christmas tree described, 75. Cleves, the Lady Ann of; cere- mony of meeting and con- ducting her to the Court, 7. acquittance given by, for rents at Bletchingley, 9. par- ticulars of her household expenses, 11. Cloth, painted, hung before the
Rood in Lent, 168. Cookery, experiments in, 14. Copley, Thomas, Esq. of Gat- ton, borrows a masque of the Master of the Revels for his wedding night, 59. Council, Privy, of Edward VI. list of, 25.
Courtray, described, 459. Cupid, triumph of, on Twelfth Night, 59.
Dartford, dissolved nunnery; the Lady Ann of Cleves had a residence there, 13. Dentist, Robert Bishop of Win- chester, applies for one, 489. Diana, masque of, with her nymphs, 92.
Donington Castle, and its De- pendencies, Sir Thomas Ca- warden Keeper of, 172. Donne, Dr. biographical no- tice of, and his clandestine marriage with Ann More of Loseley 321. seals used by, 327. his autograph, ibid. Letters to Sir George More and the Lord Keeper Eger- ton, when confined in the Fleet prison, 335, et seq. Dover, details of travelling ex- penses at, 463.
Dragon with seven heads, cost of making, 81. Drakes' necks used to trim the Lord of Misrule's gown, 85. Drum and fife used in a masque
Dunkirk, described, 454. Eglisham, Dr. George, his pamphlet against the Duke of Buckingham, 483. Egyptians, their attire for a mask, 77.
Elector Palatine, loan to, 223. Elizabeth, Queen, her marriage with a French Prince in agi- tation, 313.
Ellesmere, Lord Chancellor, letter written during his last illness, 416.
Epsom, the Vicar of, his excul-
patory letter to Sir William More, 255.
Erasmus, Paraphrase of, on the Gospels, placed in every church, 168, and note ibid. Ewell, the parishioners, repre- sent the state of their poor Vicarage, 101.
Ferrers, George, biographical notice of, 30. he is appoint- ed Lord of Misrule, ib. Fool's Coat ordered by the Privy Council, 35. Gatton, a nomination borough in the time of Queen Eliza- beth, 242. the nomination of the Members is part of Mrs. Copley's jointure! ibid. note. Gaunt (Ghent), described, 455. Glass manufactories establish- ed, 493.
Gravelin, described, 453. Greek Worthies, a mask of, 87. Grey, Lady Jane, original do-
cuments of, 121, et seq. Grocers' Company, the Marquis of Winchester gives them his fee buck out of Nonsuch Park, 160.
Hackbutters, painted jerkins for, 38.
Halls appointed for the King's stud, 98.
Hamilton, Marquis of, sup- posed effects of poison on his corpse, 483. Hampton Court, Cardinal Wol- sey's building there, 124, note. Handkerchiefs of Moorish work, 78.
Hawking in esteem in the reign
of Elizabeth, 312.
Herald Cœur Ardent, his at- tire, 43.
Herbert, Lord, of Cherbury,
biograhical notice of, 347 et seq. Why he calls Sir George More his father, 353. original letters of, 354 et seq. Hermits, attire for, 81, et seq. Holbein, a book illuminated by, 92.
Horsey, Sir William, Governor
of the Isle of Wight, his tomb, &c. 491. Idleness and Dalliance personi- fied in a masque, 43. Interlude, the plot of an, 64. Incarnation lawn, what, 79. Ireland, attire for a play of, 88. Iron-mills, consumption of
wood by, 488. Ironstone used for tesseræ by
the Romans, Introd. vii. James I. King, proclaimed in Surrey, 362. his passion for hunting, 364.
Jewel given to Chaworth by the Infanta, 449. Kempe, Sir Nicholas, notice of, 159.
La Bassée, described, 460. Latten Bilbo, what, 86. Leaden pipes for water, 499. Leicester, the Earl of, his let- ter to Queen Elizabeth, when in command of the Camp at
Tilbury, 286. Is reconciled to the Earl of Sussex, 488. Lisle, described, 460. Livery of the Earl of Notting-
ham improperly worn, 497. Livesay, Robert, Esq. of Toot- ing, impoverished by Privy Seals and sentence in the Court of Star Chamber, 220. Loseley, derivation of the name, Introd. vi.
Lotteries in the reign of Eliza-
beth, account of, 185. chart or scheme of that for 1567, 188. proclamation of Queen Elizabeth relating to, 196. of the Mayor, London, for the same, 198. mode of moving the people to adven- ture in, 205. list of prizes drawn in, with the posies of the adventurers, 207, et seq. Lumley, Lord, invites Sir Wil-
liam More to hunt at Non- such, 161.
Mars and Venus, pageant of, 92. Martyrs for the Protestant faith in Surrey and Sussex 225. Masques, their rude beginnings
Masking Garments to be made for King Edward VI. and others of his retinue, 27. Mathew Toby writes to Sir William More 262. Mayor and Aldermen of Lon.
don, warrants for two bucks for the, from Nonsuch park, 158.
May or Summer Pole plucked
down by the Puritans, 371. Medical practice governed by judicial astrology, 263. Medyoxes, origin of the term explained, 88.
Mening, described, 460. Misrule, Lord of, his curious
letter concerning Christmas
sports at the Court, 3. cos- tume of his retinue, details and charge thereof, 44 et seq. Missals, Romish, sold, 170. Modena, Nicholas, a painter to the Revels, 73.
Molyneux, Sir Thomas, suc- ceeds to the Loseley estate, Introd. xix.
Mores, succession of the Lords of Loseley, Introd. vi. et seq. Morris Dancers 89.
Mount, the, an apparatus for
a pageant, 74. Newport (Nieuport), described,
Noailles, Signeur de, the French Ambassador, notice of his warrant for two deer to be taken out of the Park of Nonesuch; also for himself and lady to visit the house, gardens, &c. there, 156, 157. Nonesuch, palace of, described, 144. documents relating to, 148. Orders by the Duke of Medina Sidonia for the Spanish Fleet, 290, note.
Ordinances of War, Hen. VIII. 105.
Ordnance, iron, cast in Surrey and Sussex, 490. Ostend, described, 455. Oven for the players, 79. Overbury's murder, notice of, 379. autograph letter King James relative to, 401,
et seq. Pageants, properties for, deli- vered to the City of London, 67. Parcel-gilt plate, what, 166. Partletts, women's ruffs, 71,77. Paschal Post, 162, 164. Pax and Pix distinguished 168. Pecuniary compensation made by visitors, 258, 260.
Peruques of hair, mention of, in an old account of the re- vels, 77. Philtres, or love-potions, belief in the efficacy of, 382. Plague, notice of the, 277. precautions against its be- ing communicated to the Court, 279.
Players, the King's, documents relating to, 57, 58, 62. Polanders, masque of, 92. Pole, Cardinal, warrant of Phi-
lip and Mary to allow him to hunt a deer at Nonesuch, 54.
Portraits at Loseley, Introd. v. Posies read in the Lottery of 1568, 207 et seq. Post, or Express, a blast of his horn a matter of enviable distinction, 100.
Pots, for drinking, used by the gentlemen of the Temple,
Prince of Wales, Henry, regu- lations of his household, 366. his attachment to the church of England, ibid.
Privy Seal, levying a benevo- lence of 201. 217. Proclamation of King James
on the murder of Darnley, extant at Loseley, 489. Also of Elizabeth on the death of the Queen of Scots, 493. Provost Marshal, jurisdiction of, 495.
Punning allusions, Introd. x. Purveyance for the Royal house- hold, 272.
Quittance, or Receipt, form of an ancient, 9.
Ralegh, Sir Walter, accused of conspiring to depose Jas. I. 372, 376. permitted to go out of the Tower to prepare for his voyage, 377.
rant to the Lieutenant of, for his enlargement, 378. Red Deer in Loseley Park, In-
trod. viii. 496. Reformation, policy of Queen Elizabeth to maintain the principles of, 224. Requesens, Don Louis de, Go- vernor of the Spanish Ne- therlands, 241. Revels, statutes of the, 93. Robberies, losses by, levied on the county, 494. Rood loft, 163, 164. Rosemary, the herb of souve- nance, 5, note. Royal Visits, documents relat-
ing to, 265 et seq. Rubens, the master painter of the world, 457.
Seminary Priests, their artifices, 247.
Shot or musqueteers, how to
train economically, 296. Shrewsbury cakes, 355. Signature of Ann of Cleves, re- markable, 7.
Small Pox, infection of, pre- cautions to keep from the Court, 315.
Somers, Will. the King's jester, attire for, 84. notice of, ibid. note. Somerset, the Earl and Coun-
tess of, documents relating to their confinement in the Tower for the murder of Sir Thomas Overbury, 395 et seq. inventory of the Earl's effects, 406. Souls, heretical opinion that women have none, 489. Southampton, Henry second
Earl of, confined at Loseley, as a Popish Recusant, 229. Swans, Office of, for Surrey, documents relating to, 305. Upping of, a popular diver-
sion, 309. ancient roll of marks for the beaks of, ex- tant at Loseley, 305. Tapers of wax, their different denominations, 13, note. Tenterden Steeple is said to
have decayed the haven of Sandwich, 211, and note. Tester and cieler of a bed, what, 151, note. Throckmorton, Sir Nicholas, adopted the surname of Ca- rew of Beddington, 359. ori- ginal letters of, to Sir George More, 360 et seq. Tilting between two knights beautifully described by Sir Philip Sydney, 177. Timber felled in Hampshire for the Royal Navy, 494. Tithes unjustly alienated to laymen, 250.
Toto, Serjeant Painter, pay- ment to, 81.
Trumpet, the lottery drawn by
Turner, Mrs. introduces the Countess of Essex to a wi- zard, 382.
Venetian Ambassador borrows masking attire of the Office of the Revels, 57. Venus, masque of, with ladies,
Vortius, an arch-heretic, 497. Votes applied for in favour of Sir Charles Howard, as Knight of the Shire, 488. Udall, Nicholas, appointed by Queen Mary to set forth dia- logues and interludes for her disport, 63.
Uniformity of Common Prayer, Act for the, not subscribed by Copley of Gatton, 243. Wapping Marsh, embankment of, repaired, 490. Westmunster, described, 458.
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