The Holinshed Project

Holinshed Project Home

The Texts
1587

Previous | Next

Then prepared the cardinall for his iournie into the north,The cardi [...] prepareth [...] his iournie into the north. and sent to London for liuerie clothes for his seruants, and so rode from Richmond to Hen|don, from thence to a place called the Rie, the next daie to Raistone, where he lodged in the priorie; the next daie to Huntingdon, and there lodged in the ab|beie; the next daie to Peterborow, and there lodged in the abbeie, where he abode all the next wéeke, & there he kept his Easter, his traine was in number an hundred and thréescore persons. Upon Maundie thursdaie he made his maundie, there hauing nine and fiftie poore men, whose féet he washed, and gaue euerie one twelue pence in monie, three els of good canuas, a paire of shoes, a cast of red herrings, and three white herrings, and one of them had two shil|lings.

On thursdaie next after Easter, he remooued to master Fitz Williams, sometime a merchant-tailor of London, and then of the kings councell; the next wéeke he remooued to Stamford, the next daie to Grantham, the next daie to Newarke, and lodged in the castell that night and the next daie also: from thence he rode to Southwell, where he continued most part of all that summer, vntill the latter end of grasse time, and then he rode to Scrobie, where he continued vntill Michaelmasse, and then to Cawood castell within seuen miles of Yorke, whereof we will speake more hereafter. On the sixtéenth of Maie, a man was hanged in chaines in Finsburie field,Uicar of S. Brides slain. for murthering doctor Miles vicar of saint Brides. The fourth and fift of Nouember was a great wind,A great wind. that blew downe manie houses and trées, after which wind followed so high a tide, that it drowned the marshes on Essex side and Kent, with the Ile of Thanet, and other places, destroieng much cattell. The nineteenth of September, in the citie of Lon|don, a proclamation was made for the restreining of the popes authoritie in England, as followeth.

20.1. A proclamation published in Eng|land in the behalfe of the kings prero|gatiue roiall against the pope.

A proclamation published in Eng|land in the behalfe of the kings prero|gatiue roiall against the pope.

Compare 1577 edition: 1 _THe kings highnes streictlie char|geth and commandeth, that no maner of person, of what estate, degree, or condition soeuer he or they be of, doo purchase or attempt to pur|chase from the court of Rome or elswhere, nor vse & put in execution, diuulge, or pub|lish anie thing hertofore within this yeare passed purchased, or to be purchased here|after, conteining mater preiudiciall to the high authoritie, iurisdiction, and preroga|tiue roiall of this his said realme, or to the let, hinderance, or impechment of his gra|ces noble & vertuous intended purposes in the premisses, vpon paine of incurring his highnesse indignation, and imprison|ment, and further punishment of their bo|dies for their so dooing at his graces plea|sure, to the dreadfull example of all other.

Previous | Next