[1] [2] Forsomuch as merchant strangers, bringing their wares into the realme, did receiue readie mo|nie for them, and euer deliuered the same monie to o|ther merchants by exchange, not emploieng it vpon the commodities of the realme,A proclamati|on for mer|chant stran|gers. a proclamation was set foorth and made, that no person should make anie exchange, contrarie to the meaning of a statute or|deined in the time of king Richard the second: by reason whereof, clothes and other commodities of this realme shortlie after were well sold, till they fell to exchange againe, and that this proclamation was forgotten. After Whitsuntide, the king & the queene remooued to Windsor, and there continued till the fourtéenth of Iulie, on the which daie the king remoo|ued to Woodstocke, and left the quéene at Windsor, where she remained a while, & after remooued to the More, and from thence to Estamstéed, whither the king sent to hir diuerse lords, to aduise hir to be con|formable to the law of God, shewing sundrie rea|sons to persuade hir to their purpose, and one among the rest vsed for that present this communication, as I find it left in writing, in the behoofe of the king.