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WILLIAM DE MONTACUTE or MONTAGU, third Baron Montacute and first Earl of Salisbury (1301-1344), born 
in 1301, was eldest son of William de Montacute, second baron Montacute (d. 1319), and succeeded his father as 
third baron on 6 Nov. 1319, being granted wardship of his own lands, though yet a minor. In 1322 he came of age, 
and received livery of his lands, together with the grant of Lundy Isle. In 1325 he was knighted, and received 
letters of protection on his departure for France.1
 In 1327 he went with Edward III to repel the Scottish invasion, when the latter nearly 
missed capture. In 1329 he accompanied the king abroad and was sent in June to treat for a marriage between the 
eldest son of the king of France and Edward's sister Alianore.2 In September he was despatched with 
Bartholomew de Burghersh (d. 1355) on an embassy to the pope at Avignon, 
returning before the end of the year, when, in his capacity as executor of Blanche, queen of Navarre, he lent 
the king two thousand marks that had belonged to her, and were deposited at Whitefriars.
 
 Next year the young king took him into his confidence about his plans for the arrest of 
Mortimer. During the parliament held at Nottingham in October 1330, Montacute, 
with a band of retainers, including Sir John de Molines, penetrated by a secret passage into the castle, where 
they found Mortimer in the queen-mother's apartments.3 After a struggle, in which two of Mortimer's 
attendants were killed, his arrest was effected, and he was sent to London for trial.4 Edward obtained 
from parliament indemnity on Montacute's behalf for all consequences of the death of Mortimer's attendants, and 
rewarded him with various grants of land forfeited by Mortimer in Hampshire, Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Kent, 
and Wales, including Sherborne, Corfe Castle, and Purbeck Chase in Dorset, and the lordship of Denbigh. 5
 
 On 4 April 1331 Montacute accompanied Edward III when, disguised as a merchant and 
attended by a handful of men-at-arms, the king paid a secret visit to France; he was present when Edward 
repeated his homage to the French king at Amiens on 13 April, and returned with him to Dover on 20 April.6 
In September Montacute held a tournament in Cheapside, entertaining his guests in the Bishop of London's palace.
 
 Next year he attended the king in Scotland, and in 1333 was present at the siege of Berwick and the battle of 
Halidon Hill;7 in the same year Edward made over to him all his rights to the Isle of Man. He appears 
to have accompanied Balliol to Scotland, and in February 1334 was deputed by him to excuse his absence from the 
parliament held at York. On 30 March Montacute was appointed envoy to France with the Archbishop of Canterbury 
[John de Stratford] and two others;8 but in June was again in Scotland, where in 1335 he was left in 
command of the army with Arundel. In the same year he was granted the forests of Selkirk 
and Ettrick and town of Peebles, made governor of the Channel Islands and constable of the Tower.
 
 In November he was given power to treat with Andrew Murray, constable of Scotland; on 27 Jan. 1336 he commenced 
the siege of Dunbar Castle, but after nineteen weeks the blockade was raised by Alexander Ramsay, and Montacute 
gave it up in despair, making a truce that was strongly disapproved of in England.9 In the same year 
he was appointed admiral of the fleet from the mouth of the Thames westward.
 
 On 16 March 1337, at the parliament held in London, Montacute was created Earl of Salisbury. In the following 
April he was sent to Philip to declare Edward's claim to the French crown, and thence on an embassy to the 
emperor Lewis, Rupert, Count Palatine, the Duke of Bavaria, and other princes of Germany and the Netherlands, 
to organise a league against France.10 In October he was commissioned to treat with Scotland, but 
in July 1338 commanded a successful raid into Scotland from Carlisle. Later on in the year he sailed with 
Edward from the Orwell to Flanders, and by a patent, dated Antwerp 20 Sept. 1338,11 was appointed 
marshal of England, an office then vacant by the death of Thomas, earl of Norfolk.
 
 He remained in Flanders, where he was one of the captains of the English forces, for the next two years, during 
part of which he was in garrison at Ypres.12 In November 1338 he was one of those appointed to treat 
with Philip of Valois at the desire of the pope; shortly after he made an inroad into the territories of the 
Bishop of Liege, and in February 1339 negotiated an agreement with the Archhishop of Treves and the Duke of Brabant, 
and was subsequently employed in various other negotiations.
 
 In 1340, induced, perhaps, by treachery within 
the walls, Salisbury and Suffolk with a small force made an attempt on Lille; 
the attack failed, and both were taken prisoners and conveyed to Paris, when Salisbury, it is said, owed his 
life to the intervention of the king of Bohemia.13 On 18 Oct. Edward demanded a levy of wools to 
secure his liberation. He was set free, on condition of never serving against Philip in France, at the peace 
negotiated after the siege of Tournay, in exchange for the Earl of Moray, who had been captured in the 
Scottish wars.14
 
 He returned to England in November, and took part in Edward's arrest of the treasury officials and others; 
in May 1341 he was commissioned to examine into the charges against Stratford [John de Stratford, Archbishop 
of Canterbury].15 Perhaps it was at this time that he conquered the Isle of Man from the Scots 
and was crowned king there; but the event has also been assigned to 1340 and 1342.16 In May 1343 
Salisbury embarked with Robert d'Artois for Brittany,17 captured Vannes, and proceeded to besiege 
Rennes.18
 
 After the death of Artois and some months' ineffectual fighting a truce was signed, and 
in August Salisbury was sent on an embassy to the court of Castile, and took part in the siege of Algeçiras, 
which Alfonso XI was then prosecuting against the Moors.19 He was soon recalled to England, and sent 
against the Scots. He died on 30 Jan. 1344 from bruises, it is said, received during a tournament held at Windsor, 
and was buried at Whitefriars, London.
 
 Montacute was a liberal benefactor of the church, his principal foundation being Bustleham, or Bisham, Berkshire. 
Walsingham says of him 'de elegantia, strenuitate, sapientia, et animositate, scribere, speciales actus requirit.' 
He married Catharine, daughter of Sir William Grandison, by whom he had two sons, 
William, second earl of Salisbury, and John, and four daughters, one of whom, 
Philippa, married Roger Mortimer, second earl of March.
 
 
 
 
 
 1.  Rymer, Fœdera, ii. i. 606.
 2.  ib. ii. ii. 764, 766.
 3.  Murimuth, Chronicles, p. 61.
 4.   See Barnes, Edward III, pp. 47-8.
 5.  Rolls of Parliament ii. 606; Galfridi Le Baker, Chron. ed. Maunde Thompson, pp. 46, 226-8; 
Walsingham, Ypodigma Neustriæ,f. 270; Murimuth, pp. 62, 285; Dugdale; Stow, Annals, p. 229; 
Stubbs, ii. 390; Longman, The History of the Life and Times of Edward III, i. 35.
 6. Froissart, ed. Lettenhove, ii. 232; Rymer, ii. ii. 818.
 7. Barnes, p. 80.
 8.  Rymer; Barnes, p. 92.
 9.  Walsingham, Ypodigma, p. 275; Hist. Angl. p. 200; Stow, p. 231; Longman, p. 189; 
Lettenhove, xxiii. 93-7 ; Barnes, pp. 101 sqq.
 10.  Lettenhove, xxiii. 97; Rymer, ii. ii. 969, 992, 995.
 11. Rymer.
 12.  Lettenhove, passim.
 13. Murimuth, p. 104; Chronicon Angliæ,ed. Maunde Thompson, p. 10; 
Walsingham, Ypodigma, p. 278; Hist. Angl. i. 226; 
Froissart, Chron. ed. Lettenhove, ii. 5; Galf. Le Baker, Chron. pp. 67, 241-2; 
Barnes, pp. 168-9, and Stow, p. 369, who gives a very different account from Froissart.
 14.  Rymer, passim; Cal. Rot. Parl. p. 138b.
 15.  Murimuth, p. 120.
 16.  cf. Annals of England, p. 193; Lettenhove, Galf. Le Baker, Stow, and Longman.
 17.  Lettenhove.
 18.  Longman, Edward III, i. 212; Barnes, pp. 281-5.
 19. Lettenhove; Rymer, ii. ii. 1232; Dugdale antedates this occurrence by two years.
 
 
 
 Source:
 
 Pollard, A. F. "Montacute or Montagu, William de."
 Dictionary of National Biography. Vol XXXVIII. Sidney Lee, Ed.
 New York: Macmillan and Co., 1894. 212-213.
 
 
 
 
 Other Local Resources:
 
 
 
 
 William de Montacute on the Web:
 
 
 
 
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 Index of Encyclopedia Entries:
 
 Medieval Cosmology
 Prices of Items in Medieval England
 
 Edward II
 Isabella of France, Queen of England
 Piers Gaveston
 Thomas of Brotherton, E. of Norfolk
 Edmund of Woodstock, E. of Kent
 Thomas, Earl of Lancaster
 Henry of Lancaster, Earl of Lancaster
 Henry of Grosmont, Duke of Lancaster
 Roger Mortimer, Earl of March
 Hugh le Despenser the Younger
 Bartholomew, Lord Burghersh, elder
 
 Hundred Years' War (1337-1453)
 
 Edward III
 Philippa of Hainault, Queen of England
 Edward, Black Prince of Wales
 John of Eltham, Earl of Cornwall
 The Battle of Crécy, 1346
 The Siege of Calais, 1346-7
 The Battle of Poitiers, 1356
 Lionel of Antwerp, Duke of Clarence
 John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster
 Edmund of Langley, Duke of York
 Thomas of Woodstock, Gloucester
 Richard of York, E. of Cambridge
 Richard Fitzalan, 3. Earl of Arundel
 Roger Mortimer, 2nd Earl of March
 The Good Parliament, 1376
 Richard II
 The Peasants' Revolt, 1381
 Lords Appellant, 1388
 Richard Fitzalan, 4. Earl of Arundel
 Archbishop Thomas Arundel
 Thomas de Beauchamp, E. Warwick
 Robert de Vere, Earl of Oxford
 Ralph Neville, E. of Westmorland
 Thomas Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk
 Edmund Mortimer, 3. Earl of March
 Roger Mortimer, 4. Earl of March
 John Holland, Duke of Exeter
 Michael de la Pole, E. Suffolk
 Hugh de Stafford, 2. E. Stafford
 Henry IV
 Edward, Duke of York
 Edmund Mortimer, 5. Earl of March
 Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland
 Sir Henry Percy, "Harry Hotspur"
 Thomas Percy, Earl of Worcester
 Owen Glendower
 The Battle of Shrewsbury, 1403
 Archbishop Richard Scrope
 Thomas Mowbray, 3. E. Nottingham
 John Mowbray, 2. Duke of Norfolk
 Thomas Fitzalan, 5. Earl of Arundel
 Henry V
 Thomas, Duke of Clarence
 John, Duke of Bedford
 Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester
 John Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury
 Richard, Earl of Cambridge
 Henry, Baron Scrope of Masham
 William de la Pole, Duke of Suffolk
 Thomas Montacute, E. Salisbury
 Richard Beauchamp, E. of Warwick
 Henry Beauchamp, Duke of Warwick
 Thomas Beaufort, Duke of Exeter
 Cardinal Henry Beaufort
 John Beaufort, Earl of Somerset
 Sir John Fastolf
 John Holland, 2. Duke of Exeter
 Archbishop John Stafford
 Archbishop John Kemp
 Catherine of Valois
 Owen Tudor
 John Fitzalan, 7. Earl of Arundel
 John, Lord Tiptoft
 
 Charles VII, King of France
 Joan of Arc
 Louis XI, King of France
 Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy
 The Battle of Agincourt, 1415
 The Battle of Castillon, 1453
 
 
 
 The Wars of the Roses 1455-1485
 Causes of the Wars of the Roses
 The House of Lancaster
 The House of York
 The House of Beaufort
 The House of Neville
 
 The First Battle of St. Albans, 1455
 The Battle of Blore Heath, 1459
 The Rout of Ludford, 1459
 The Battle of Northampton, 1460
 The Battle of Wakefield, 1460
 The Battle of Mortimer's Cross, 1461
 The 2nd Battle of St. Albans, 1461
 The Battle of Towton, 1461
 The Battle of Hedgeley Moor, 1464
 The Battle of Hexham, 1464
 The Battle of Edgecote, 1469
 The Battle of Losecoat Field, 1470
 The Battle of Barnet, 1471
 The Battle of Tewkesbury, 1471
 The Treaty of Pecquigny, 1475
 The Battle of Bosworth Field, 1485
 The Battle of Stoke Field, 1487
 
 Henry VI
 Margaret of Anjou
 Richard Plantagenet, Duke of York
 Edward IV
 Elizabeth Woodville
 Richard Woodville, 1. Earl Rivers
 Anthony Woodville, 2. Earl Rivers
 Jane Shore
 Edward V
 Richard III
 George, Duke of Clarence
 
 Ralph Neville, 2. Earl of Westmorland
 Richard Neville, Earl of Salisbury
 Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick
 Edward Neville, Baron Bergavenny
 William Neville, Lord Fauconberg
 Robert Neville, Bishop of Salisbury
 John Neville, Marquis of Montagu
 George Neville, Archbishop of York
 John Beaufort, 1. Duke Somerset
 Edmund Beaufort, 2. Duke Somerset
 Henry Beaufort, 3. Duke of Somerset
 Edmund Beaufort, 4. Duke Somerset
 Margaret Beaufort
 Edmund Tudor, Earl of Richmond
 Jasper Tudor, Earl of Pembroke
 Humphrey Stafford, D. Buckingham
 Henry Stafford, Duke of Buckingham
 Humphrey Stafford, E. of Devon
 Thomas, Lord Stanley, Earl of Derby
 Sir William Stanley
 Archbishop Thomas Bourchier
 Henry Bourchier, Earl of Essex
 John Mowbray, 3. Duke of Norfolk
 John Mowbray, 4. Duke of Norfolk
 John Howard, Duke of Norfolk
 Henry Percy, 2. E. Northumberland
 Henry Percy, 3. E. Northumberland
 Henry Percy, 4. E. Northumberland
 William, Lord Hastings
 Henry Holland, Duke of Exeter
 William Fitzalan, Earl of Arundel
 William Herbert, 1. Earl of Pembroke
 John de Vere, 12th Earl of Oxford
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 Thomas de Clifford, 8. Baron Clifford
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 John Tiptoft, Earl of Worcester
 Thomas Grey, 1. Marquis Dorset
 Sir Andrew Trollop
 Archbishop John Morton
 Edward Plantagenet, E. of Warwick
 John Talbot, 2. E. Shrewsbury
 John Talbot, 3. E. Shrewsbury
 John de la Pole, 2. Duke of Suffolk
 John de la Pole, E. of Lincoln
 Edmund de la Pole, E. of Suffolk
 Richard de la Pole
 John Sutton, Baron Dudley
 James Butler, 5. Earl of Ormonde
 Sir James Tyrell
 Edmund Grey, first Earl of Kent
 George Grey, 2nd Earl of Kent
 John, 5th Baron Scrope of Bolton
 James Touchet, 7th Baron Audley
 Walter Blount, Lord Mountjoy
 Robert Hungerford, Lord Moleyns
 Thomas, Lord Scales
 John, Lord Lovel and Holand
 Francis Lovell, Viscount Lovell
 Sir Richard Ratcliffe
 William Catesby
 Ralph, 4th Lord Cromwell
 Jack Cade's Rebellion, 1450
 
 
 Tudor Period
 
 King Henry VII
 Queen Elizabeth of York
 Arthur, Prince of Wales
 Lambert Simnel
 Perkin Warbeck
 The Battle of Blackheath, 1497
 
 King Ferdinand II of Aragon
 Queen Isabella of Castile
 Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor
 
 King Henry VIII
 Queen Catherine of Aragon
 Queen Anne Boleyn
 Queen Jane Seymour
 Queen Anne of Cleves
 Queen Catherine Howard
 Queen Katherine Parr
 
 King Edward VI
 Queen Mary I
 Queen Elizabeth I
 Henry Fitzroy, Duke of Richmond
 
 Margaret Tudor, Queen of Scotland
 James IV, King of Scotland
 The Battle of Flodden Field, 1513
 James V, King of Scotland
 Mary of Guise, Queen of Scotland
 
 Mary Tudor, Queen of France
 Louis XII, King of France
 Francis I, King of France
 The Battle of the Spurs, 1513
 Field of the Cloth of Gold, 1520
 Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor
 Eustace Chapuys, Imperial Ambassador
 The Siege of Boulogne, 1544
 
 Cardinal Thomas Wolsey
 Archbishop Thomas Cranmer
 Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex
 Thomas, Lord Audley
 Thomas Wriothesley, E. Southampton
 Sir Richard Rich
 
 Edward Stafford, D. of Buckingham
 Thomas Howard, 2nd Duke of Norfolk
 Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk
 John Dudley, Duke of Northumberland
 Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk
 Thomas Boleyn, Earl of Wiltshire
 George Boleyn, Viscount Rochford
 John Russell, Earl of Bedford
 Thomas Grey, 2. Marquis of Dorset
 Henry Grey, D. of Suffolk
 Charles Somerset, Earl of Worcester
 George Talbot, 4. E. Shrewsbury
 Francis Talbot, 5. E. Shrewsbury
 Henry Algernon Percy,
 5th Earl of Northumberland
 Henry Algernon Percy,
 6th Earl of Northumberland
 Ralph Neville, 4. E. Westmorland
 Henry Neville, 5. E. Westmorland
 William Paulet, Marquis of Winchester
 Sir Francis Bryan
 Sir Nicholas Carew
 John de Vere, 15th Earl of Oxford
 John de Vere, 16th Earl of Oxford
 Thomas Seymour, Lord Admiral
 Edward Seymour, Protector Somerset
 Margaret Pole, Countess of Salisbury
 Henry Pole, Lord Montague
 Sir Geoffrey Pole
 Thomas Manners, Earl of Rutland
 Henry Manners, Earl of Rutland
 Henry Bourchier, 2. Earl of Essex
 Robert Radcliffe, 1. Earl of Sussex
 Henry Radcliffe, 2. Earl of Sussex
 George Hastings, Earl of Huntingdon
 Henry Courtenay, Marquis of Exeter
 George Neville, Baron Bergavenny
 Sir Edward Neville
 William, Lord Paget
 William Sandys, Baron Sandys
 William Fitzwilliam, E. Southampton
 Sir Anthony Browne
 Sir Thomas Wriothesley
 Sir William Kingston
 George Brooke, Lord Cobham
 Sir Richard Southwell
 Thomas Fiennes, 9th Lord Dacre
 Sir Francis Weston
 Henry Norris
 Lady Jane Grey
 Sir Thomas Arundel
 Sir Richard Sackville
 Sir William Petre
 Sir John Cheke
 Walter Haddon, L.L.D
 Sir Peter Carew
 Sir John Mason
 Nicholas Wotton
 John Taylor
 Sir Thomas Wyatt, the Younger
 
 Cardinal Lorenzo Campeggio
 Cardinal Reginald Pole
 Stephen Gardiner, Bishop of Winchester
 Edmund Bonner, Bishop of London
 Nicholas Ridley, Bishop of London
 John Hooper, Bishop of Gloucester
 John Aylmer, Bishop of London
 Thomas Linacre
 William Grocyn
 Archbishop William Warham
 Cuthbert Tunstall, Bishop of Durham
 Richard Fox, Bishop of Winchester
 Edward Fox, Bishop of Hereford
 
 Pope Julius II
 Pope Leo X
 Pope Clement VII
 Pope Paul III
 Pope Pius V
 
 Pico della Mirandola
 Desiderius Erasmus
 Martin Bucer
 Richard Pace
 Christopher Saint-German
 Thomas Tallis
 Elizabeth Barton, the Nun of Kent
 Hans Holbein, the Younger
 The Sweating Sickness
 
 Dissolution of the Monasteries
 Pilgrimage of Grace, 1536
 Robert Aske
 Anne Askew
 Lord Thomas Darcy
 Sir Robert Constable
 
 Oath of Supremacy
 The Act of Supremacy, 1534
 The First Act of Succession, 1534
 The Third Act of Succession, 1544
 The Ten Articles, 1536
 The Six Articles, 1539
 The Second Statute of Repeal, 1555
 The Act of Supremacy, 1559
 Articles Touching Preachers, 1583
 
 Queen Elizabeth I
 William Cecil, Lord Burghley
 Robert Cecil, 1st Earl of Salisbury
 Sir Francis Walsingham
 Sir Nicholas Bacon
 Sir Thomas Bromley
 
 Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester
 Ambrose Dudley, Earl of Warwick
 Henry Carey, Lord Hunsdon
 Sir Thomas Egerton, Viscount Brackley
 Sir Francis Knollys
 Katherine "Kat" Ashley
 Lettice Knollys, Countess of Leicester
 George Talbot, 6. E. of Shrewsbury
 Elizabeth, Countess of Shrewsbury
 Gilbert Talbot, 7. E. of Shrewsbury
 Sir Henry Sidney
 Sir Robert Sidney
 Archbishop Matthew Parker
 Walter Devereux, 1st Earl of Essex
 Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex
 Penelope Devereux, Lady Rich
 Sir Christopher Hatton
 Edward Courtenay, E. Devonshire
 Edward Manners, 3rd Earl of Rutland
 Thomas Radcliffe, 3. Earl of Sussex
 Henry Radcliffe, 4. Earl of Sussex
 Robert Radcliffe, 5. Earl of Sussex
 William Parr, Marquis of Northampton
 Henry Wriothesley, 2. Southampton
 Henry Wriothesley, 3. Southampton
 Charles Neville, 6. E. Westmorland
 Thomas Percy, 7. E. Northumberland
 Henry Percy, 8. E. Northumberland
 Henry Percy, 9. E. Nothumberland
 William Herbert, 1. Earl of Pembroke
 Charles, Lord Howard of Effingham
 Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk
 Henry Howard, 1. Earl of Northampton
 Thomas Howard, 1. Earl of Suffolk
 Henry Hastings, 3. E. of Huntingdon
 Edward Manners, 3rd Earl of Rutland
 Roger Manners, 5th Earl of Rutland
 Francis Manners, 6th Earl of Rutland
 Henry FitzAlan, 12. Earl of Arundel
 Thomas, Earl Arundell of Wardour
 Edward Somerset, E. of Worcester
 William Davison
 Sir Walter Mildmay
 Sir Ralph Sadler
 Sir Amyas Paulet
 Gilbert Gifford
 Anthony Browne, Viscount Montague
 François, Duke of Alençon & Anjou
 
 Mary, Queen of Scots
 Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley
 James Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell
 Anthony Babington and the Babington Plot
 John Knox
 
 Philip II of Spain
 The Spanish Armada, 1588
 Sir Francis Drake
 Sir John Hawkins
 
 William Camden
 Archbishop Whitgift
 Martin Marprelate Controversy
 John Penry (Martin Marprelate)
 Richard Bancroft, Archbishop of Canterbury
 John Dee, Alchemist
 
 Philip Henslowe
 Edward Alleyn
 The Blackfriars Theatre
 The Fortune Theatre
 The Rose Theatre
 The Swan Theatre
 Children's Companies
 The Admiral's Men
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 Citizen Comedy
 The Isle of Dogs, 1597
 
 Common Law
 Court of Common Pleas
 Court of King's Bench
 Court of Star Chamber
 Council of the North
 Fleet Prison
 Assize
 Attainder
 First Fruits & Tenths
 Livery and Maintenance
 Oyer and terminer
 Praemunire
 
 
 The Stuarts
 
 King James I of England
 Anne of Denmark
 Henry, Prince of Wales
 The Gunpowder Plot, 1605
 George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham
 Robert Carr, Earl of Somerset
 Arabella Stuart, Lady Lennox
 
 William Alabaster
 Bishop Hall
 Bishop Thomas Morton
 Archbishop William Laud
 John Selden
 Lucy Harington, Countess of Bedford
 Henry Lawes
 
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 Queen Henrietta Maria
 
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 Rump Parliament
 Kentish Petition, 1642
 
 Thomas Wentworth, Earl of Strafford
 John Digby, Earl of Bristol
 George Digby, 2nd Earl of Bristol
 Thomas Fairfax, 3rd Lord Fairfax
 Robert Devereux, 3rd E. of Essex
 Robert Sidney, 2. E. of Leicester
 Algernon Percy, E. of Northumberland
 Henry Montagu, Earl of Manchester
 Edward Montagu, 2. Earl of Manchester
 
 The Restoration
 
 King Charles II
 King James II
 Test Acts
 
 Greenwich Palace
 Hatfield House
 Richmond Palace
 Windsor Palace
 Woodstock Manor
 
 The Cinque Ports
 Mermaid Tavern
 Malmsey Wine
 Great Fire of London, 1666
 Merchant Taylors' School
 Westminster School
 The Sanctuary at Westminster
 "Sanctuary"
 
 
 Images:
 
 Chart of the English Succession from William I through Henry VII
 
 Medieval English Drama
 
 London c1480, MS Royal 16
 London, 1510, the earliest view in print
 Map of England from Saxton's Descriptio Angliae, 1579
 London in late 16th century
 Location Map of Elizabethan London
 Plan of the Bankside, Southwark, in Shakespeare's time
 Detail of Norden's Map of the Bankside, 1593
 Bull and Bear Baiting Rings from the Agas Map (1569-1590, pub. 1631)
 Sketch of the Swan Theatre, c. 1596
 Westminster in the Seventeenth Century, by Hollar
 Visscher's View of London, 1616
 Larger Visscher's View in Sections
 c. 1690.  View of London Churches, after the Great Fire
 The Yard of the Tabard Inn from Thornbury, Old and New London
 
 
 
 
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