Source: http://www3.telus.net/lakowski/England3.html
Timestamp: 2019-04-19 06:48:35+00:00

Document:
I plan to add at least two more files to the Contemporaries of Thomas More in the future: one of the English Reformation (to 1540) and another on the Continental (Northern) Renaissance and Reformation (to 1540). The entries in this section are modelled at least partially on The Contemporaries of Erasmus (Toronto: 1985–87) and will hopefully eventually also include short biographies.
See Herbrüggen/Rogers #11A, #14, #42, #49, #51, #53, #55, #94, #103A, #103B, #103C (= Rogers #98), #103D (= Rogers #13), #169B–#169F (5 letters) and passim.
CFG. William Knight of London,1476–29 September 1547. Contemporaries of Erasmus: A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation. Ed. P. G. Bietenholz and T. B. Deutscher. 3 vols. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 1985–87. 2: 264–65.
See brief biographies in Allen #207/22, n. on p.438; and Rogers #67/26, n. on p.133.
Letter From William Latimer to Erasmus, Oxford, 30 January 1517. See Correspondence of John Fisher.
Allen, P.S. Linacre and Latimer in Italy. English Historical Review 18 (1903): 514–17.
McConica, James K. William Latimer d. before 17 October 1545. Contemporaries of Erasmus: A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation. Ed. P. G. Bietenholz and T. B. Deutscher. 3 vols. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 1985–87. 2: 302–303.
Orme, Nicholas. Latimer, William (c. 1467–1545). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography [Jan. 2004] (http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/16104).
Letter From Thomas More to Master <Stephen> Leder, Tower of London, Saturday, 16 January 1535. See Calendar of the Letters of Thomas More.
See also Wikipedia and http://www.liquisearch.com/john_leland_antiquary/bibliography.
Leland, John. The itinerary of John Leland the Antiquary. . . . Publish'd from the original MS. in the Bodleian Library by Thomas Hearne M.A. To which is prefix'd Mr. Leland's New-Year's Gift: And at the end is subjoyn'd A Discourse concerning some Antiquities lately found in York-Shire. 9 vols. Oxford : printed at the Theater for the publisher, [1710–1712]. Rpt. Oxford, Printed at the Theater for J. Fletcher and J. Pote, 1744. Rpt. 3rd ed. Oxford: Printed at the Theatre; For James Fletcher, in the Turl, and Joseph Pote, at Eton College, MDCCLXX. .
Beal, P., ed. John Leland. Index of English Literary Manuscripts. Vol. I: 1450–1625. 5 vols. London: Mansell; New York: R. R. Bowker, 1980. 1/2: 299–310. Online at http://www.celm-ms.org.uk/introductions/LelandJohn.html and http://www.celm-ms.org.uk/authors/lelandjohn.html.
Hudson, Hoyt Hopewell. John Leland's List of Early English Humanists. Huntington Library Quarterly 2 (1939): 301–04.
Liddell, J. R. Leland's Lists of Manuscripts in Lincolnshire Monasteries. English Historical Review 54 (1939): 88–95.
Bradner, L. [John Leland.]. Musae Anglicanae: A History of Anglo-Latin Poetry, 1500–1925. The Modern Language Association of America, General Series 10. New York: Modern Language Association of America; Oxford: Oxford UP, 1940. 25–32.
Hudson, Hoyt Hopewell. [John Leland.] The Epigram in the English Renaissance. Printon: Princeton UP, 1947. Rpt. New York: Octagon Books, 1966. 87–92.
L. Bradner, Modern Language Notes 63 (1948): 577–78.
Skeat, T. C. Two Lost Works of John Leland. English Historical Review 65 (1950): 505–08.
Lewis, C. S. English Literature in the Sixteenth Century, excluding Drama. Oxford History of English Literature, Vol. 3. London: Oxford UP, 1954. 1973. 297–98.
Bradner, L. Some Unpublished Poems of John Leland. Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 71 (1956): 827–36.
Dorsch, T. S. Two English Antiquaries: John Leland and John Stow. Essays and Studies ns 12 (1959): 18–35.
Hutton, J. John Leland's Laudatio Pacis. Studies in Philology 58 (1961): 616–26. Rpt. Essays on Renaissance Poetry. Ed. R. Guerlac. Ithaca, NY: Cornell UP, 1980. 319–29.
Carley, J. Four Poems in Praise of Erasmus by John Leland. Erasmus in English 11 (1981/82): 26–27.
Carley, James P. John Leland's Cygnea cantio: A Neglected Tudor River Poem. Humanistica Lovaniensia 32 (1983): 225–241.
Carley, James P. Polydore Vergil and John Leland on King Arthur: The Battle of the Books.  See Polydore Vergil.
Carley, James P. John Leland and the Foundations of the Royal Library: The Westminster Inventory of 1542. Bulletin of the Society for Renaissance Studies 7 (1989): 13–22.
See Shaaber L92–L101, and ARCR I:739. The son of Thomas More's friend William Lily, and uncle of the Elizabethan Write John Lyly. He made important contributions to cartography and also provided the historical accounts for Paolo Giovio's Descriptio Britanniae . The four references to More by Jovius quoted in Stapleton's Life are derived from Lily. See also Sullivan II:234-35 (and 176-77).
Feuillerat, Albert. John Lyly: contribution à l'histoire de la renaissance en Angleterre. Cambridge: 1910. 11–14.
Schütt, M. George Lily's Elogia. Die englische Biographik de Tudor-Zeit. Hamburg: Friederichsen, de Gruyter & Co., 1930. 54–57.
See Shaaber L102–L174, USTC, CE, ODNB and ESTC.
Bradner, L. and C. A. Lynch, eds. Progymnasmata: Thomae Mori et Guilelmi Lilii sodalium. The Latin Epigrams of Thomas More. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1953. 6–14, 129–36. Rpt. in Latin Poems. Vol. 3, Part II of The Yale Edition of the Complete Works of St. Thomas More. Ed. C. H. Miller, L. Bradner, C. A. Lynch, and R. P. Oliver. New Haven: Yale UP, 1984. 78–95, 321–26.
Lily, William A Shorte Introduction to Grammar. Intro. V. J. Flynn. New York: Scholars' facsimiles & reprints, 1945.
Nugent, E. M., ed. Lily's Grammar: Lily's Rudimenta. The Thought and Culture of the English Renaissance: An Anthology of Tudor Prose, 1481–1555. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1956. 116–17, 121–22.
Baskervill, C. R. William Lily's Verse for the Entry of Charles V into London. Huntington Library Bulletin no. 9 (1936): 1–14.
Stewart, M. B. William Lily's Contribution to Classical Study. Classical Journal 33 (1938): 217–25.
Flynn, Vincent Joseph. The Grammatical Writings of William Lily, ?1468–?1523. Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 37 (1943): 85–113.
Hudson, Hoyt Hopewell. [William Lily.] The Epigram in the English Renaissance. Printon: Princeton UP, 1947. Rpt. New York: Octagon Books, 1966. 82–87.
Allen, C. G. The Sources of Lily's Latin Grammar. A Review of the Facts and Some Further Suggestions. The Library 5th ser. 9 (1954): 85–100.
Allen, C. G. Certayne Briefe Rules and Lily's Latin Grammar . The Library 5th ser. 14 (1959) 49–53.
Carlson, David R. Printer's Needs: Wynkyn de Worde's Piracy of William Lily's Epigrammata in 1522. English Humanist Books: Writers and Patrons, Manuscript and Print, 1475–1525. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 1993. 123–141, 231–239, and Figs. 23–27, between pp.126–127.
See Shaaber L175–L328, USTC, ODNB, CE and ESTC, google and Internet Archive.org.
Williamson, Richard Thomas. English physicians of the past; short sketches of the life and work of Linacre, Gilbert, Harvey, Glisson, Willis, Sydenham, Mead, Heberden, Baker, J. & P.M. Latham, Bright. Newcastle-upon-Tyne: A. Reid, 1923. 7–19. Online at https://archive.org/details/englishphysician00willuoft.
Allen, P. S. Linacre and Latimer in Italy. English Historical Review 18 (1903): 514–17.
Fulton, J. F. Early Medical Humanists, Leonicenus, Linacre, Thomas Elyot.  See Thomas Elyot.
Mitchell, R. J. Thomas Linacre and Italy. English Historical Review 50 (1935): 696–98.
O'Donovan, W. J. Thomas Linacre. Great Catholics. London: Nicholson and Watson, 1938. 130–38.
Weiss, Roberto. Notes on Thomas Linacre. Miscellanea Giovanni Mercati. Vol. IV. Letteratura Classica e Umanistica. Roma: Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, 1946. 373–80.
Weiss, Roberto. Un allievo inglese del Poliziano: Thomas Linacre. Il Poliziano e il suo tempo: atti del IV Convegno internazionale di studi sul Rinascimento. Istituto nazionale di studi sul Rinascimento. Firenze: G.C. Sansoni, 1957. 231–36.
Marc'hadour, G. Thomas More and Thomas Linacre.  See More's Family, Friends and Descendents.
Bennett, J. P. John Morer's Will: Thomas Linacre and Prior Sellyng's Greek Teaching. Studies in the Renaissance 15 (1968): 70–91.
G. Marc'hadour, Moreana 61 (1979): 53–56.
M. H. Saffron Renaissance Quarterly 31 (1978): 235–37.
Clough, Cecil H. Thomas Linacre, Cornelio Vitelli, and Humanistic Studies at Oxford. Essays on the Life and Works of Thomas Linacre. c.1460–1524. Ed. F. Maddison, M. Pelling and C. Webster. Oxford: Clarendon, 1977. 1–23.
Durling, R. J. Linacre and Medical Humanism. Essays on the Life and Works of Thomas Linacre. c.1460–1524. Ed. F. Maddison, M. Pelling and C. Webster. Oxford: Clarendon, 1977. 76–106.
Hill, M. An Iconography of Thomas Linacre. Essays on the Life and Works of Thomas Linacre. c.1460–1524. Ed. F. Maddison, M. Pelling and C. Webster. Oxford: Clarendon, 1977. 354–74 + 20 plates at end of volume.
Lewis, R. G. The Linacre Lectureships Subsequent to their Foundation. Essays on the Life and Works of Thomas Linacre. c.1460–1524. Ed. F. Maddison, M. Pelling and C. Webster. Oxford: Clarendon, 1977. 223–64.
Pagel, W. Medical Humanism — A Historical Necessity in the Era of the Renaissance. Essays on the Life and Works of Thomas Linacre. c.1460–1524. Ed. F. Maddison, M. Pelling and C. Webster. Oxford: Clarendon, 1977. 375–86.
Pelling, M. The Refoundation of the Linacre Lectureships in the Nineteenth Century. Essays on the Life and Works of Thomas Linacre. c.1460–1524. Eds. F. Maddison, M. Pelling and C. Webster. Oxford: Clarendon, 1977. 265–89.
Schmitt, C. B. Linacre and Italy. Essays on the Life and Works of Thomas Linacre. c.1460–1524. Eds. F. Maddison, M. Pelling and C. Webster. Oxford: Clarendon, 1977. 36–75.
Thomson, D. F. S. Linacre's Latin Grammars. Essays on the Life and Works of Thomas Linacre. c.1460–1524. Eds. F. Maddison, M. Pelling and C. Webster. Oxford: Clarendon, 1977. 24–35.
Webster, C. Thomas Linacre and the Foundation of the College of Physicians. Essays on the Life and Works of Thomas Linacre. c.1460–1524. Ed. F. Maddison, M. Pelling and C. Webster. Oxford: Clarendon, 1977. 198–222.
Jensen, K. De emendata structura Latini sermonis: The Latin Grammar of Thomas Linacre. Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 49 (1986): 106–25.
Trapp, J. B. Erasmus, John Colet, Thomas More and Thomas Linacre.  See More: Life of Pico.
Arnold, Jonathan A. The English Erasmians: Thomas Linacre, Thomas Grocyn and Thomas Lupset. The Great Humanists: An Introduction. London:I. B. Tauris. 2011. 189–206, 285–89.
Add CE and ONDB .
Byrne, M. St. C., ed. The Lisle Letters. 6 vols. Chicago: Chicago UP, 1981.
G. R. Elton, London Review of Books 3:13 16th Jul. 1981: 3–5 (rpt. in G. R. Elton, Studies in Tudor and Stuart Politics and Government , 4 vols. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, Vols. 1–2: 1974; Vol. 3: 1983; Vol. 4: 1992; 3: 436–44).
M. Levine, Renaissance Quarterly 35 (1982): 491–95.
G. Marc'hadour, Moreana 79/80 (1983): 177–83.
D. Starkey, History 68 (1983): 317–18.
Byrne, M. St. C., ed. The Lisle Letters: An Abridgement. Foreward by Hugh Trevor-Roper. Selected and Arranged by Bridget Boland. Chicago: Chicago UP, 1983.
F. Williams, Moreana 83/84 (1984): 55–56.
Bridbury, A. R. The Lisle Letters. Economic History Review ns 35 (1982): 573–80.
Trevor-Roper, H. Upstairs Downstairs in the Sixteenth Century. American Scholar 51 (1982): 410–23. Rpt. as The Lisle Letters. in Renaissance Essays. London: Seeker & Warburg, 1985; Fontana Books, 1986. 76–93.
Slavin, A. J. The Lisle Letters and the Tudor State. Sewanee Review 90 (1982): 135–42.
For short bios. see Allen 6:#1535, pp.1–2 ( CWE 11:2–3); Rogers #83/1002–1007 and n1002 p.192 and CW 15: 268/26–270/2 and n. on p.588. Check biblography in CE and ODNB , etc.
Blench, J. W. John Longland and Roger Edgeworth: Two Forgotten Preachers of the Early Sixteenth Century. Review of English Studies ns 5 (1954): 123–43.
Blench, J. W. Preaching in England in the late Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries: A Study of English Sermons, 1450 – c.1600 . Oxford: Basil Blackwell; New York: Barnes and Noble, 1964 . 20–28.
Add STC, Shaefer M218, etc. and Bude's Letter to Lupset (1517 Utopia).
Gee, J. A. The Life and Works of Thomas Lupset, with a Critical Text of the Original Treatises and Letters. New Haven: Yale UP, 1928.
R. W. Chambers, Modern Language Review 26 (1931): 467–68.
Nugent, E. M., ed. An Exhortation to Young Men. By Thomas Lupset. The Thought and Culture of the English Renaissance: An Anthology of Tudor Prose, 1481–1555. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1956. 79–88.
J. X. Evans, Moreana 39 (1973): 43–45.
Haynes, Robert W. Thomas Lupset's A Treatise of Charitie: Dialogue as Charity in Action. Renaissance Papers 1990: 19–26.
Arnold, Jonathan A. The English Erasmians: Thomas Linacre, Thomas Grocyn and Thomas Lupset. The Great Humanists: An Introduction. London: I. B. Tauris. 2011. 199–201, 204–206, 288–89.
Add CE 2:357-59, McConica English Humanists and ODNB.
Armstrong, C. A. J. Introduction. The Usurpation of Richard the Third: Dominicus Mancinus ad Angelum Catonem de occupatione regni anglie per Riccardum Tercium libellus. Ed. and trans. C. A. J. Armstrong. Oxford: Clarendon P, 1936. 2nd. ed. 1969. Rpt. Gloucester: Alan Sutton, 1984, 1989. 1–54.
Hanham, A. Mancini, the Unsuspected Eye-Witness. Richard III and His Early Historians. Oxford: Clarendon P, 1975. 65–73.
Gransden, A. Chroniclers of the Wars of the Roses: Foreign. Historical Writing in England ii, c. 1307 to the Early Sixteenth Century. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1982. 300–307.
Potter, Jeremy. Good King Richard? An Account of Richard III and his Reputation 1483—1983. London: Constable, 1983, rpt. 1985. 1989. 81–86.
Horrox, Rosemary. The Usurpation. Richard III: A Study in Service. Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought, Fourth Series 11. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1989. 89–137.
See also Wikipedia entry for Margaret of York.
Hommel, Luc. Marguerite d'York, ou, La duchesse Junon Paris: Hachette, 1959. Rpt. 2003.
Weightman, Christine. Margaret of York: Duchess of Burgundy 1446–1503. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1989. Revised edition as Margaret of York: The Diabolical Duchess. Stroud, Gloustershire: Amberley Publishing, 2009.
D. A. Penny, Sixteenth Century Journal 21 (1990): 511–12.
Berkowitz, D. S., ed. Humanist Scholarship and Public Order: Two Tracts against the Pilgrimage of Grace. By Sir Richard Morison. With Historical Annotations and Related Contemporary Documents. Washington, DC: The Folger Shakespeare Library; London: Associated University Presses, 1984.
Baskervill, C. R. Sir Richard Morison as the Author of Two Anonymous Tracts on Sedition. The Library 4th ser. 17 (1936): 83–87.
Zeeveld, W. G. Richard Morison, Official Apologist for Henry VIII. Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 55 (1940): 406–25.
Slavin, Arthur J. Tis far off, And rather like a dream : Common Weal, Common Woe and Commonwealth.  See Utopian Communism, Justice, Law, Property and Prosperity.
Zeeveld, W. G. Apology for an Execution. [1967/1977] See The Immediate Aftermath of More's Death.
Mueller, Janel M. Schematism and Scripturalism in Morison and Cheke. The Native Tongue and the Word: Developments in English Prose Style 1380–1580. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1984. 203–221.
Tracey Sowerby Renaissance and Reform in Tudor England: The Careers of Sir Richard Morison. Oxford Historical Monographs. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2010.
See also Salvador Miranda, John Morton, The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church ; online at http://www2.fiu.edu/~mirandas/bios1493.htm#Morton.
Williams, Robert Folkestone. Lives of the English Cardinals: Including Historical Notices of the Papal Court, From Nicholas Breakspear (Pope Adrian IV) to Thomas Wolsey, Cardinal Legate. 2 Vols.	London: Wm. H. Allen, 1868. Vol. II:152–192. Online at https://archive.org/details/englishcardinals02willuoft.
Gairdner, J. Archbishop Morton and St. Albans. English Historical Review 24 (1909): 91–96, 319–21.
Jenkins, Claude. Cardinal Morton's Register. Tudor Studies Presented... to Albert Frederick Pollard. Ed. R. W. Seton-Watson. London: Longmans Green & Co., 1924. 26–74.
Schoeck, R. J. More, the Devil, and Cardinal Morton: A Note on 16th-Century Name Devices.  See More, Miscellaneous Background: On More's Name, Coat of Arms, etc.
Davis, J. C. More, Morton, and the Politics of Accommodation.  See Utopia: Book One, Europe, the 'Dialogue of Counsel,' and Reform.
Harper-Bill. Christopher. Archbishop John Morton and the Province of Canterbury, 1486–1500. Journal of Eccesiastical History 29 (1978): 1–21.
Harper-Bill. Christopher. The Familia, Administrators and Patronage of Archbishop Morton. Journal of Religious History 10 (1978/79): 236–52.
Schoeck, R. J. John Morton (c1420–15 September 1500). Contemporaries of Erasmus: A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation. Ed. P. G. Bietenholz, and T. B. Beutscher. 3 vols. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 1985–87. Vol. 2: 465.
Davies, C. S. L. Bishop John Morton, the Holy See, and the Accession of Henry VII. English Historical Review 102 (1987): 2–31.
The register of John Morton, Archbishop of Canterbury, 1486–1500. Edited by Christopher Harper-Bill. Canterbury and York Society, 75, 78, 89. 3 vols. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell & Brewer, 1987, 1991, 2000.
For Pace's continental publications see Shaaber P1–P7 and USTC; And include his translation of Fisher's Sermon against Luther. See also STC.
R. Pace. Plutarchi Cheronaei opuscula: De garrulitate. De avaritia. Quomodo poterit quis ab inimicius aliquid commodi reportare. De modo audiendi. Ex Luciano: Demonactis philosophi vita. Per R. Paceum … versa (1522).
Pace, Richard. De fructu qui ex doctrina percipitur: The Benefit of a Liberal Education. Ed. and trans. Frank Manley and Richard S. Sylvester. Renaissance Society of America, Renaissance Texts Series 2. New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing Co. for the Renaissance Society of America, 1967.
C. Carside, Jr., Moreana 18 (1968): 91–92.
J. B. Trapp, Renaissance Quarterly 21 (1968): 453–55.
(L). Fisher, John. Contio quam anglice habuit . . .  [Translated into Latin by Richard Pace, with a Preface by Nicholas Wilson.] See Fisher: English Sermon Against Luther ( May 1521 ).
For brief bios, see Allen #211*** CWE n. to #211/53, p.141–42; Rogers intro. to #89, p.240.
Wegg, Jarvis. Richard Pace: A Tudor Diplomatist. London: Methuen, 1932.
TLS 5 Jan. 1933: 4.
Frank, and Richard S. Sylvester. Introduction. Richard Pace: De fructu qui ex doctrina percipitur: The Benefit of a Liberal Education. Ed. and trans. Frank Manley and Richard S. Sylvester. Renaissance Society of America, Renaissance Texts Series 2. New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing Co. for the Renaissance Society of America, 1967.	ix–xxvi.
Lehmberg, Stanford E. Richard Pace d. 28 June 1536. Contemporaries of Erasmus: A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation. Ed. P. G. Bietenholz and T. B. Deutscher. 3 vols. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 1985–87. 3: 37–39.
Curtis, Cathy. Richard Pace on pedagogy, counsel and satire. PhD diss., University of Cambridge, 1996.
Curtis, Cathy. Richard Pace's De Fructu and Early Tudor Pegagogy. Reassessing Tudor Humanism. Ed. Jonathan Woolfson. Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave MacMillan, 2002. 43–77.
Crittall, Elizabeth. John Palsgrave of London, died c 12 September 1554. Contemporaries of Erasmus: A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation. Ed. P. G. Bietenholz and T. B. Deutscher. 3 vols. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 1985–87. 3: 46–47.
Three works listed in ESTC; Armstrong also lists some MSS. See also CW 1:10/23–28, nn. on pp.193–94.
Henry Patenson, Thomas More's fool, appears in the Holbein More Family Portrait, is mentioned in More's Confutation ( CW 8/2: 900/12–901/5 and n. in 8/3:1689), and is referred to by later authors, including Stapleton and Ellis Heywood.
Nichols, John Gough. Henry Patenson. Notes and Queries 3rd ser. 11 (1867): 134.
Hall, Noeline. Henry Patenson—Sir Thomas More's Fool.  See More's Family, Friends and Descendents: 16th Century.
Pierce, Hazel. Margaret Pole, Countess of Salisbury, 1473–1541: Loyalty, Lineage and Leadership. Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2003.
For cultural depictions of Margaret Pole, see Wikipedia.
For editions and biographies, see Shaaber P179–P211, USTC, ARCR I:911–924, II:650, CE, ODNB, and ESTC.
Dwyer, J. G., trans. Reginald Pole: Defence of the Unity of the Church. Westminster, MD: Newman Press, 1965.
G. Marc'hadour, Moreana 14 (1967): 99–102.
Egretier, N.-M., trans. Reginald Pole: Defense de l'Unité de l'Église. De Pétrarque à Descartes 12. Paris: J. Vrin, 1967.
(Diss.) G. Marc'hadour, Moreana 1 (1963): 82.
E. V. Telle, Renaissance Quarterly 21 (1968): 353–55.
Pagano, S. M., and C. Ranieri, ed. Nuovi documenti su Vittoria Colonna e Reginald Pole. Collectanea Archivi Vaticani 24. Vatican City: Archivo Vaticano, 1989.
E. G. Gleason, Catholic Historical Review 76 (1990): 851–52.
Meyer, Thomas F. ed. The Correspondence of Reginald Pole. St. Andrews Studies in Reformation History 4 vols. ***: Aldershot: 2002–2008.
Gibaud, Henri and Marthe Ravaze. Reginald Pole: Le silence de Thomas More.  See More's Trial: Cardinal Pole.
See also More's Trial: Cardinal Pole. double check Cardinal Pole in ***Morebib2***.
Stewart, A. M. Life of Cardinal Pole. London: Burns & Oates, 1882.
Child, H. Reginald Pole, 1500–1558. The Great Tudors. Ed. K. Garvin. New York: E. P. Dutton & Co., 1935. 239–50. Rpt in abr. ed. London: Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1956, 1961. 151–62.
Messenger, E. C. Cardinal Pole, A.D. 1500–1558. Great Catholics. Ed. C. Williamson. London: Nicholson and Watson, 1938. 172–86.
Schenk, Wilhelm Reginald Pole: Cardinal of England. London; New York: Longmans, Green & Co., 1950.
Williamson, H. R. His Eminence of England: A Play in Two Acts. London: W. Heinemann, 1953.
Fenlon, Dermot. Heresy and Obedience in Tridentine Italy: Cardinal Pole and the Counter-Reformation. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1973.
J. K. McConica, Renaissance Quarterly 27 (1974): 62–64.
P. F. Macaluso, Moreana 42 (1974): 81–82.
A. Santasuosso, Renaissance and Reformation os 10 (1974): 139–40.
Simoncelli, P. Il caso Reginald Pole. Eresia e santità nelle polemiche religiose del cinquecento. Rome: Edizioni di Storia e Letteratura, 1977.
Meyer, Thomas F. Reginald Pole, Prince and Prophet. Cambridge: CUP, 1990. Rpt? 2000. Google preview available at Online.
Mayer, Thomas F. Cardinal Pole in European Context: A Via Media in the Reformation. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2000.
John Edwards. Archbishop Pole. The Archbishops of Canterbury Series. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2014.
Dyke, P. van. Reginald Pole and Thomas Cromwell: An Examination of the Apologia ad Carolum Quintum. American Historical Review 9:4 (1904): 696–724. Rpt. as Appendix in Renascence Portraits. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1905. 377–418.
Routledge, F. J. Six Letters of Cardinal Pole to the Countess of Huntingdon. English Historical Review 28 (1913): 527–31.
Dyke, P. van. The Mission of Cardinal Pole to Enforce the Bull of Deposition against Henry VIII. English Historical Review 37 (1922): 422–23.
Penlock, L. Cardinal Pole and His Friends at Padua. Dublin Review 173: 347 (1923): 210–20.
Wainwright, J. B. Cardinal Pole's Library. Notes and Queries 151 (1926): 209, 247 + 153 (1927): 189.
TLS 7 Apr. 1927: 242.
Schütt, M. Reginald Poles Vita Longolii. Die englische Biographik de Tudor-Zeit. Hamburg: Friederichsen, de Gruyter & Co., 1930. 53–54.
Garrett, C. H. The Legatine Register of Cardinal Pole, 1554–57. Journal of Modern History 13 (1941): 189–94.
Schenk, W. The Student Days of Cardinal Pole. History 33 (1948): 211–25.
Crehan, J. H. The Return to Obedience: New Judgement on Cardinal Pole. Month ns 14 (1955): 221–29.
Trevor-Roper, H. The Crisis of English Humanism: Reginald Pole and His Circle. Men and Events: Historical Essays. New York: Harper and Row, 1957. Rpt. New York: Octagon Books, 1976. 79–84.
Fry, E. J. B. Monsignor of England : Cardinal Pole Before His Final Return to England. Dublin Review 232 (1958): 236–45.
Parks, G. B. The Parma Letters and the Dangers to Cardinal Pole. Catholic Historical Review 46 (October 1960): 299–317.
Idigoras, J. I. Tellechea, Pole y Paulo IV: Una celebre Apologia inedita del Cardenal Ingles (1557). Archivum Historia Pontificiae 4 (1966): 105–54.
Jedin, H. Kardinal Pole und Vittoria Colonna. In Kirche des Glaubens, Kirche der Geschichte [Freiburg: 1966], 1: 181–94.
Anderson, M. W. Trent and Justification (1546): A Protestant Reflection. Scottish Journal Of Theology 21 (1968): 385–406.
Blond, Georges. Le Cardinal Reginald Pole et l'unité de l'église. Moreana 17 (1968): 33–46.
Steinmetz, D. C. Reginald Pole (1500–1558): The Loss of Eden. Reformers in the Wings. Philadelphia: Fortress P, 1971. 53–65.
Bühler, C. F. Observations on the 1562 Editions of Cardinal Reginald Pole's De concilio and Reformatio Angliae. University of Virginia Studies in Bibliography 26 (1973): 232–34.
Parks, G. B. Did Pole Write the Vita Longolii ? Renaissance Quarterly 26 (1973): 274–85.
Pogson, R. H. Revival and Reform in Mary Tudor's Church: A Question of Money. Journal of Ecclesiastical History 25 (1974): 249–66. Rpt. in The English Reformation Revised. Ed. C. Haigh. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1987. 139–56.
Marmion, J. P. Cardinal Pole in Recent Studies. Recusant History 13 (1975/76): 56–61.
Pogson, R. H. Reginald Pole and the Priorities of Government in Mary Tudor's Church. Historical Journal 18 (1975): 3–20.
Dunn, T. F. The Development of the Text of Pole's De Unitate Ecclesiae. Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 70 (1976): 455–68.
Parks, G. B. Italian Tributes to Cardinal Pole. Studies in the Continental Background of Renaissance English Literature: Essays Presented to John L. Lievsay. Ed. D. B. J. Randall and G. W. Williams. Durham, NC: Duke UP, 1977. 43–66.
Loades, D. M. The Restoration of the Old Religion, The Religious Reaction: Pole as Legate, and The English Church under Papal Disfavour. The Reign of Mary Tudor: Politics, Government, and Religion in England, 1553–1558. London: Ernest Benn, 1979. 148–82, 321–64, 428–57.
Pastore, A. Due biblioteche umanistiche del Cinquecento: I libri del Cardinal Pole e di Marcantonio Flaminio. Rinascimento 2nd ser. 19 (1979): 269–90.
Donaldson, P. S. Machiavelli, Antichrist, and the Reformation: Prophetic Typology in Reginald Pole's De Unitate and Apologia ad Carolum Quintum. Leaders of the Reformation. Ed. R. L. DeMolen. Cranbury, NJ: Associated University Presses; Selinsgrove: Susquehanna UP, 1984. 211–46. Rev. vers. rpt. as Machiavelli and Antichrist: Prophetic Typology in Reginald Pole's De Unitate and Apologia ad Carolum Quintum. in Machiavelli and Mystery of State. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1988. 1–35.
Thomas F. Mayer, Sixteenth Century Journal 21 (1990):108–09.
Herman, J. S. von, Eine ökumenische Auslegung von Apg 15 in der Reformationszeit: Reginald Poles De concilio. Theologie und Philosophie 60 (1985): 16–42.
Mayer, Thomas F. Reginald Pole in Paolo Giovio's Descriptio: A Strategy for Reconversion. Sixteenth Century Journal 16:4 (1985): 431–50.
Mayer, Thomas F. A Diet for Henry VIII: The Failure of Reginald Pole's 1537 Legation. Journal of British Studies 26:3 (1987): 305–31.
Mayer, Thomas F. A Mission Worse Than Death: Reginald Pole and the Paris Theologians. English Historical Review 103 (1988): 870–91.
Egretier, Noëlle-Marie. Signification historique et valeur littéraire du De unitate de Reginald Pole. Acta Conventus Neo-Latini Torontonensis. Proceedings of the Seventh International Congress of Neo-Latin Studies: Toronto, 8 August to 13 August 1988. Ed. Alexander Dalzell, Charles Fantazzi, Richard J. Schoeck. Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies 86. Binghamton, NY: Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies, 1991. 301–305.
Mayer, Thomas F. Heretics be not in all things heretics : Cardinal Pole, His Circle, and the Potential for Toleration. Beyond the Persecuting Society: Religious Toleration Before the Enlightenment. Ed. by John Christian Laursen and Cary J. Nederman. Philadelphia: U of Pennsylvania P, 1998. 107–124.
Meyer, Thomas F. Becket's Bones Burnt! Cardinal Pole and the Invention and Dissemination of an Atrocity. Martyrs and Martyrdom in England, c.1400–1700. Ed. Thomas S. Freeman and Thomas Fredrick Meyer. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell & Brewer, 2007. 126–143.
Duffy, Eamon. Archbishop Cranmer and Cardinal Pole: the See of Canterbury and the Reformation. Saints, Sacrilege, Sedition: Religion and Conflict in the Tudor Reformations. London: Bloomsbury, 2012. 179–194, 282–85.
Overell, M. Anne, and James M. W. Willoughby. Books from the Circle of Cardinal Pole: The Italian Library of Michael Throckmorton. Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 75 (2012): 111–140.
For Thomas Starkey's A Dialogue between Cardinal Pole and Thomas Lupset , see Thomas Starkey. For Pole's account of More's (and Fisher's) death, see More's Imprisonment and Trial: Cardinal Pole.
Useful bibliography under Wikipedia entry; see also Moreana 176 (2009) article.
Lathrop, H. B. The First English Printers and their Patrons. Library 4th ser. 3 (1922): 69–96.
Plomer, Henry Robert. Richard Pynson: Glover and Printer. Library 4th ser. 3 (1923): 49–51.
Plomer, Henry Robert. [Chapter on Richard Pynson]. Wynkyn de Worde and his Contemporaries from the Death of Caxton to 1535: A Chapter in English Printing. London: Grafton and Co., 1925. ***–***. Rpt. [Folkestone, Eng.] Dawson .
Johnston, Stanley Howard. A Study of the Career and Literary Publications of Richard Pynson. Ph.D. Diss. University of Western Ontario, 1977.
Schoeck, Richard. Richard Pynson, died c January 1530 . Contemporaries of Erasmus: A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation. Ed. Peter G. Bietenholz and Thomas B. Deutscher. 3 vols. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 1985 – 87 . 3: 124–25.
Neville, Pamela. Richard Pynson, King's Printer (1506–1529): Printing and Propaganda in Early Tudor England. Ph.D. Diss. University of London, 1990.
Axton, Richard, ed. John Rastell: Three Rastall Plays: Four Elements, Calisto and Melebea, Gentleness and Nobility. Cambridge: D. S. Brewer; Totowa, NJ: Rowman and Littlefield, 1979.
Geritz, Albert J., ed. The Pastyme of People and A New Boke of Purgatory. By John Rastell. New York: Garland, 1985.
G. Marc'hadour, Moreana 109 (1992): 67–73.
Reed, Arthur William.	 John Rastell, Printer, Lawyer, Venturer, Dramatist, and Controversialist. Early Tudor Drama: Medwall, the Rastells, Heywood, and the More Circle. London: Methuen, 1926; rpt. New York: Octagon Books, 1969. 1–28.
Borish, M. E. Source and Intention of The Four Elements. Studies in Philology 35 (1938): 149–63.
Parks, George B. The Geography of the Interlude of the Four Elements. Philological Quarterly 17 (1938): 251–62.
Nugent, Elizabeth M. Sources of John Rastell's The Nature of the Four Elements. Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 57 (1942): 74–88.
Parks, George B. Rastell and Waldseemuller's Map. Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 58 (1943):572–74.
Parr, Johnstone. More Sources of Rastell's Interlude of the Four Elements. Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 60 (1945): 48–58.
Parr, Johnstone. John Rastell's Geographical Knowledge of America. Philological Quarterly 27 (1948): 229–40.
Geritz, Albert J. Recent Studies in John Rastell. English Literary Renaissance 8 (1978): 341–50.
Roberts, R. J. John Rastell's Inventory of 1538. The Library 6th ser. 1 (1979): 34–42.
P. D. Green, Moreana 83/84 (1984): 73–76.
Laine, Amos Lee. John Rastell and the Norman Conquest: Tudor Theories about the Feudal Age. The Rusted Hauberk: Feudal Ideas of Order and Their Decline. Ed. Liam O. Purdon and Cindy L. Vitto. Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida, 1994. 299–317.
Geritz, Albert J. John Rastell and the Printing Press. Europa: Wiege des Humanismus und der Reformation. 5 Internationales Symposion der Amici Thomas Mori 20. bis 27. Mai 1995 in Mainz. Dokumentation. Ed. Hermann Boventer and Uwe Baumann. Frankfurt: Peter Lang, 1997. 245–52.
[William Rastell?] The prynter to the gentle reader, [London, April 1557]. The Workes of Sir Thomas More Knyght . . . [Rastell's Preface to Mary Basset's translation of De Tristitia .] See Calendar of More's Letters.
(E). Dedicatory Letter of William Rastell to Queen Mary, [London, April 1557]. The Workes of Sir Thomas More Knyght . . . See Calendar of More's Letters.
Reed, Arthur William. The Printer of Heywood's Plays: William Rastell. Early Tudor Drama: Medwall, the Rastells, Heywood, and the More Circle. London: Methuen, 1926; rpt. New York: Octagon Books, 1969. 72–93.
See also Thomas More: William Rastell's 1557 Edition and Other Early Editions and John Fisher: The Rastell Fragments.
Tatton-Brown, T. The Roper chantry in St. Dunstan's Church, Canterbury. Antiquaries Journal 60 (1980): 227–46.
Schoeck, R. J. William Roper (c.1496–4 January 1578). Contemporaries of Erasmus: A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation. Ed. P. G. Bietenholz, and T. B. Beutscher. 3 vols. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 1985–87. Vol. 3: 170–71.
Reynolds, E. E. New Catholic Encyclopedia New York: Gale Publishing, Thomson: 1966–79. 12: 665–66.
Trevor-Roper, Hugh. Roper, William (1495/8–1578). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography [May 2005] (http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/24074).
Baker, J. H. Roper, John (d. 1524). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography [Jan 2008] (http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/69370).
See also Thomas More Biographers: William Roper, and Margaret Roper.
Ellis, Sir Henry, ed. Original Letters Illustrative of English History. Third Series. 2 vols. London: Richard Bentley, 1846. 1: nos. 40–46 (pp. 101–115).
Gairdner, James, ed. Letters and Papers Illustrative of the Reigns of Richard III and Henry VII. 2 vols. Rolls Series. London: Longman, Green, Longman, and Roberts, 1: 1861, 2: 1863.
Wilson, J. Dover. A Note on Richard III: The Bishop of Ely's Strawberries. Modern Lanquage Review 52 (1957): 563–64. Rpt. in To Prove a Villain: The Case of King Richard III. Ed. by Taylor Littleton and Robert R. Rea. New York: MacMillan Co., 1964. 124–25.
Lamb, Vivien B. The Betrayal of Richard III: An Introduction to the Controversy. London: Coram, 1959. Rev. ed. with intro by P. W. Hammond Gloucester: Sutton Publishing, 1997.
Levine, M. Richard III—Usurper or Lawful King? Speculum 34 (1959): 391–401.
Ross, L. J. The Meaning of Strawberries in Shakespeare. Studies in the Renaissance 7 (1960): 225–40.
Kelly, H. A. Canonical Implications of Richard III's Plan to Marry his Niece. Traditio 23 (1967): 269–311.
Myers, Alexander Reginald. Richard III and Historical Tradition. History 53 (1968): 181–202. Rpt. The Historical Association Book of the Tudors Ed. Joel Hurstfield. London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 1973. 14–44. Rpt. Crown, Household and Parliament in Fifteenth Century England. Ed. by Cecil H. Clough, intro. by R. B. Dobson. History Series 46. London: Hambledon P, 1985. 349–370.
Tudor-Craig, Pamela. Richard III, A Descriptive Catalogue of the Exhibition held at the National Portrait Gallery, 27 June–27 October 1973. London, UK: National Portrait Gallery, 1973.
Wood, C. T. The Deposition of Edward V. Traditio 31 (1975): 247–86.
J. M. W. Bean, Renaissance Quarterly 38 (1985): 710–12.
Bennett, M. The Battle of Bosworth. Gloucester: Alan Sutton, c1985.
Horrox, Rosemary. Richard III: A Study in Service. Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought, Fourth Series 11. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1989.
Hicks, Michael. Richard III: The Man Behind the Myth. London: Collins & Brown, 2001.
Hicks, Michael. Richard III. English Monarchs. Stroud: Tempus Books, 2001.
Hicks, Michael. The Family of Richard III. Stroud: Amberley Publishing, 2015.
Add more recent bibliography. Add ODNB.
This section needs to be readited.
Buck, George (see Sullivan 1:137–138).
Buck, George, Sir. The History of King Richard the Third (1619). Ed. Arthur Noel Kincaid. Gloucester: Alan Sutton, 1979. Rev. ed. 1982.
Alison Hanham, Moreana 70 (1981): 73–76.
Cornwallis, William, Sir. The Encomium of Richard III. Ed. Arthur Noel Kincaid. Intro. J. A. Ramsden and Arthur Noel Kincaid. London: Turner & Devereux, 1977.
Ives, E. W. Andrew Dimnock and the Papers of Antony Earl Rivers, 1482–83. Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research 41 (1968): 216–29.
Rous, John. This rol was laburd & finished by Master John Rows of Warrewyk . Intro. by William Courthope. London: W. Pickering, 1845, 1859. 1845 edition online as https://archive.org/details/thisrolwaslaburd00rousrich Rpt. as The Rous Roll. With historical intro. by Charles D. Ross. Gloucester, UK: Sutton, 1980.
Russell, A. G. B. The Rous Roll. Burlington Magazine 30 (1917): 23–31.
Wright, C. E. The Rous Roll: The English Version. British Museum Quarterly 20:3 (1956): 77–81 + 2 plates after p.96.
Gransden, A. The Antiquaries: John Rous and William Worcester. Historical Writing in England ii, c. 1307 to the Early Sixteenth Century. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1982. 308–41.
Lowry, M. John Rous and the Survival of the Neville Circle. Viator 19 (1988): 327–38.
Both Thomas More (Rogers #5, cf. also #89) and Erasmus (EE 192, 325) dedicated works to Ruthall. For a brief biography, see introduction to Allen 1:#192, p.423; introduction to Rogers #5, p.10 and CW 3/1, p.138.
Letter of Thomas More to Thomas Ruthall, [London, 1506]. See Thomas More Calendar: Thomas More to Thomas Ruthall.
Crittall, Elizabeth. Thomas Ruthall, of Cirencester. Contemporaries of Erasmus: A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation. Ed. P. G. Bietenholz and T. B. Deutscher. 3 vols. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 1985–87. 3: 179–80.
Johnson, Margot. Ruthall, Thomas (d. 1523), Bishop of Durham. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography  (http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/24359).
Weiss, Roberto. John Shirwood and Prior Sellyng. Humanism in England During the Fifteenth Century. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 3rd ed. 1967. 149–59, 198–99.
Bennett, J. P. John Morer's Will: Thomas Linacre and Prior Sellyng's Greek Teaching.  See Thomas Linacre.
Clough, Cecil H. Selling , William (c.1430–1494). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography  (http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/4991).
Pratt, S. M. Jane Shore and the Elizabethans: Some Facts and Speculations. Texas Studies in Language and Literature 11 (1970): 1293–1306.
Barker, Nicolas, and Sir Robert Birley. The Story of Jane Shore. Etoniana nos. 125/126 (June 4 and Dec. 2, 1972): 383–414. Comprised of two articles?: (a)	N. Barker, The Real Jane Shore , 125:383–91 + 126:410–414; (b) R. Birley, Jane Shore in Literature , 125:391–97 + 126:399–407.
Brown, Barbara. Sir Thomas More and Thomas Churchyard's Shore's Wife.  See Richard III: Shore's Wife and Later Influence.
Harner, James L. The Wofull Lamentation of Mistris Jane Shore : The Popularity of an Elizabethan Ballad. Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 71 (1977): 137–49.
Harner, James L. Jane Shore in Literature: A Checklist. Notes and Queries ns 28 (1981): 496–507.
Brown, Richard Danson. A Talkative Wench (Whose Words a World Hath Delighted In) : Mistress Shore and Elizabethan Complaint. Review of English Studies 49:196 (1998): 395–415.
Scott, Maria M. Re-Presenting Jane Shore: Harlot and Heroine. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate, 2005.
For popular treatments of Mistress Shore in poetry, drama, television, film, and fiction, see Wikipedia entry for Jane Shore.
This is not meant to be a complete bibliography of Skelton, but only deals with his neo-latin poetry and his relationships to English Humanism and Thomas More.
Carlson, David R., ed. The Latin Writings of John Skelton. Studies in Philology Texts and Studies Series. Studies in Philology 88:4 (1991): 1–125.
Harris, William O. Wolsey and Skelton's Magnyfycence : A Re-evaluation. Studies in Philology 57 (1960): 99–122.
Pollet, Maurice. John Skelton: Poet of Tudor England Trans. John Warrington. London: J.M. Dent and Sons; Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell UP, 1971.
Marc'hadour, Germain. Croisade triomphale de l'Angleterre.  See More: Latin Epigrams.
Kozikowski, Stanley J. Lydgate, Machiavelli, More and Skelton's Bowge of Courte.  See More: Latin Epigrams.
McLane, Paul E. Prince Lucifer and the Fitful Lanternes of Lyght : Wolsey and the Bishops in Skelton's Colyn Cloute . Huntington Library Quarterly 43 (1980): 159–49.
M. V. C. Alexander, Albion 21 (1989): 295–97.
A. Fox, Catholic Historical Review 75 (1989): 701–03.
S. J. Gunn, Journal of Ecclesiastical History 40 (1989): 427–28.
W. T. Walker, Sixteenth Century Journal 21 (1990): 142.
Scattergood, John. Skelton and Heresy.  See More: Dialogue Concerning Heresies.
Walker, Greg. John Skelton, Thomas More, and the Lost History of the Early Reformation in England. [1991/1996] See More: Dialogue Concerning Heresies.
Lüsse, Beate. Panegyric Poetry on the Coronation of Henry VIII: The King's Praise and the Poet's Self-Presentation.  See More: Latin Epigrams.
Reed, Arthur William. The Twelve Merry Jests of the Widow Edyth and the Household of More. Early Tudor Drama: Medwall, the Rastells, Heywood, and the More Circle. London: Methuen, 1926; rpt. New York: Octagon Books, 1969. 149–59.
Routh, E. M. G. Sir Thomas More and His Friends, 1477–1535. London: Oxford UP, 1934. Rpt. New York: Russell & Russell, 1963. 144–45.
Devereux, E. J. A Bibliography of John Rastell. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press, 1999. #20, pp.119–20.
Munro, Ian, and Anne Lake Prescott. Jest Books. The Oxford Handbook of English Prose 1500–1640. Edited by Andrew Hadfield. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2013. 343–359, esp. 348–52.
Baker, J. H., ed. The Reports of Sir John Spelman. 2 vols. London: Seldon Society, 1977–78.
Reynolds, E. E. One of Thomas More's Judges.  See Thomas More's Imprisonment and Trial: Spelman's Report.
Not in ONDB , or NDB , see Rogers #10, intro. on p.17. Tommaso di Guasparre Spinelli, a naturalized English subject, from Florence served under Henry VII and VIII as English Ambassadaor to the Court of Flanders. He was appointed resident ambassador of Spain in 1517, where he died in Valladolid in 1522. See LP and CSP Venice .
Behrens, Betty. The Office of the English Resident Ambassador: Its Evolution as Illustrated by the Career of Sir Thomas Spinelly, 1509–22. , Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 4th ser., xvi (1933): 161–95.
Philip Jacks, and William Caferro. The Spinelli of Florence: Fortunes of a Renaissance Merchant Family. Philadelphia: Penn State UP, 2001.
See also Domnina, Ekaterina Gennadevna, A Diplomat's Legacy: Tommaso Spinelli’s Self-Representation in His Testament (1522). http://istina.msu.ru/conferences/presentations/19786177/ and http://www.premoderndiplomats.org/uploads/1/2/8/0/12803247/sev_programme.pdf.
ESTC lists 177 editions of Stanbridge's grammatical works.
Stanbridge, John. The Vulgaria of John Stanbridge and the Vulgaria of Robert Whittinton. Ed. Beatrice White. Early English Text Society 187. London: Oxford UP, 1932. ***–***.
F. W. Conrad, Sixteenth Century Journal 21 (1990): 143–44.
S. J. Gunn, Journal of British Studies 30 (1991): 216–21.
S. Lockwood, Journal of Ecclesiastical History 41 (1990): 687–88.
Baumer, F. Le Van, Thomas Starkey and Marsilius of Padua. Politica 2 (1936): 14–27.
Zeeveld, W. G. Thomas Starkey and the Cromwellian Polity. Journal of Modern History 15 (1943): 177–91.
White, H. C. The Utopia and Commonwealth Tradition.  See Utopia: Social and Political Philosophy.
Lehmberg, Stanford E. English Humanists, the Reformation, and the Problem of Counsel.  See Utopia: Utopia Book One, Europe, the Dialogue of Counsel, and Reform.
Elton, G. R. Reform by Statute: Thomas Starkey's Dialogue and Thomas Cromwell's Policy. Proceedings of the British Academy 54 (1968): 165–88. Rpt. in Studies in Tudor and Stuart Politics and Government. 4 vols. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, Vols. 1–2: 1974; Vol. 3: 1983; Vol. 4: 1992.	2: 236–58.
McLean, Andrew M. Political Commitment — Pole and Starkey. Humanism and the Rise of Science in England. London: Heinemann, 1972. 63–69.
McLean, Andrew M. A Note on Thomas More and Thomas Starkey.  See Utopian Communism, Justice, Law, Property and Prosperity.
Mayer, Thomas F. Starkey and Melanchthon on Adiaphora: A Critique of W. Gordon Zeeveld. Sixteenth Century Journal 11:1 (1980): 39–50.
Mayer, Thomas F. Faction and Ideology: Thomas Starkey's Dialogue. Historical Journal 28 (1985): 1–25.
Mayer, T. F. Thomas Starkey's Aristocratic Reform Programme. History of Political Thought 7 (1986): 439–61.
Mayer, Thomas F. Thomas Starkey, An Unknown Conciliarist at the Court of Henry VIII. Journal of the History of Ideas 49 (1988): 207–27.
Mayer, Thomas F. Thomas Starkey and the Commonweal: Humanist Politics in the Reign of Henry VIII. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1989.
F. W. Conrad, Sixteenth Century Journal 21 (1990): 143 & 333–34.
G. R. Elton, Historical Journal 33 (1990): 243–46.
D. Hoak, Renaissance Quarterly 43 (1990): 863–65.
Dunning, Robert W. The Muniments of Syon Abbey: Their Administration and Migration. Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research 37 (1964): 1–11.
Tait, M. B. The Brigittine monastery of Syon	(Middlesex) with special reference to its monastic usages. DPhil diss., University of Oxford, 1975.
Rhodes, J. T. Syon Abbey and its religious publications in the sixteenth century. Journal of Ecclesiastical History 44 (1993): 11–25.
Jones, Edward Alexander, and Alexandra Walsham, eds. Syon Abbey and Its Books: Reading, Writing and Religion, C.1400–1700. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell & Brewer, 2010.
Da Costa, Alexandra. The King's Great Matter: Writing under Censure at Syon Abbey 1532–1534. Review of English Studies 62:253 (Feb. 2011): 15–29.
Check Shaaber T150 to T164, USTC, EEBO/TCP and DTC, ODNB, CE and ESTC.
Check Shaaber T155 to T159 for more continental editions.
Hinde, Gladys, ed. The Registers of Cuthbert Tunstall, Bishop of Durham, 1530–59, and James Pilkington, Bishop of Durham, 1561–76. Edited and calendared by Gladys Hinde. Publications of the Surtees Society, 161.	Durham: Andrews & Co.; London: Bernard Quaritch, 1952.
Tunstall, Cuthbert. Licence for Sir Thomas More to keep and read heretical books, 7 March 1528. See More's Correspondence: Individual Letters.
Tunstall, Cuthbert. Certain Godly and Devout Prayers. Made in Latin by ... Cuthbert Tunstall ... and translated into English by Thomas Paynell, etc. Lat. & Eng. Orchard Books. Extra series. no. 1. London: Burns, Oates & Co.: London, 1925. xvi. 51p.
Ross-Lewin, G.H. Cuthbert Tunstall. Typical English Churchmen, Series 2. From Wyclif to Gardiner. Edited by John Neville Figgis. The Church Historical Society, 78. London: Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge, 1909. 135–66. Online at https://archive.org/details/typicalenglishch00londrich.
Gee, John Archer. The Second Edition of the Utopia, Paris, 1517.  See Utopia: Locations of Early Editions.
Quinn, Edward. Bishop Tunstall's Treatise on the Holy Eucharist. Downside Review 51 (1933): 674–89.
Sturge, Charles. Cuthbert Tunstall: Churchman, Scholar, Stateman, Administrator. London: Longmans, Green and Co., 1938.
TLS 17 Dec. 1938: 796.
Brooks, P. Notes on Rare Books.  See Utopia: Locations of Early Editions.
Rogers, E. F. Margaret of Austria's Gifts to Tunstal, More and Hacket After the Ladies' Peace.  See More: Thomas More's Travels.
Forster, A. Bishop Tunstall's Priests. Recusant History 9 (1967/68): 175–202.
Loades, D. M. The Last Years of Cuthbert Tunstall, 1547–1559. Durham University Journal ns 35 (1973/74): 10–21. Also The Last Years of Cuthbert Tunstall (1547–1559). (Durham Cathedral Lecture). Durham: Dean and Chapter of Durham, 1973. 14p.
Thomas, M. Tunstal: Trimmer or Martyr? Journal of Ecclesiastical History 24 (1973): 337–55.
Woods, Robert Lawrence Jr. Politics and Precedent: Wolsey's Parliament of 1523.  See Thomas More's Political Career and Thought.
Redworth, Glyn. A Study in the Formulation of Policy: The Genesis and Evolution of the Act of the Six Articles. Journal of Ecclesiastical History 37 (1986): 42–67.
McConica, James. Cuthbert Tunstall (1474–18 November 1559). Contemporaries of Erasmus: A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation. Ed. P. G. Bietenholz and T. B. Deutscher. 3 vols. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 1985–87. 3: 349–54.
Moreau, J.-P. Politique et theologie chez les catholiques schismatiques anglais (1534–1553).  See Stephen Gardiner.
Johnson, C. Latin prayers of Cuthbert Tunstall, Renaissance man, friend of More and Erasmus, last Catholic bishop of Durham (1474–1530–1559). In unum congregati: Festgabe für Augustinus Cardinal Mayer, OSB, zur Vollendung des 80. Lebensjahres. Edited by Stephan Haering. Metten: Abtei-Verlag Metten, 1991. 177–200.
Walker, Greg. Heretical sects in pre-reformation England. History Today 43:5 (May 1993: 42–48.
O'Connell, M.R. Tunstall, Cuthbert. New Catholic Encyclopedia. Detroit: Gale, 2nd ed. 2003. Vol. 14:237.
Mason, John. Bartering problems in arithmetic books 1450–;1890. BSHM Bulletin: Journal of the British Society for the History of Mathematics 22:3 (2007): 160–181.
Powell, Raymond. The English Church at the Frontier of Early Modern Catholicism. The Medieval History Journal 14:1 (2011): 101–127.
Ferguson, Wallace F. An Unpublished Letter of John Colet, Dean of St. Paul's.  Calendar of Colet's Letters.
McConica, J. K. English Humanists and Reformation Politics. Oxford: Clarendon P, 1965. 70–72, 298.
Gale, F. K. Christopher Urswick, Dean of Windsor, 1448–1522. M.A. Diss. Warburg Institute, University of London, 1974.
Kaufman, Peter Iver. Polydore Vergil and The Strange Disappearance of Christopher Urswick. Sixteenth Century Journal 17:1 (1986): 69–85.
Kaufman, Peter Iver. The Eclipse of the Early Tudor Church: André, Fabyan, and Polydore Vergil. [ 1986 ] See Bernard André.
Trapp, J. B. Christopher Urswick. Contemporaries of Erasmus: A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation. Ed. P. G. Bietenholz and T. B. Deutscher. 3 vols. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 1985–87. 3: 357–60.
Trapp, J. B. Christopher Urswick and His Books: The Reading of Henry VII's Almoner. Renaissance Studies 1 (1987): 48–70. Rpt. in Essays on the Renaissance and the Classical Tradition. London: Variorum Reprints, 1990. XV: 48–70 + Additions and Corrections : 3.
G. Marc'hadour, Moreana 98/99 (1988): 112–13.
This entry needs major revisions.
Check CE, ODNB!, USTC, Shaaber F9–F123, Worldcat; and ESTC?
Ellis, Henry, ed. Polydore Vergil's English History From an Early Translation Preserved Among the MSS. of the Old Royal Library in the British Museum. Vol. I, Containing the First Eight Books, Comprising the Period Prior to the Norman conquest Camden Society, Old Series 36. London: J.G. Nichols and Son, 1846. Rpt. New York: AMS Press, 1968. Facsimile Rpt. Dyfed, Wales: Llanerch Publishers, 1996.
Gasquet, F. A. Some Materials for a New Edition of Polydore Vergil's History. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society ns 16 (1902): 1–17.
Schütt, M. Polydore Vergil. Die englische Biographik de Tudor-Zeit. Hamburg: Friederichsen, de Gruyter & Co., 1930. 47–49.
Hay, Denys. The Manuscript of Polydore Vergil's Anglica Historia. English Historical Review 54 (1939): 240–51.
Koebner, R. The Imperial Crown of this Realm : Henry VIII, Constantine the Great and Polydore Vergil. Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research 26 (1953): 29–52.
Elliot, John R., Jr. Polydore Vergil and the Reputation of King John in the Sixteenth Century. English Language Notes 2 (1964/65): 90–92.
Clough, Cecil H. Federigo Veterani, Polydore Vergil's Anglica Historia and Baldassare Castiglione's Epistola... ad Henricum Angliae regem. English Historical Review 82 (1967): 772–83.
Kelly, H. A. Polydore Vergil. Divine Providence in the England of Shakespeare's Histories. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 1970. 85–108, 325.
Hanham, Alison. Polydore Vergil, the Second Italian. Richard III and His Early Historians. Oxford: Clarendon P, 1975. 128–51.
Cespedes, F. V. The Final Book of Polydore Vergil's Anglica Historia : Persecution and the Art of Writing. Viator 10 (1979): 375–96.
Hanham, Alison. Fact and Fantasy: Thomas More as Historian.  See More. Richard III: Historiography and General Literary Studies.
Gransden, A. The Humanist Historians: Thomas More and Polyore Vergil. See More. Richard III: Historiography and General Literary Studies.
Kaufman, Peter Iver. Polydore Vergil's Fifteenth Century. The Historian 47 (1984/85) 512–23.
Antonovics, A. V. Henry VII, King of England, by the Grace of Charles VIII of France. Kings and Nobles in the Later Middle Ages: A Tribute to Charles Ross. Ed. by Ralph A. Griffiths and James Sherborne. New York: St. Martin's, 1986. 169–184.
Candido, J. Thomas More, The Tudor Chroniclers, and Shakepeare's Altered Richard.  See More's Richard III: Dramatic Structure and Shakespeare.
Dean, P. Tudor Humanism and the Roman Past: A Background to Shakespeare.  See More. Richard III: Historiography and General Literary Studies.
Vergil, Polydore. Beginnings and Discoveries: Polydore Vergil's De Inventoribus Rerum. An Unabridged Translation and Edition with Introduction, Notes and Glossary. Ed. by Beno Weiss and Louis C. Pérez. Bibliotheca Humanistica & Reformatorica 56. Nieuwkoop: De Graaf Publishers, 1997.
Starnes, D. T. Thomas Tyrwitt's Copy of Polydore Vergil's De Inventoribus Rerum. Texas Studies in Language and Literature 7 (1965/66): 255–63.
Copenhaver, B. P. The Historiography of Discovery in the Renaissance: The Sources and Composition of Polydore Vergil's De inventoribus rerum, I–III. Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 41 (1978): 192–214.
Leadam, I. S. Polydore Vergil in the English Law Courts. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society ns 19 (1905): 279–94.
Whitney, E. A., and P. P. Cram. The Will of Polydore Vergil. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 4th ser. 11 (1928): 117–36.
Hay, Denys. The Life of Polydore Vergil of Urbino. Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 12 (1949): 132–51.
Hay, Denys. Polydore Vergil, Renaissance Historian and Man of Letters. Oxford: Clarendon P, 1952.
Alsop, J. D. Polydore Vergil's Final Rewards. Notes and Queries ns 27 (1980): 299–301.
Kaufman, Peter Iver. Polydore Vergil and The Strange Disappearance of Christopher Urswick. [ 1986 ] See Christopher Urswick.
Kaufman, Peter Iver. The Eclipse of the Early Tudor Church: André, Fabyan, and Polydore Vergil. [ 1986 ]	See Bernard André.
Bacchielli, Ronaldo, ed. Polidoro Virgili e la cultura umanistica europea. Urbino: Accademia Raffaello, 2000.
Stelio Cro, Moreana 161 (2005): 121–28.
Ruggeri, Romano. Polidoro Vergili, Erasmo e la Respublica litteraria. Erasmus and the Renaissance Republic of Letters. Proceedings of a Conference to Mark the Centenary of the Publication of the First Volume of Erasmi Epistolae by P.S. Allen, Corpus Christi College, Oxford, 5–7 September 2006. Edited by Stephen Ryle. Forword by Lisa Jardine. Disputatio, 24. Turnhaut, Belgium: Brepols, 2014. 189–201.
G. Hammond, Moreana 115/116 (1993): 121–26.
Gairdner, James. Warham, William. Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900. 50:384.
Allen, P. S. Dean Colet and Archbishop Warham.  See Colet: General Studies.
Scarisbrick, J.J. The Conservative Episcopy in England, 1529–1535. Ph.D. Diss. Cambridge, 1956.
Kelly, Michael J. Canterbury Jurisdiction and Influence during the Episcopate of William Warham, 1503–1532. Ph.D. Diss. Cambridge, 1963.
Kelly, Michael J. The Submission of the Clergy. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 5th ser., 15 (1965): 97–119.
Kitching, Christopher. The Prerogative Court of Canterbury from Warham to Whitgift. Continuity and Change: Personnel and Administration of the Church in England 1500–1642. Edited by Rosemary O'Day and Felicity Heal. Leicester: Leicester UP, 1976. 191–214.
Klein, E. J., ed. The Imitation of Christ. From the First Edition of an English Translation Made c. 1530 by Richard Whitford. New York: Harper & Brothers, Publishers, 1941.
Hogg, J., ed. The Pype or Tonne of the Lyfe of Perfection. By Richard Whitford. Elizabethan and Renaissance Studies 89. Salzburg: Salzburg Studies in English Literature, 1979.
Klein, J. The Life and Works of Richard Whitford. Yale Ph. D. Diss., 1937.
Klein, E. J. Introduction. The Imitation of Christ. From the First Edition of an English Translation Made c. 1530 by Richard Whitford. Ed. E. J. Klein. New York: Harper & Brothers, Publishers, 1941. xi–lx.
Caraman, P. G. An English monastic reformer of the sixteenth century. Clergy Review new ser., 28/1 (July 1947), 1–16.
Peters, W. A. M. Richard Whitford and St. Ignatius' visit to England. Archivum Historiae Societatis Jesu 25 (1956): 328–50.
Williams, G. Two Neglected London-Welsh Clerics: Richard Whitford and Richard Gwent. Transactions of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion (1961): 23–44 [pt 1]. Rpt. in	 Welsh Reformation Essays. Cardiff: University of Wales P, 1967. 67–89.
Paul, J. E. The Humanists: Vives, More and Whytford. Catherine of Aragon and her Friends. London: Burns & Oates, 1966. 62–72, 100–102.
White, Helen Richard Whytford and His Work. Studies in Honor of De Witt T. Starnes. Ed. T. P. Harrison et al. Austin, TX: The University of Texas, 1967. 181–214.
Knighton, C. S. Richard Whitford, died c.1543. Contemporaries of Erasmus: A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation. Ed. P. G. Bietenholz and T. B. Deutscher. 3 vols. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 1985–87. 3: 441–442.
Lawrence, Veronica. Richard Whitford and Translation. The Medieval Translator IV. Edited by Roger Ellis and Ruth Evans. Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies 123. Binghamton, NY: State University of New York, 1994. 136–152.
Alakas, Brandon. A Monastic Reformation of Domestic Space: Richard Whitford's Werke for Housholders . Fifteenth-Century Studies 38 (2013): 1–19.
R. Whitford, A werke of preparacion or of ordinaunce unto comunion or howselyng.
See also Syon Abbey, Margaret Beaufort, and The Imitation of Christ.
For Bibliography, see Carlson below. Check out ESTC.
ESTC lists some 240 items when "Whittington, Robert" is entered.
Bennett, H. S. A Check-List of Robert Whittinton's Grammars. Library 5th ser., 7 (1952): 1–14.
Nixon, H.M. The Gilt Binding of the Whittinton Epigrams, MS Bodley 523. Library 5th ser., 7 (1952): 120–121.
Sylvester, Richard S. The Man For All Seasons Again: Robert Whittington's Verses to Sir Thomas More.  See Thomas More: Poems and Epigrams from the 16th to the 19th Centuries.
Gabel, John Butler. The Year of Robert Whittington's Death. Huntington Library Quarterly 28 ( 1965 ): 77–78.
Carlson, David R. Printed and Manuscript Reduplication of the Same Piece of Writing: Robert Whittinton's Printed Opusculum of 1519 and a Manuscript for Cardinal Wolsey. English Humanist Books: Writers and Patrons, Manuscript and Print, 1475–1525. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 1993. 102–122, 224–231, and Figs. 19–22, between pp.74–75.
For a short bio, see Rogers n. to #200/43, pp.503–504.
(L). Prefatory Letter by Nicholas Wilson to the Christian Reader, Cambridge, Kalend. Ianuarii 1521. [1 January 1522]. See Calendar of Fisher's Letters and Paper.
From John Leland's Epigrammata (1589). John Leland, Epigrammata (printed 1589) , edited by Dana Sutton, online at http://www.philological.bham.ac.uk/lelandpoems/ See CXXXIV on Nicholas Wilson.
For short bios, see Allen #375***; Rogers intro. to #42, pp.92–93. For joint letters to and from More and Wingfield and Henry VIII or Wolsey, see Rogers #42, 49,50, 51, 53, 55; for other references to Wingfield, see Rogers #102/16, p.251; #116/4, p.279; and #132, p.305n13. For Sir Richard's brother Sir Robert, see below.
Knighton, C.S. Sir Richard Wingfield. Contemporaries of Erasmus: A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation. Ed. P. G. Bietenholz and T. B. Deutscher. 3 vols. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 1985–87. 3: 452.
For short bio, see Allen #326A *** and Rogers note to #137/1, p.315. For Sir Robert's brother Sir Richard see above.
See also Salvador Miranda, Thomas Wolsey, The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church ; online at http://www2.fiu.edu/~mirandas/bios1515.htm#Wolsey.
Gairdner, James. Wolsey, Thomas. Dictionary of National Biography, 1885–1900. XXI: 796–814 (62:325–343). Online at https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Wolsey,_Thomas_(DNB00).
Taunton, E. L. Thomas Cardinal Wolsey, Archbishop of York. American Catholic Quarterly Review 25 (1900): 289–329.
Pollard, A.F. Wolsey. London: Longmans, Green, and Company, 1929. Rpt. with and Intro. by Geoffrey Elton. London: Collins, 1965.
Conyers Read, The American Historical Review 35:2 (Jan 1930): 337–339.
Charles W. Ferguson. Naked to Mine Enemies: The Life of Cardinal Wolsey. Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1958.
Harris, William O. Wolsey and Skelton's Magnyfycence : A Re-evaluation.  John Skelton.
Chambers, D. S. Cardinal Wolsey and the Papal Tiara. Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research 38 (1965): 20–30.
Casey, Ralph Brinsley. The Social Policy of Cardinal Wolsey. Ph.D. Diss., Rutgers U, 1973.
Lasher, Charles Frederick. The Historiography of Thomas Wolsey. Ph.D. Diss, Catholic U of America, 1973.
Elton, Geoffrey R. Cardinal Wolsey. Studies in Tudor and Stuart Politics and Government. 4 vols. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, Vols. 1–2: 1974; Vol. 3: 1983; Vol. 4: 1992. 1:109–128.
Woods, Robert Lawrence, Jr. The Amicable Grant: Some Aspects of Wolsey's Rule in England, 1525–1526. Ph.D. diss., U of California-Los Angeles, 1974.
Williams, Neville. The Cardinal and the Secretary: Thomas Wolsey and Thomas Cromwell. London, Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1975; New York: MacMillan, 1976.
Guy, John. Wolsey, the Council and the Council Courts. English Historical Review 91 (1976): 481–505.
Guy, John. The Cardinal's Court: The Impact of Thomas Wolsey in Star Chamber. Hassock, Sussex: The Harvester P, 1977.
Scarisbrick, J. J. Cardinal Wolsey and the Common Weal. Wealth and Power in Tudor England. Ed. E. W. Ives, R. J. Knecht, and J. J. Scarisbrick. London: The Athlone P. 1978. 45–67.
Mullally, E. Wolsey's Proposed Reform of the Oxford University Statutes: A Recently Discovered Text. Bodleian Library Record 10 (1978/82): 22–27.
Gwyn, Peter. Wolsey's Foreign Policy: The Conferences at Calais and Bruges. Historical Journal 23 (1980): 755–72.
McLane, Paul E. Prince Lucifer and the Fitful Lanternes of Lyght : Wolsey and the Bishops in Skelton's Colyn Cloute .  See John Skelton.
Harvey, Nancy Lenz. Thomas Cardinal Wolsey. London: Collier Macmillan, 1981.
Ridley, Jasper G. Statesman and Saint: Cardinal Wolsey, Sir Thomas More, and the Politics of Henry VIII.  See More: Modern Biographies (1964–Present).
Bernard, G. W. Taxation and Rebellion in Tudor England: Henry VIII, Wolsey and the Amicable Grants of 1525. Hassocks, Sussex: Harvester, 1986.
Lehmberg, Stanford E. Thomas Wolsey, d.29 November 1530. Contemporaries of Erasmus: A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation. Ed. P. G. Bietenholz and T. B. Deutscher. 3 vols. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 2: 1985 – 87 . 3: 460–62.
Gwyn, P. The King's Cardinal: The Life and Death of Thomas Wolsey. London: Barrie and Jenkins, 1990. Rpt. London: Pimlico Books, 1992, 2002; ebook 2011.
Richard Rex, Catholic Historical Review 78 (1992): 607–12.
Gunn, S. J., and P. G. Lindley, eds. Cardinal Wolsey: Church, State and Art. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1991.
R. Haynes, Sixteenth Century Journal 23 (1992): 825–27.
Richard Rex, Catholic Historical Review 78 (1992): 612–14.
Wilson, Derek A. In the Lion's Court: Power, Ambition, and Sudden Death in the Reign of Henry VIII.  See More: Modern Biographies (1964–Present).
See also LP Passim, George Cavendish, Henry VIII (Excluding the English Reformation), and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Wolsey for popular fictional treatments of Wolsey.
Include items from Wikipedia and ODNB? Cross-reference to Thomas More's Richard III.
Scofield, C. L. Elizabeth Wydevile in the Sanctuary at Westminster, 1470. English Historical Review 24 (1909): 90–91.
Myers, Alexander Reginald. The Household of Queen Elizabeth Woodville, 1466–67. Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 50 (1967–68): 207–35, 443–81. Rpt. Crown, Household and Parliament in Fifteenth Century England. Ed. by Cecil H. Clough, intro. by R. B. Dobson. History Series 46. London: Hambledon P, 1985. 251–320.
For popular treatments of Elizabeth Woodville in television, film, and fiction, see Wikipedia.
Brilliant, A. N. The Style of Wyatt's The Quyete of Mynde. Essays and Studies ns 24 (1971): 1–21.
Thomson, P. A Note on Wyatt's Prose Style in Quyete of Mynde. Huntington Library Quarterly 25 (1961/62): 147–56.
Thomson, P. Sir Thomas Wyatt: Classical Philosophy and English Humanism. Huntington Library Quarterly 25 (1961/62): 79–96.

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