Elizabeth: November 1567

Calendar of State Papers Foreign: Elizabeth, Volume 8, 1566-1568. Originally published by Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1871.

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'Elizabeth: November 1567', in Calendar of State Papers Foreign: Elizabeth, Volume 8, 1566-1568, ed. Allan James Crosby( London, 1871), British History Online https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/cal-state-papers/foreign/vol8/pp364-368 [accessed 25 November 2024].

'Elizabeth: November 1567', in Calendar of State Papers Foreign: Elizabeth, Volume 8, 1566-1568. Edited by Allan James Crosby( London, 1871), British History Online, accessed November 25, 2024, https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/cal-state-papers/foreign/vol8/pp364-368.

"Elizabeth: November 1567". Calendar of State Papers Foreign: Elizabeth, Volume 8, 1566-1568. Ed. Allan James Crosby(London, 1871), , British History Online. Web. 25 November 2024. https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/cal-state-papers/foreign/vol8/pp364-368.

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November 1567

[Nov.] 1797. Pensioners at Berwick.
List of officers and soldiers, pensioners at Berwick, with the amounts they received [10d. to 2s. per diem], and the dates of their appointments.
Subscribed by Drury. Endd. Pp. 10.
[Nov.] 1798. Affairs of the Borders.
A memoir of Murray's requesting to move the Queen to direct the Wardens and others to concur with him in the pursuit of the thieves and peace-breakers.
Draft of letter from the Queen to the Wardens directing them to assist the Earl of Murray.
In Cecil's writing. Endd. P. 1.
Nov. 1. 1799. Adolph Blyleven to Gresham.
The Count of Aremburg goes to France to aid the King, and on the 27th October several carts with munitions left Brussels for the frontiers. The last containing money was upset and a secretary of M. D'Aremburg killed. The Pope has revoked the sentence against the Caraffas, and restored them to their estates. He has also forbidden any one to speak to a married woman unless he is related to her on pain of the galleys.—Antwerp, 1 Nov. 1567. Signed.
Add. Fr. P. 1.
Nov. 2. 1800. Richard Clough to Gresham.
All letters from France are opened, so that no news can come. The Castle goes forward apace. It has five bulwarks and between every bulwark a flanker of 400 feet. The bulwarks are longer than the flankers. Next summer it shall be walled with stone. The Count of Aremburg is general of those who are prepared to be sent into France. The Lords of this town have refused to pay the labourers on the Castle, and have protested against the Duke's breaking down the walls of the town.—Antwerp, 2 Nov. 1567. Signed.
Add. Endd., with seal. Pp. 3.
Nov. 2. 1801. Pietro Bizarri to Cecil.
Sends news which he has received from Rome relating to matters which have passed in France.—Venice, 2 Nov. 1567. Signed.
Add. Endd., with seal. Ital. P. 1.
Nov. 2. 1802. Reply of the Emperor.
Denies that he has had anything to do with the slaughters and effusion of blood in France, but on the contrary declares that he has always advised the French King to pacify his realm.
Endd. Lat. P. 1.
Nov. 2. 1803. Richard Clough to Gresham.
News that the Prince of Conde has taken Paris. There is a gathering of men of war about Nimeguen who are like to take the town.—Antwerp, 2 Nov. 1567. Signed.
Add. Endd. P. ½.
Nov. 2. 1804. Sir Henry Norris to Cecil.
Metz is taken by the Prince's company, but not the citadel. 5,000 Spaniards to aid the King are looked for daily, and also 5,000 Swiss which be already in their journey hitherward. On the 27th the King declared to him that he was beholden to the Queen of England, who as his Ambassador had advertised him had promised to give him aid against his adversaries. That day he caused to be proclaimed that no man should bruit of peace to be had betwixt him and the Prince. The Pont De Charenton has been taken by the Prince. There was great slaughter on both sides. The King's captain and his ensign bearer escaping to Paris were hanged. Great want is already felt at Paris, as Charenton chiefly fed it with wheat and flour. There arrived out of Auvergne 300 horse men under a Captain Cobborn. Gives advertisement of different arrivals and movements. Has to advertise that which he may not write.—Paris, 2 Nov. 1567. Signed.
Add. Endd., with seal. Pp. 1¾.
Nov. 3. 1805. The Queen to Sir Henry Norris.
He is to let the King, the Queen Mother, and the Council plainly understand that in anything where they shall think she may stand them in any stead she will be glad to show the good office of a prince and neighbour for the maintenance of his estate and the quiet of his realm. He is also to desire the redress of certain wrongs committed upon some of her subjects in France.—Hampton Court, 3 Nov. 1567.
Draft corrected by Cecil. Endd. Pp. 2½.
Nov. 3. 1806. Reply of John Casimer Count Palatine to the Bishop of Rennes.
Regrets the divisions and commotions in France. Many of the nobility of France have implored his assistance and declared how many innocent people have been there persecuted on account of their religion contrary to the King's Edict without any redress. Has been credibly informed that on 8th September last there was a meeting of certain cardinals at which it was determined to seize upon certain town and put down the professors of the reformed doctrines by force. If this was not a matter of religion and the Condians were endeavouring to seize on the government he would be ready to assist the King against them.—Heidelburg, 3 Nov. 1567.
Endd. Lat. Pp. 8¼.
Nov. 3. 1807. Reply of the Elector Palatine to the Bishop of Rennes.
To the same effect as the reply of Duke John Casimer. Complains of the threats contained in the Bishop's address.
Endd. Lat. Pp. 14.
Nov. 3. 1808. Sir William Drury to Throckmorton.
The Regent having secretly devised a journey for the apprehension of certain of the thieves of Liddisdale, upon Thursday put the same in execution at Hawick, being market day. He took thirty-six of them; whereof thirteen were presently hanged, nine drowned, and fourteen carried prisoners away. The Laird of Ormiston and John-of-the-Park escaped. —Berwick, 3 Nov. 1567. Signed.
Add. Endd., with seal. P. 1.
Nov. 4. 1809. Occurrences in France.
Reinforcements for the King and for Conde. Macon in Burgundy taken by the Protestants, and recovered with great slaughter to them. The most stay for the matter of religion, and the King shows himself inclined to have the restrictions of the Edict taken away, so it is thought that an agreement shall be shortly made. On the back a note of two names in Cecil's writing.
Endd. P.1.
Nov. 8. 1810. N. Stopio to —
Encloses advices of different dates during the month of October from Vienna, Rome, and Genoa.—Venice, 8 Nov. 1567. Signed.
Endd. Ital. P. 6.
Nov. 8. 1811. Pietro Bizarri to Cecil.
Sends news from Vienna, of the 22nd and 30 Oct.; and Rome, of the 1st Nov.—Venice, 8 Nov. 1567. Signed.
Add. Endd., with seal. Ital. Pp. 5.
Nov. 9. 1812. Sir William Drury to Throckmorton.
Sends the names of the thieves whom the Regent took at Hawick on the 30th ult. On the 28th the Bishop of Moray and the Lairds of Skirling and Riccarton were cleansed by an assize of the death of the King. The Bishop for the receiving of Bothwell put himself in the Regent's hands. On Wednesday was executed a younger brother of the Laird of "Bathecatts" being a Hamilton, with two of his servants, for the killing of his eldest brother, whose wife he had dishonestly used. He took his death penitently, affirming that it was not sufficient for his sins, requiring that his heart might be cut out and divided in piecemeal. One of his brothers threw his dagger at the executioner. The wife of the gentleman murdered is also in Edinburgh burnt.—Berwick, 9 Nov. 1567. Signed.
Add. Endd. P. 1.
Oct. 30. Justice on the Borders.
A list of some forty-three names of those who were taken at Hawick, 30th October by the Lord Regent of Scotland. Mostly Elliots and Crosiers. Eleven were hanged, nine drowned, one slain in taking, fourteen cleansed, and ten led to Edinburgh, and three or four letten to sureties.
Endd. Pp. 1½. Enclosure.
Nov. 10. 1813. Battle of St. Denis.
Sketch giving a bird's-eye view of the battle of St. Denis. Drawn in a spirited manner on a very large sheet of paper. Probably that alluded to by Norris in his letter to Cecil, November 29, as made by young William Berkeley and Norris's two boys who were there present.
Nov. 11. 1814. The Emperor's Envoy to the Electors.
The Emperor has lately complained through his Envoy to the Electors about an injurious calumny that he has entered into a league with the Pope, the King of Spain, and others against those of the reformed religion, and denied that this was the case. Also required that the authors might be punished.
Endd. Lat. P. 1.
Nov. 14. 1815. Sir Thomas Gresham to Cecil.
Clough has charged him by exchange with the whole 3,000l. part of the 7,000l. lent to the Queen, wherein is lost 300l., which is cheap, being only 12l. 10s. upon the 100l. for the year. Desires that he may be paid 3,300l.—London, 14 Nov. 1567. Signed.
Add. Endd. P. ½.
Nov. 14. 1816. Dr. Man to Cecil.
Ruy Gomez told him that the King had commanded him to open to him and the Emperor's Ambassador the rebellion of the Prince of Conde and his complices, and that the Queen was to beware that she gave no aid unto them. The King has written to the Emperor to give no license to any to aid the rebels, and has caused the Duke of Alva to send to the French King's relief 1,500 horsemen and two regiments of Almains.—Madrid, 14 Nov. 1567.
Copy.