Assurances

Analytical Index to the Series of Records Known as the Remembrancia 1579-1664. Originally published by EJ Francis, London, 1878.

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Citation:

'Assurances', in Analytical Index to the Series of Records Known as the Remembrancia 1579-1664, ed. W H Overall, H C Overall( London, 1878), British History Online https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/no-series/index-remembrancia/1579-1664/p27 [accessed 22 December 2024].

'Assurances', in Analytical Index to the Series of Records Known as the Remembrancia 1579-1664. Edited by W H Overall, H C Overall( London, 1878), British History Online, accessed December 22, 2024, https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/no-series/index-remembrancia/1579-1664/p27.

"Assurances". Analytical Index to the Series of Records Known as the Remembrancia 1579-1664. Ed. W H Overall, H C Overall(London, 1878), , British History Online. Web. 22 December 2024. https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/no-series/index-remembrancia/1579-1664/p27.

Assurances.

I. 74. Letter from Sir Francis Walsingham to the Lord Mayor, in reply to a communication touching the orders set down for Assurances, and requesting that Mr. Norton, (fn. 1) or some fit person, might be appointed to confer with him upon the subject.
21st February, 1576.

Footnotes

  • 1. A Citizen of London, and Member of the Grocers' Company. In early life was tutor to the children of the Lord Protector Somerset; translated 'Calvin's Institutes' into English in 1561; member of the Inner Temple in 1555, and subsequently called to the Bar; jointly with Thomas Sackville (Lord Dorset), was the author of the tragedy of 'Gorboduc,' the earliest regular drama in blank verse in the English language, performed before Queen Elizabeth at Whitehall in 1561–2. Appointed Counsel to the Stationers' Company, Dec. 12th, 1562; M.A., Cambridge, 10th June, 1570; appointed First Remembrancer of the City of London, 6th February, 1570–1; M.P. for London, 2nd April, 1571. In 1583 he was committed to the Tower on a charge of treason, but was subsequently released through the intercession of Sir Christopher Hatton and Lord Burghley. He died in March, 1583–4. He married, first, Margaret, only daughter of Archbishop Cranmer; secondly, her cousin Alice, daughter of Edmund Cranmer, the Archbishop's brother; thirdly, Elizabeth—, who survived him. For further particulars of this remarkable man, see Shakespeare Society's Papers, 'Tragedie of Gorboduc,' edited by Wm. Durrant Cooper, F.S.A., 1847; also Mr. Cooper's further notes upon his life, 'Archæologia,' vol. xxxvi., p. 105 et seq.