118 Diplomacy and Early Modern Culture
50. Elizabeth McCutcheon (1999) ‘Playing the Waiting Game: the Life and
Letters of Elizabeth Wolley’, Quidditas, 20, 43–6.
51. Daybell, ‘Such newes’, pp. 126–7.
52. David Starkey (1987), ‘Intimacy and Innovation: The Rise of the Privy
Chamber, 1485–1547’, in David Starkey, ed., The English Court, pp. 71–119;
idem (1985) The Reign of Henry VIII: Personalities and Politics (London: George
Philip).
53. Wright (1987); Goldsmith (1987); Merton (1993).
54. Natalie Mears (2004) ‘Politics in the Elizabethan Privy Chamber: Lady
Mary Sidney and Kat Ashley’, in Daybell, ed., Women and Politics, pp. 67–82
(pp. 72–4 and passim).
55. On Mary Scudamore see, Simon Adams (2004) ‘Scudamore, Mary, Lady
Scudamore’, ODNB.
56. TNA, Chancery: Master Harvey’s Exhibits: Duchess of Norfolk’s Deeds,C 115.
57. TNA, PRO, C115/101/7543.
58. I.J. Atherton (1999) Ambition and failure in Stuart England: the career of John,
first Viscount Scudamore (Manchester: Manchester University Press), p. 28.
59. LPL, Shrewsbury MS, 707, fol. 221.
60. W.J. Tighe (1995) ‘Country into Court, Court into Country: John Scudamore
of Holme Lacy (c.1542–1623) and his Circles’, in Dale Hoak, ed., Tudor
Political Culture (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), pp. 157–78.
61. BL, Add. MS, 12506, fol. 481; Bodleian Library, Tanner MS, 241, fol. 2.
62. LPL, Talbot MS, 3205, fol. 56.
63. TNA, PRO, C115/100/7511; Cecil MS, 84, fol. 57. See also Cecil MS, 89, fol.
140; LPL, Talbot MS, 3203, fol. 7.
64. LPL, Talbot MS, 3199, fol. 441.
65. TNA, SP74/2/79, SP74/2/81, SP74/2/115. Steven G. Ellis (2004) ‘Croft, Sir James
(c.1518–1590)’, ODNB.
66. HMC, Salisbury, 4, p. 516; Cecil MS, 32, fol. 34, 97, fol. 10.
67. David Starkey (1977) ‘Representation Through Intimacy: a Study in the
Symbolism of Monarchy and Court Office in Early-Modern England’, in
I. Lewis, ed., Symbols and Sentiments: Cross Cultural Studies in Symbolism
(London: Academic Press), pp. 187–224.
68. Marie B. Rowlands (1985; 1996) ‘Recusant Women 1560–1640’, in Mary Prior,
ed., Women in English Society 1500–1800 (London: Routledge), pp. 149–180;
J.C.H. Aveling (1980) ‘Catholic Households in Yorkshire, 1580–1603’, Northern
History, XVI, 85-101; Roland Connelly (1997) The Women of the Catholic
Resistance in England, 1540–1680 (Edinburgh: Pentland Press).
69. Michael Hodgetts (1989) Secret Hiding Places (Dublin: Veritas Publications).
70. TNA, SP14/216/10; SP14/16/44; SP14/216/70/1; SP14/18/109
71. TNA, SP14/216/105; SP14/216/103; SP14/216/141, 148, 149, 150, 156, 228,
230. Jane Griffiths (2004) ‘Wenman, Agnes, Lady Wenman’, ODNB.
72. TNA, SP14/216/226 and 83.
73. For a later period, the Ghent Benedictines in the 1650s put their postal
services at the disposal of Charles II for delivering royalist mail: Claire Walker
(2000) ‘Prayer, Patronage, and Political Conspiracy: English Nuns and the
Restoration’, Historical Journal, 43, 1, 1–23.
74. Philip Caraman (1951) ed., The Autobiography of an Elizabethan (London:
Longman), p. 208.
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