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The Cradle King: The Life of James VI and I, the First Monarch of a United Great Britain

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  Sommerville, Johann P., ‘James I and the Divine Right of Kings: English Politics and Continental Theory’, in The Mental World of the Jacobean Court, ed. Linda Levy Peck (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991)

  Spedding, James, ‘Review of the evidence respecting the conduct of King James I. in the case of Sir Thomas Overbury’, Archaeologia, 41 (1867), 79–115

  Stafford, Helen Georgia, James VI of Scotland and the Throne of England (New York and London: D. Appelton-Century Company, 1940)

  Stafford, Helen, ‘Notes on Scottish Witchcraft Cases 1590–1591’, in Essays in Honour of Conyers Read (Chicago, 1935), 96–118

  Stevenson, David, Scotland’s Last Royal Wedding: The Marriage of James VI and Anne of Denmark [with a Danish Account of the Marriage translated by Peter Graves] (Edinburgh: John Donald, 1997)

  Stewart, Alan, ‘The Body Archival: Re-Reading the Trial of the Earl of Somerset’, in The Body in Late Medieval and Early Modern Culture, ed. Darryll Grantley and Nina Taunton (Basingstoke: Ashgate, 2000), 65–81

  Stewart, Alan, ‘Homosexuals in History: A.L. Rowse and the Queer Archive’, in Love, Sex, Friendship and Intimacy Between Men, 1550–1800, ed. Katherine O’Donnell and Michael O’Rourke (Aldershot: Palgrave, 2003)

  Stewart, Alan, ‘Boys’ Buttocks Revisited: James VI and I and the Myth of the Sovereign Schoolmaster’, in Sodomy in Early Modern Europe, ed. Tom Betteridge (Manchester University Press, 2002), 131–47

  Stewart, Alan, ‘Purging Troubled Humours: Bacon, Northampton and the Anti-Duelling Campaign of 1613–1614’, in The Crisis of 1614 and the Addled Parliament: Literary and Historical Perspectives, ed. Stephen Clucas and Rosalind Davies (Basingstoke: Ashgate, 2002), 84–97

  Stone, Lawrence, The Causes of the English Revolution 1529–1642 (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1972)

  Strickland, Agnes, Lives of the Queens of Scotland and English Princesses connected with the Regal Succession of Great Britain, 8 vols (Edinburgh and London: William Blackwood, 1850–1859)

  Strong, Roy, Britannia Triumphans: Inigo Jones, Rubens and Whitehall Palace (London: Thames & Hudson, 1980)

  Strong, Roy, Henry, Prince of Wales and England’s Lost Renaissance (London: Thames & Hudson, 1986)

  Thoren, Victor E. (with John R. Christianson), The Lord of Uraniborg: A Biography of Tycho Brahe (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990)

  Tyacke, Nicholas, Anti-Calvinists: The Rise of English Arminianism ca. 1590–1640 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1987)

  Tytler, Patrick Fraser, History of Scotland, vol. 9 (Edinburgh: William Tait, 1843)

  Usher, Roland G., ‘James I and Sir Edward Coke’, English Historical Review, 18 (1903), 664–75

  Usher, Roland G., The Reconstruction of the English Church, 2 vols (New York: D. Appleton, 1910)

  Warner, George F. ed., ‘The Library of James VI. 1573–1583 From a Manuscript in the Hand of Peter Young, His Tutor’, Miscellany of the Scottish History Society (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press for the Scottish History Society, 1893), ix–lxxv

  Warrender, Margaret ed., Illustrations of Scottish History (Edinburgh: James Stillie, 1889)

  Welsby, Paul, George Abbot (London: SPCK, 1962)

  Wickham, Glynne, ‘Contributions de Ben Jonson et de Dekker aux Fêtes du Couronnement de Jacquers Ier’, in Fêtes de la Renaissance, ed. Jean Jacquot (Paris, 1956), 1: 279–83

  Williams, Ethel Carleton, Anne of Denmark: Wife of James VI of Scotland: James I of England (London: Longman, 1970)

  Williamson, Arthur H., ‘Scotland, Antichrist and the Invention of Great Britain’, in New Perspectives on the Politics and Culture of Early Modern Scotland, ed. John Dwyer et al. (Edinburgh: John Donald, 1980–1982), 34–58

  Williamson, Arthur H., Scottish National Consciousness in the Age of James VI (Edinburgh: John Donald, 1979)

  Williamson, Hugh Ross, George Villiers, First Duke of Buckingham: Study for a Biography (London: Duckworth, 1940)

  Willson, David Harris, ‘James I and His Literary Assistants’, Huntington Library Quaterly 8 (1944–5), 35–57

  Willson, David Harris, King James VI and I (London: Jonathan Cape, 1956)

  Willson, David Harris, The Privy Councillors in the House of Lords 1604–1629 (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1940)

  Wormald, Jenny, ‘Ecclesiastical Vitriol: the Kirk, the Puritans, and the Future King of England’, in The Reign of Elizabeth I: Court and Culture in the Last Decade, ed. John Guy (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press/The Folger Institute, 1995), 171–91

  Wormald, Jenny, ‘James VI, James I, and the Identity of Britain’, in The British Problem, c. 1534–1707, ed. Brendan Bradshaw and John Morrill (New York: St Martin’s Press, 1966)

  Wormald, Jenny, ‘James VI and I, Basilikon Doron and The Trew Law of Free Monarchies: The Scottish Context and the English Translation’, in The Mental World of the Jacobean Court, ed. Linda Levy Peck (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991), 36–54

  Wormald, Jenny, ‘James VI and I: Two Kings or One’, History, 68 (1983), 187–209

  Wormald, Jenny, ‘“’Tis True I Am A Cradle King”: The View from the Throne’, in The Reign of James VI, ed. Goodare and Lynch, 241–56

  Wright, Louis B., ‘Propaganda against James I’s “Appeasement” of Spain’, Huntington Library Quarterly, 6: 2 (1943), 149–72

  Young, Michael B., James VI and I and the History of Homosexuality (Basingstoke: Macmillan, 2000)

  Zaller, Robert, The Parliament of 1621: A Study in Constitutional Conflict (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1971)

  Zeeberg, Peter, ‘The Inscriptions at Tycho Brahe’s Uraniborg’, in A History of Nordic Neo-Latin Literature (Odense: Odense University Press, 1995), 251–66

  Index

  The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.

  Abbot, George, later Archbishop of Canterbury; campaigns to promote Villiers

  Abbot, Robert

  Aberdeen; Bishop of, see Blackburn, Peter

  Act of Oblivion

  Acutrie, John

  Adamson, John

  Adamson, Patrick, later Bishop of St Andrews

  Addled Parliament

  Alexander, William

  Anabaptists

  Andrewes, Lancelot, Bishop of Chichester (1605), Bishop of Ely (1609), Bishop of Winchester (1619); Responsio ad apologiam cardinalis Bellarmini

  Angus, Earl of, see Douglas, Archibald; Douglas, William (d. 1591); Douglas, William (d. 1611)

  Anna, Princess of Denmark, later Queen of Scots and Queen of England; negotiations to marry James; marries James by proxy; attempts to sail to Scotland; marries James; coronation of; entry into Edinburgh; marriage to James; relations with James; relations with Maitland; relations with Melville; pregnancy of; gives birth to Henry; dispute over Henry’s upbringing; other children of; finances of; correspondence with Elizabeth; and Roman Catholicism; Kirk attacks on; attempts to take Henry from Stirling; miscarries; household in England; patronage of; objects to Elizabeth’s marriage; reaction to Henry’s death; campaigns to promote Villiers; death of; funeral of

  Anne, Infanta of Spain

  Apethorpe (Northants)

  Archy, James’s jester

  Aremberg, Count, Spanish agent

  Argyll, Earl of, see Campbell, Archibald (d. 1573); Campbell, Colin; Campbell, Archibald (d. 1638)

  Argyll, Janet, Countess of

  Argyll, Countess of [Moray’s widow]

  Armada, Spanish

  Arminianism

  Arminius, Jacobus

  Arran, James, second Earl of, see Hamilton, James

  Arran, James, Earl of, see Stewart, Captain James

  Arthur, King

  Arthurianism

  Arundel, Earl of

  Ashby St Leger

  Asheby, William

 
; Assheton, Nicholas

  Aston, Roger

  Atholl, John, Earl of, see Stewart, John

  Austria

  Ayr

  Babington, Anthony

  Babington Plot, the

  Bacon, Anthony

  Bacon, Francis, later Viscount St Albans; Declaration [on Ralegh]; Novum organum; prosecutes Somerset; relations with Villiers; fall of

  Baker, servant of Buckingham

  Balcalquall, Walter, minister

  Balcomie, Margaret

  Balfour, Sir James

  Balfour, James, minister

  Bancroft, Richard, Bishop of London, later Archbishop of Canterbury

  Barclay, John

  Barclay, William; De potestate papae

  Barlow, William, Dean of Chester; On the Hampton Court Conference; Answer to a Catholike Englishman

  Bate, John, merchant

  Beaton, Archbishop

  Bedford, Francis, Earl of, see Russell, Francis

  Bedford, Lucy, Countess of

  Bellarmine, Cardinal Robert; Responsio

  Bellenden, Sir Lewis

  Berwick

  Bettenson, Sir Richard, of Essex

  Bèze, Théodore de; Icones

  Bible, new translation of

  Bille, Steen

  Bilson, Thomas, Bishop of Winchester

  Black, David, minister

  Black, John, minister

  Black Acts

  Blackature, Captain William

  Blackburn, Peter, Bishop of Aberdeen

  Blackwell, George, Archpriest

  Blackwood, Adam

  Blount, Charles, Lord Mountjoy, later Earl of Devonshire

  Blyth, Helene

  Bodleian Library, Oxford

  Bohemia

  Boig, George

  Boig, John

  Boleyn, Anne, Queen of England

  Borders

  Borthwick Castle

  Bothwell, Francis, fifth Earl of, see Stewart, Francis Hepburn

  Bothwell, Jean, Countess of, see Gordon, Lady Jean

  Bothwell, James, fourth Earl of, see Hepburn, James

  Bothwell, John, laird of Holyroodhouse

  Bowes, Robert

  Boy, Jerome

  Boyd, James, Bishop of Glasgow

  Brahe, Tygo (Tycho); De nova stella

  Brechin

  Brett, Arthur

  Brig o’ Dee

  British Library

  Brokkes, William

  Brooke, George, conspirator with Ralegh

  Brooke, William, Lord Cobham

  Brouncker, Sir Henry

  Bruce, Edward, Abbot of Kinloss, later Lord Kinloss

  Bruce, Sir George

  Bruce, Harry

  Bruce, Robert, intermediary with Spain

  Bruce, Robert, minister

  Buccleuch, Border nobleman

  Buchanan, George; Baptistes; De jure regni apud Scotos; Rerum Scotiarum historia

  Burgh, Thomas, Lord

  Burghley, William, Lord, see Cecil, Sir William

  Caithness; Bishop of, see Gledstanes, George

  Calderwood, David, minister; quarrel with James

  Calvert, Sir George

  Calvert, Samuel

  Calvinism

  Cambridge, University of

  Camden, William

  Campbell, Archibald (d. 1573), Earl of Argyll

  Campbell, Archibald (d. 1638), Earl of Argyll

  Campbell, Colin, Earl of Argyll

  Campion, Thomas

  Canterbury

  Carberry Hill

  Carey, Henry, first Lord Hunsdon

  Carey, Sir Robert

  Carey, Valentine, Dean of St Paul’s

  Carleton, George

  Carlisle, James, Earl of, see Hay, James

  Carmichael, James, minister of Haddington

  Carr, kinsman of Robert Carr

  Carr, Robert, later Viscount Rochester, Earl of Somerset; meets James; becomes James’s favourite; rise of; courts Frances Howard; friendship with Overbury; commission into Essex/Howard marriage; marries Frances Howard; continued rise; resents Villiers; quarrels with James; asks for indemnification; promotes Bilson; implicated in Overbury murder; trial and sentence of

  Carwood, Margaret

  Cary, Sir George

  Casaubon, Isaac

  Cassillis, Gilbert, Earl of, see Kennedy, Gilbert

  Castelnau de Mauvissière

  Castilian Band

  Catesby, Robert

  Catherine de Bourbon

  Cawbraith, James

  Cecil, Sir Robert, later Viscount Cranborne, Earl of Salisbury; relations with James in Scotland; laments James’s regime; as Principal Secretary, as James’s ‘beagle’; becomes Earl of Salisbury; and Gunpowder Plot; as Lord Treasurer; and the Great Contract; 1610 Parliament; illness and death of; posthumous attacks on

  Cecil, Sir William, later Lord Burghley

  Chaderton, Laurence

  Chamberlain, John

  Chancery, Court of

  Chapel Royal

  Charles, Prince, later Charles I, King of England; birth of; guardianship of; as sickly child; becomes Prince of Wales; marriage plans for; relations with Villiers; relations with James; trip to Spain; return to England; and 1624 Parliament; as the ‘rising sun’; and French marriage negotiations; becomes King; marries Henrietta Maria; fall and execution of

  Charles IX, King of France

  Chaseabout Raid, the

  Christian IV, King of Denmark

  Christiana, Princess of France

  Christiensen, Anders

  Church of England

  Chytræus, Nathan

  Civil War, English

  Clanesse

  Clayton, Ralph

  Clement VIII, Pope; James’s letter to

  Clerke, Edward

  Cobham, William, Lord, see Brooke, William

  Cockburn, Captain

  Coke, Sir Edward; Reports

  Coke, Roger

  Colville, John

  Combe Abbey (Warwickshire)

  Common Law, English

  Confederate Lords

  Confession of Faith

  Conway, Sir Edward

  Copenhagen

  Corona Regia

  Cottington, Francis

  Cotton, Sir Robert

  Council of Wales

  Council of War

  Courcelles

  Craig, John, minister

  Craig, Dr John

  Craigmillar

  Cranborne, Robert, Viscount, see Cecil, Sir Robert

  Cranfield, Sir Lionel, Lord Treasurer Middlesex; fall of

  Cranston, Thomas

  Crawford, Bessie

  Crawford, David, tenth earl of, see Lindsey, David

  Crichton, Father William

  Cromarty, George, Earl of, see Mackenzie, George

  Culross

  Cuningham, Robert

  Cunningham, Alexander, fifth Earl of Glencairn

  Cunningham, John

  Dairsie

  Dalkeith

  Dalton, James

  Daniel, Samuel

  Davidson, John, minister

  Davison, Francis

  de Bohan, Duc

  de Brienne, Comte

  de Caus, Salomon

  de Fentray, M.

  d’Effiat, Marquis

  de Fontenay, M.

  de Inojosa, Marquis

  Dekker, Thomas

  de la Boderie

  de Mayerne, Theodore

  de Mendoza, Bernardino

  Denmark; James sails for; James and Anna visit

  de Perriet, Jean

  de’ Servi, Constantino

  de Vere, Susan

  de Vere, Edward, Earl of Oxford

  Devereux, Robert, second Earl of Essex, negotiations with James

  Devereux, Robert, third Earl of Essex

  d’Ewes, Simonds

  Digby, Sir Everard

  Digby, Sir John, later Earl of Bristol

  Dingwall, Lord

 
; Discourse of the Maner of the Discovery …

  Doncaster, James, Viscount, see Hay, James

  Donne, John

  Douglas, Archibald, eighth Earl of Angus

  Douglas, Archibald

  Douglas, George

  Douglas, James, fourth Earl of Morton; Lord Chancellor; flees to England; Regent; threatened by Lennox; denunciation of; execution of

  Douglas, William (d. 1591), ninth Earl of Angus

  Douglas, William (d. 1611), tenth Earl of Angus

  Douglas, Sir William, of Lochleven

  Douglas, Willie

  Dove, Thomas, Dean of Peterborough

  Dover

  Dowland, John

  Drummond, Jane

  Drummond, William, of Hawthorden

  Drury, Sir William

  Du Croc

  Dudley, Lord Robert, later Earl of Leicester

  duelling

  Dumbarton Castle

  Dunbar

  Dunchurch

  Dundee

  Dunfermline; Abbey of

  Dunkeson, John

  Durham

  Dykes, John

  Edinburgh; James’s entry into (1579); riots in; Anna’s entry into (1590); James leaves (1603); preparations for James’s visit (1617); James’s visit (1617); Locations in: Bow Street; Butter Trone; Canongate; Castle; Coinhouse; High Town; Mercat Cross; Nether Bow; St Giles’s Church; Salt Trone; Strait Bow; Tolbooth; University of; West Port

  Edmondes, Sir Thomas

  Edward III, King of England

  Edward VI, King of England

  Eedes, Richard

  Egerton, Thomas, Lord Ellesmere, Lord Chancellor

  Eglinton, Hugh, Earl of, see Montgomery, Hugh

  Eglisham, George

  Elizabeth I, Queen of England; supports Scottish Protestants; and James’s baptism; interest in James’s upbringing; alliance with Bothwell; Kirk attacks on; death of; funeral of; relations with James; relations with Mary; relations with Anna

  Elizabeth, Princess of Denmark

  Elizabeth, Princess; marriage plans for; marriage to Frederick; leaves England; and Bohemia; flees Prague

  Ellesmere, Lord Chancellor see Egerton, Thomas

  Elphinstoun, James, later Lord Balmerino

  Elsinore

  Eltham Park

  Elwes, Sir Gervase

  England, Scottish relations with; after Mary’s execution

  Eric XIV, King of Sweden

  Erskine, Adam, Commendator of Cambuskenneth

  Erskine, Alexander, of Gogar

  Erskine, David, Commendator of Dryburgh

  Erskine, John, Earl of Mar, Regent; guardian of James; Regent; death of

  Erskine, John, Master of (‘Jocky o’ Sclaittis’), later Earl of Mar; as Henry’s guardian; wife of; son of; joins English Privy Council

 

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