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To Catch a King

Page 31

by Charles Spencer


  Hull 69

  Hunger Hill 119

  Huntbach, John 120, 123, 124

  Huntly, Lewis Gordon, 3rd Marquess of 61

  Hutchinson, Colonel John 68–9, 252

  Hutchinson, Lucy 68

  Hyde, Edward 204

  Hyde, Sir Edward: character and description 5; relationship with Charles 5; supports Royalist cause 5; questions instructions to take Charles to the Continent 8, 13; on George Carteret 11; considered pious and priggish 13; distrust of Jermyn and his allies 13; fatalistic speech 20; reunited with Charles at The Hague 20; on the Earl of Northumberland 33; against treaty with Scotland 55; learns of Charles’s landing in Scotland 58; ally of Earl of Southampton 227; scoffs at Wilmot’s comfortable escape from England 243–4; advises Charles against Scottish adventure 245; congratulates Charles on his arrival in France 245; joins royal council in Paris 245; realises futility of Charles’s return to England 248; as most important and trusted adviser to Charles 263; disapproves of Charles’s behaviour 264; given the title of Earl of Clarendon 264; as Lord Proprietor of land in America 264; crosses swords with Barbara Castlemaine 265; removes himself to France 265–6; The History of the Rebellion 14, 266

  Hyde, Frederick 220

  Hyde, Sir Henry 220

  Hyde, Katherine 219, 220–1, 222

  Hyde, Lawrence 208, 214, 216, 223

  Hyde, Sir Lawrence (d.1641) 220

  Hyde family 220

  Ingoldsby, Col Richard 85, 88

  Inverkeithing, battle of (1650) 62, 63, 77

  Inverlochy, battle of (1645) 49

  Ireland 52, 59, 175, 188, 190, 246

  Irish and Scottish Committee 141

  Isle of Man 75, 246

  Isle of Wight 51, 231; Carisbrooke Castle 31

  Isles of Scilly 8, 9, 25, 63, 180, 246

  Jaffray, Alexander 56

  James I 104

  James, Duke of Monmouth: birth and parentage 18–19; kidnapped by Charles 247; relationship with his father and James 275

  James, Duke of York (later James II): asks Pepys to let him read about his brother’s escape xviii; escapes to the Netherlands dressed as a woman 16, 33–7; joins his siblings at Syon House 29; taken to St James’s Palace 32; character and description 33; takes heed of his father’s instructions 33–4; learns of his brother’s defeat at Worcester 92, 93; reunited with Charles in France 237; accession to the throne 253; remains with his terminally brother 270–1, 275; informed that Charles was a Catholic at heart 273; brings Huddleston to his brother’s bedside 274

  Jefferson, Thomas xxi

  Jermyn, Henry, 1st Earl of St Albans 13–14, 238

  Jersey, C.I. 10–13, 198, 206, 208, 246; Elizabeth Castle 10; Mont Orgueil 10; St Aubin’s 10

  Jesuits 125, 126

  John and Sara (ship) 190

  Jones, David 137

  Jones, Inigo 221

  Jones, Colonel John 244

  Jones, Rhys 200

  Jordan, Robert 245–6

  Josselin, Rev Ralph 69, 244

  Kemble, Thomas 190

  Kérouaille, Louise de, Duchess of Portsmouth 268, 272, 273, 275

  Key, Capt Lt John 185

  Killigrew, Charles 269

  Killigrew, Thomas 70

  King, Sir Edmund 269–70 and note

  King’s Horse Guards 3

  King’s Lynn 69

  Kinver 104

  Kirton, Edward 173

  Lambert, Maj Gen John 62, 76–7, 78, 80, 83, 84, 88

  Lane, Jane 194; given pass to travel to Bristol 135; accompanies Charles on his journey from Bentley 164–7, 168–9, 173; sends Charles boiled walnuts to rub on his face 164; expected to attend her cousin Ellen Norton 172; leaves Charles at Trent 174; escapes to France disguised as a peasant woman 240; rewarded by Charles after the Restoration 256–8; marries Sir Clement Fisher 258; death of 258

  Lane, Colonel John 134–6, 145, 146; asked to return horses to Wilmot at Moseley 156; collects Charles from Moseley Hall 159–60; takes Charles to Bentley 164–5; rewarded by Charles after the Restoration 256–7

  Langport, Somerset 76

  Langstone Harbour 214

  Lascelles, Henry 165, 167, 170, 174, 258

  Lauderdale, John Maitland, 1st Earl of 106, 206, 265

  Leicester, Dorothy Percy, Countess of 30

  Leicester, Robert Sidney, 2nd Earl of 30

  Lenthall, William 37

  Leslie, Lt Gen David: defeats Montrose at Philiphaugh 49, 66; defeated at Dunbar and Inverkeithing 60, 62; brutality and ruthlessness of 66; character and description of 66, 67; serves under Cromwell at Marston Moor 66–7; opposes invasion of England by Charles 67, 77–8, 89; refuses to fight at Worcester 89–90, 106; low morale of his forces 110; captured and imprisoned in Chester 184–5; suspected of abandoning his men after Worcester 184; believed to have acted treacherously 260; imprisoned in the Tower 260; rewarded by Charles after the Restoration 260–1; granted the title of 1st Baron Newark 261

  Levellers 40–1, 81, 242

  Leven, Alexander Leslie, 1st Earl of 60

  Leyland, John 174–5

  Lichfield 169

  Lilburne, Colonel Robert 81, 97, 164

  Limbry, Stephen 176, 177, 194, 195–7, 201

  Lingua Testium: wherein Monarchy is Proved 242

  Littleton, Stephen 121

  Liverpool 190

  Lockier, Richard 41

  London 72, 94, 96, 102; St James’s Palace 27, 28, 32, 37, 193; Danvers House, Chelsea 28–9; St Paul’s Cathedral 41; Three Cranes inn, the Vintry 116–17; Tower of London 127, 209, 241, 242, 247, 260; Charing Cross 180, 193; Whitehall 180; Blackwall 186; Greenwich 186; Hampstead Heath 186; Kingsland (now Dalston) 186; Tothill Fields 186, 187–8; Hyde Park Corner 193; Knightsbridge 193; Haberdashers’ Hall 209; Westminster 254; St James’s Park 268

  London, Henry Compton, Bishop of 272

  Long, Sir Robert 19

  Long Marston 165, 167–8

  Lords Proprietor 264 and note

  Lorraine, Charles IV, Duke of 46

  Loudon, John Campbell, 1st Earl of 244

  Louis XIII 45

  Louis XIV 45, 58, 268

  Louvre group 14

  Lowestoft 69

  Luke, Katherine de 250

  Lyme Regis 174–7, 194, 198, 200–1

  Lyson, Thomas 79

  MacColla, Alasdair 49

  MacKinnon, Clan 65

  MacLeod, Neil 57

  MacNeil’s Foot 65

  Mackworth, Colonel Humphrey 74

  Macy, Captain 196, 198, 201, 202

  Madeley 113–14

  Magny-en-Vexin 237

  Maine 190

  Mainwaring, George 143

  The Man in the Moon 56

  Mançell, Francis 215–17, 222, 228, 259

  Manual of Controversies 157

  Marston Moor, battle of (1644) 66, 76, 251–2

  Martin, Bartholomew 107, 109

  Martin, Edward 107

  Mary, Queen 266

  Mary, Princess of Orange 16, 31; marriage to William of Orange 27–8; welcomes her brother James at The Hague 37; swoons with shock on hearing of her brother’s defeat 93; Jane Lane given position in her household 256

  Massachusetts 72, 190

  Massey, Maj Gen Edward 83–4, 103, 241

  Maurice, Prince 16, 175

  Mayerne, Theodore de 23–4

  Mazarin, Cardinal Jules Raymond 45–6

  Medway, River 58

  Mercurius Politicus 42, 72, 75, 93, 164, 179, 185, 239

  Mere, George inn at 219

  Middleburg 37

  Middleton, Lt Gen John: excommunicated and forced to wear sackcloth and ashes 61, 261; as loyal Royalist 61; successful army career 61; wounded at Worcester 88; captured and imprisoned in Chester 184–5; created Earl of Middleton 261; escapes from the Tower and joins Charles in exile 261; rewarded by Charles after the Restoration 261

  Mildmay, Sir Anthony 31

  Milnes, Lieutenant Robert 185

  Milton, John 42
, 43, 73

  Modena, Francesco I d’Este, Duke of 45

  Monck, Lt Gen George 82–3, 190–1

  Montgomery, Maj Gen Robert 88

  Montrose, James, 1st Marquess of 49, 54–5, 56–8, 66, 262

  Morley, Colonel Herbert 225

  Morosini, Michiel 69–70, 94

  Morpeth 188

  Moseley Hall, Staffordshire 123–5, 129, 143–9, 150–60, 241, 256

  Mosstroopers 59

  Motteville, Madame de 18

  Murray, Anne 35–6

  Nantwich 71

  Naseby, battle of (1645) 7, 44, 49, 76, 123

  Naseby (ship, later Royal Charles) xvi

  National League and Covenant 47, 51–3, 59

  Nedham, Marchamont 42, 43, 72, 179

  Netherlands 16, 17–18, 28, 31, 52, 54, 55, 93

  New England 243

  New Hampshire 190

  New Haven, Connecticut 72

  New Model Army 6, 20, 52, 60, 62, 70, 73, 76, 77, 83, 87, 104, 171, 178, 185, 198

  Newcastle 48

  Newport, Shropshire 81, 181, 184

  Nicholas, Sir Edward 14, 70, 92, 93

  Northcot 121

  Northumberland, Algernon Percy, 10th Earl of 29, 32–3, 37

  Northumberland, Anne Cecil, Countess of 29

  Northwich 71

  Norton, Ellen 168–9, 170, 172

  Norton, George 168–9, 258

  Oak Apple Day (29 May) 251, 255

  Oatlands Palace, Surrey 27

  Orange, Frederick Henry, Prince of 32

  Order of the Oak Tree 251, 255

  Orléans, Gaston, Duke of 45, 237

  Ormonde, James Butler, 1st Marquess of 52, 55, 238

  Outer Hebrides 65

  Owen, Nicholas ‘Little John’ 125–8 and note

  Oxford 4, 29, 73, 192; New College 73

  Packington Hall, Warwickshire 166

  Paget, William, 5th Baron 165

  Paling, Thomas 155–6

  Paris 55, 93, 233, 237–8, 261

  Parker, Richard 70

  Parliament 8–9, 11, 48, 51, 61, 71, 74, 175, 179, 238, 243, 247

  Paterick, George 250

  Pattingham 119

  Paul VI, Pope 128n

  Pendeford Mill 148

  Penderel, Anne ‘Nan’ 114

  Penderel, George 107–8, 111, 114, 149, 241

  Penderel, Humphrey: provides Charles with rustic headgear 109; scouts for news to warn Charles of any danger 111; accompanies Charles to Hobbal Grange 114; interrogated on whereabouts of Charles 139–40; lends Charles his mill horse 147; comment on slowness of horse carrying the weight of three kingdoms 148, 254; bids Charles farewell at Moseley Hall 149; complains about his pension 255; serves Queen Catherine as footman 255

  Penderel, Jane 108, 114

  Penderel, Joan 81, 108, 136–7, 139, 254–5

  Penderel, John 241; guides and assists Wilmot and his servant Robert Swan 117; helps Wilmot find sanctuary at Moseley Hall 119–25; takes messages between Moseley, Whiteladies and Boscobel 143–7; accompanies Charles to Moseley Hall 148–9, 151; notices troop of Parliamentary cavalry passing through Moseley village 157; discusses arrangements for Charles’s journey with Jane Lane 164; bids farewell to Charles 165

  Penderel, Mary 114

  Penderel, Richard ‘Trusty Richard’ 241; introduced to Charles 108; cuts Charles’s hair 109; leads Charles out of Whiteladies by a secret door 111, 129; discusses Charles’s escape to London 112, 113–14; accompanies Charles to Hobbal Grange 114; remains to serve and protect Charles 117; cross-country trek with Charles towards Wales 129–31; chased by angry miller 130–1; takes refuge in Wolfe’s home 131–3; agrees to return home 133; returns to Boscobel House 136; supplies Charles with wine at Boscobel 139; buys provisions for Charles 143; accompanies Charles to Moseley Hall 148, 151; rewarded by Charles at Restoration 254; death and burial 254

  Penderel, Thomas 107n

  Penderel, William 241, 254; tends to Derby and Roscarrock’s wounds 81, 108; lends Charles clothes 109; scouts for news to warn Charles of any danger 111; remains to serve and protect Charles 117; informs Charles that Careless also hiding at Boscobel 137; keeps watch below the Boscobel oak 139; shaves and trims Charles’s hair 139; clandestinely kills a sheep for Charles to eat 142

  Penruddock, Colonel John 251

  Penshurst Place, Kent 30

  Pepys, Samuel: fellow passenger with Charles aboard the Royal Charles xvi; resolves to trace history of Charles’s time on the run xvi–xviii; witnesses beheading of King Charles I xvii; on Christabella Wyndham 6; on George Carteret 11; shoots arrow at Kingsland 186; told of Charles’s reception in Rouen 232–3; notes that Humphrey Penderel is footman for Queen Catherine 255; witnesses death of Thomas Harrison 262; reckons Frances Stuart the most beautiful woman he had ever seen 264–5; death of xviii–xix

  Perry Wood 178

  Perth 62

  Peter, Hugh 193

  Peters, Harry 194–5, 200–1, 204, 219, 221, 222

  Petre, John 165, 167

  Petre, Withy Lane 165, 167

  Philiphaugh, battle of (1645) 49, 66

  Philips, Christopher 219

  Phillips, Colonel Robert: testimony of Charles’s escape from England xix; allowed to return home after Worcester 204; promises to do all he can to help Charles 204–5; attempts to find a ship for Charles 205–6; recommends Lawrence Hyde as an ally 208; sent to inform Charles of new plan 217; stays with Katherine Hyde at Heale House 220, 222; spends day with Charles at Stonehenge 221–2; transmits plan to Dr Henchman in Salisbury 222; accompanies Charles to Brighton 223–7; dispatched to London to arrange finance 227; arrested and committed to the Tower 258; rewarded by Charles after the Restoration 258–9

  Phoenix (ship) 8

  Pilsdon House, Dorset 201

  Pitscottie, Colonel Colin 87

  Plucknell, Thomas 197

  Plymouth 245

  Poole 217, 222, 231, 232

  Pope, John 169–71

  Popish Plot (1678) 256

  Powick Bridge 85, 118

  Presbyterians, Presbyterianism 23, 44, 48, 76

  Preston, battle of (1648) 20, 51, 61, 76, 261

  Preston, Sir John 155–6

  Preston family 155–6

  Pride, Colonel Thomas 87

  priest holes 125–9, 142–3, 150, 152, 154, 222

  priest-catchers 158–9

  printing 42; see also named news-sheets

  printing presses 242–3

  Privy Council 14

  Purefoy, Colonel William 242

  Puritans, Puritanism 23, 44, 71, 175

  Quarles, John 30–1; Regale lectum miseriae 31

  Quinton 166

  Racton 208, 210–11

  Raleigh, Sir Walter 10

  Redbridge 206, 208

  regicides 39–40, 72, 81, 93, 95, 186, 198, 241, 252, 261

  Retz, Jean François Paul de Gondi, Cardinal de 238

  Reymes, Bullen 171

  Reynolds, Francis 155–6, 159, 256

  Richmond Island, New England 245–6

  Richmond, James Stewart, 1st Duke of 265

  Rider, Margaret 169

  Rishton, William 215

  Roch Castle 247

  Rochester, 1st Earl of see Wilmot, Lord Henry

  Rochester, John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of 253 and note, 267

  Roman Catholics 44, 46, 75, 104–5, 121, 125, 157, 175

  Roscarrock, Col Edward 81, 106

  Rotterdam 18

  Rouen 227, 231, 232–3, 262

  Rowe, Owen 72

  Rowley Regis 166

  Royal Charles (ship) 58

  Royal Escape (ship, formerly Surprise) 259–60

  Royal Horse Guards 259

  Royal Oak pubs xxi

  Royal Seal 41

  Royalists 14, 23; in exile 18; disbelief and despair at capture of the king 21; use Elizabeth’s death for propaganda purposes 31–2; and question of manpower to challenge Parliament 43; in Ireland 52; disabling of 73; defeated
at Worcester 80–91, 93; vigorously hunted and killed after Worcester 178–93, 191–2; horses and weapons taken and given to captors 191; celebrate deliverance of Charles 243–6

  Rupert, Prince 19, 66, 85

  St-Germain-en-Laye 14, 52

  St Mary’s, Isles of Scilly 8–9

  Salisbury 204, 208, 221, 222, 251; Coventry Arms inn 204; Cathedral Close 205

  Salisbury Plain 221

  Salmon, Lt Col Edward 69

  Sandbourne, John 233

  Scarburgh, Dr Charles 275

  Scone 62

  Scotland: Church and religion in 46–51; and the Covenanters 47–53; and the National Covenant 47, 52–3; collision between king and Kirk 48–51; civil war in 49; Prince Charles proclaimed king following execution of his father 51–3; Charles capitulates to demands from 55–6; fails to evict Cromwell 59–62; Scots totally routed 246

  Scots Foot 71

  Scots prisoners: rely on kindness of people for their food 186–7; sent to Tothill Fields in London 186; separated from English counterparts 186; forced to live in the open 187–8; given basic diet 187; herded through Westminster 187; cruel treatment of each other 188–9; deaths amongst 188, 190; suffer from dysentery and other ills 188; transported to Ireland as forced labourers 188, 190; prevented from to returning to Scotland 189; sent to drain malaria-infested fens of East Anglia 189–90; two thousand transported to the New World and the West Indies 190

  Severn, River 114, 130, 132

  Seymour, Henry 55

  Sherborne, Dorset 171

  Shoreham 216, 217, 222, 227, 230–1, 258

  Shores, John 119

  Shrewsbury 74, 190

  Sidney, Algernon 17

  Sidney, Colonel Robert 18–19

  Skye, Isle of 65

  Sluys 252

  Smart, Thomas 121

  Smith, Gaius 227, 229

  Snead, Richard 81

  Solemn League and Covenant (1643) 48–9, 51

  Southall (priest-catcher) 158–9

  Southampton 205, 208

  Southampton, Thomas Wriothesley, 4th Earl of 226–7

  Spelsbury church, Oxfordshire 252

  spies, agents and informants 42, 63, 65, 83, 103, 179, 247, 251

  Spring Coppice 111, 119

  Stafford 190

  Stamford, Henry Grey, Earl of 241

  Stirling 62

  Stirling Castle 64

  Stone, Captain Henry 129, 135, 166, 240

 

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