In a letter of 19 July 1599 to Essex, Elizabeth wrote: "For what can be more true if things be rightly examined than that your two month's journey has brought in never a capital rebel against whom it had been worthy to have adventured one thousand men" | McCluskey, Peter, Elizabeth: The Queen Mother, CBC News, retrieved 1 May 2009 |
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A Patent of Monopoly gave the holder control over an aspect of trade or manufacture | : Preserved in a Ms |
2001 , United States foreign policy in the interwar period, 1918—1941, Greenwood, p.
20Barton, Fiona 3 February 2002 , Queen Mother too ill to visit her husband's grave, Mail on Sunday, retrieved 30 August 2013• Letter from George VI to Winston Churchill in which the King says his family shared his view, quoted by Howarth, p | , Calendar of State Papers Relating to English Affairs in the Archives of Venice, Volume 9: 1592—1603 1897 , 562—570 |
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"The wives of Wycombe passed cake and wafers to her until her litter became so burdened that she had to beg them to stop | Retrieved on 28 May 2016 |
Letter from Elizabeth to Lady Strathmore, 1 November 1924, quoted in Shawcross, p.
21Burgess, Major Colin 2006 , Behind Palace Doors: My Service as the Queen Mother's Equerry, John Blake Publishing, p | , FSA 1978 [1950], Boutell's Heraldry Revised ed |
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Susan Doran, "Juno Versus Diana: The Treatment of Elizabeth I's Marriage in Plays and Entertainments, 1561—1581," Historical Journal 38 1995 : 257—74 in JSTOR• In his preface to the 1952 reprint of Queen Elizabeth I, J | Letter to Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, 10 February 1586, delivered by Sir |
Pinches, John Harvey; Pinches, Rosemary 1974 , The Royal Heraldry of England, Heraldry Today, Slough, Buckinghamshire: Hollen Street Press, p.
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