Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
Historians have not been kind to Henry Rich, earl of Holland. When they have noticed him, it has been to express moral disapproval. William Godwin spoke austerely of his ‘superficial and gaudy levity’; Clarendon imputed mercenary motives for his trimming in the English civil war; other writers have deplored his general unreliability or his frivolity and cowardice; and his career has been magisterially dismissed:
The personal beauty and untimely fate of Holland [have] thrown an interest over his history which neither his capacity nor his conduct would otherwise have justified.
1 Quoted in C[okayne], G. E., The Complete Peerage … (13 vols., London, 1910–1959) VI, 539Google Scholar. See also Godwin, William, History of the Commonwealth of England … (4 vols.,London, 1824–1828), 1, 193Google Scholar; Hyde, Edward, earl of Clarendon, The History of the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England … (3 vols., Oxford, 1702–4), III, 209Google Scholar; Aylmer, G. E., The King's Servants … (London, 1961), pp. 213Google Scholar, 384–5; Wedgwood, C. V., Thomas Wentworth First Earl of Strafford 1593–1641. A Revaluation (London, 1961), pp. 257–8, 289.Google Scholar
2 Calendar of State Papers, Domestic, 1640 (C.S.P.D.), p. 278; Calendar of State Papers, Venetian, 1640–42 (C.S.P. Ven.), p. 247.
3 For the careers of Hamilton and Pembroke, see Dictionary of National Biography, ‘James Hamilton, third Marquis and first Duke of Hamilton’, and ‘Philip Herbert, Earl Montgomery and fourth Earl of Pembroke’. Clarendon's view that Pembroke was really loyal at heart appears to have been based on partiality rather than the facts of his career. On aristocratic faction in 1640–1 and Holland's role at that time, see Brian Manning, ‘The Aristocracy and the Downfall of Charles I’, Politics, Religion and the English Civil War, Manning, (ed.) (London, 1973), pp. 37–80Google Scholar; on peace parties, see e.g. Rowe, Violet A., Henry Vane the Younger (London, 1970)Google Scholar, ch. 2; Pearl, Valerie, ‘The “Royal Independents” in the English Civil War’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 5th series, xviii (1968) 69–96CrossRefGoogle Scholar, and ‘London's Counter-Revolution’, The Interregnum: The Quest for Settlement 1646–1660, G. E. Aylmer (ed.) (Hamden, Conn., 1972), pp. 29–56 (for the political manoeuvres of groups with which Holland was involved either directly or through his family).
4 Hamilton was finally freed by Fairfax's troops in 1646.
5 Zagorin, Perez, The Court and the Country (London, 1969), pp. 33–9Google Scholar and passim; Manning, ‘Aristocracy’, p. 42; Russell, Conrad, ‘Parliament and the King's Finances,’, in Russell, Conrad (ed.) The Origins of the English Civil War (London, 1973), pp. 110–1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
6 Havran, Martin J., Caroline Courtier. The Life of Lord Cottington (London, 1973) chs. 10–12.Google Scholar
7 Historical Manuscripts Commission (H.M.C.) 29: Fourteenth Report, Pt. II, Manuscripts of … the Duke of Portland … (London, 1894), III, 52.Google Scholar
8 Clarendon, 1, 48.
9 Stone, Lawrence, The Crisis of the Aristocracy 1558–1641 (Oxford, 1965), p. 743.Google Scholar
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11 Clarendon, , 1, 49; Wilson, Arthur, The History of Great Britain … (London, 1653) p. 162.Google Scholar
12 C.S.P. Ven. 1623–25, p. 374; Somerset House, Soame fo. 51.
13 On one occasion, according to gossip, ‘after the King had slobbered his mouth’, Rich turned aside and spat. Osborn, Francis, Traditional Memoires on the Reign of King James, in The Works of Francis Osborn … (London, 1673), p. 535Google Scholar; Johnson, George W., Memoirs John Selden (London, 1835), pp. 91–2Google Scholar; The Letters of John Chamberlain, McClure, N. E. (ed.) (Philadelphia, American Philosophical Society, Memoirs, XII, 2 vols., 1939, 1, 14.Google Scholar
14 C.S.P.D. 1611–18, p. 261; Loftie, W. J., Kensington Picturesque & Historical (London, 1888), pp. 60–72; Chamberlain, 1, 346, 516; 11, 30.Google Scholar
15 C.S.P.D. 1619–25, p. 589.
16 C.S.P.D. 1619–18, pp. 441, 494; C.S.P.D. 1625–26, p. 396; Acts ofthe Privy Council 1625–26 (A.P.C.), p. 124; Chamberlain, 11, 612; C.S.P.Ven. 1629–32, p. 264.
17 E.g. sole exchanger and comptroller of foreign bullion, C.S.P.D. 1627–28, pp. 76–7, 168, 189, 198, 359, 379, 383; Aylmer, King's Servants, p. 374; captain and governor of Harwich fort, C.S.P.D. 1627–28, p. 362; C.S.P.D. 1628–29, pp. 8–9, 14, 45, 323, 373, 415. Both grants involved conflict with others who thought their privileges had been infringed.
18 C.S.P.D. 1619–23, pp. 554–5, 562, 589; C.S.P.D. 1623–25, pp. 158, 206–7, 325; C.S.P.D. 1625–26, pp. 192, 299, 579; C.S.P. Ven. 1629–32, pp. 13, 37; Chamberlain, 11, 391; A.P.C. July 1628–April 1629, p. 273; Clarendon, 1, 48.
19 Granger, James, A Biographical History of England … (2 vols. in 4, London, 1769), 1, pt. 2, 366.Google Scholar
20 C.S.P.D. 1627–28, pp. 363, 390–1, 397–8, 400–2, 406, 414, 424–30, 458, 473; C.S.P. Ven. 1626–28, passim.
21 Diary of John Rous, Green, M. A. E. (ed.) (Camden Society, 1856), p. 25Google Scholar; C.S.P.D. 1628–29, p. 267. Holland eventually succeeded in acquiring the constableship of Windsor. Lords' Journals (L.J.), VIII, p. 45.Google Scholar
22 C.S.P.D. Add. 1625–49, pp. 291–7, 382.
23 Ibid. pp. 292–4; C.S.P. Ven. 1628–29, P. 262; The Venetian ambassador commented: ‘The person who seems to be the chief favourite is the Earl of Holland, a great friend of the duke, a man of some forty years old and beloved by the king. He is more given to amours than politics, but only time can show what he is.’
24 C.S.P.D. 1628–29, p. 276. Williams was rapidly forced to withdraw his offer by the displeasure of the king, who wished Montgomery to have the office. Ibid. pp. 277, 311, 317.
25 C.S.P. Ven. 1628–29, pp. 310–11.
26 C.S.P. Ven. 1629–52, pp. 263–4, 271, 276–7, 281; H.M.C. 45: Manuscripts of the Duke of Buccleuch and Queensberry … (London, 1926),III, 346–7; C.S.P.D. 1628–29, p. 310.Google Scholar
27 Aylmer, , King's Servants, p. 132. Holland's brief tenure as master of the horse (September–November, 1628) was recognized as a stop-gap measure while the king used the office as a carrot to persuade Hamilton to live with his wife, Buckingham's niece. D.N.B. ‘Henry Rich, first Earl of Holland’, C.S.P.D. Add. 1625–49, PP. 292–3, 295–6.Google Scholar
28 H.M.C. 55: Manuscripts in Various Collections (London, 1914), vii, 412–13Google Scholar; C.S.P.D. 1603–10, p. 643; C.S.P.D. 1628–29, p. 423. Holland's involvement in the queen's financial affairs dated from her marriage. See e.g. C.S.P.D. 1625–26, p. 265; C.S.P.D. 1628–29, P. 513; C.S.P.D. 1637–38, p. 447; Dalton, Charles, Life and Times of General Sir Edward Cecil, Viscount Wimbledon (2 vols., London, 1885), 11, 367.Google Scholar
29 C.S.P.D. Add. 1625–49, P. 293; Manning, ‘Aristocracy’, pp. 42, 46; Havran, , Cottington, pp. 114–16Google Scholar; John H. Barcroft, ‘Carleton and Buckingham: The Quest for Office’, Early Stuart Studies … Reinmuth, Howard S. Jr, (ed.) (Minneapolis, 1970), pp. 123–4Google Scholar, 130–2, 134; Aylmer, , King's Servants, p. 211.Google Scholar
30 Whitelocke, Bulstrode, Memorials of the English Affairs from the Beginning of the Reign of Charles the First … (4 vols., Oxford, 1853), II, 524–5. Cf. the tenure of Holland's brother Warwick as parliament's lord admiral, when political interest and professional skill combined.Google Scholar
31 See Aylmer, , King's Servants, pp. 346–51 for the conflicting interests of the exponents of ‘thorough’ and the great courtiers.Google Scholar
32 C.S.P. Ven. 1632–56, pp. 263–4, 336–7; The Earl of Strafforde's Letters and Dispatches … Knowler, William (ed.) (2 vols., Dublin, 1740), 1, 463, 467; 11, 124; H.M.C. 45: Buccleuch, III. 374–5–Google Scholar
33 Knowler, 11, 124. See Dietz, Frederick C., English Public Finance 1558–1641 (New York, 1932), pp. 273, 283, for the Crown's relatively low returns and for mitigation of fines.Google Scholar
34 ‘A Relation of a Short Survey of the Western Counties’, in Camden Miscellany xvi (London, 1936), pp. 51–5; see also Knowler, 1, 410.Google Scholar
35 C.S.P.D. Add. 1625–49, P. 415, and Cf. P. 435.
36 H.M.C. 45: Buccleuch III, 347.
37 H.M.C. 55: Var. Coll. VII, p. 401; see also C.S.P. East Indies 1630–34, p. 282.
38 C.S.P.D. 1633–34, pp. 11–15. The occasion of this quarrel was Weston's opening, as ambassador in France, of a packet of Holland's letters, including some from the queen. Holland regarded it as an occasion for drama, demanding that Weston meet him as ‘a cavalier’. The king was particularly angered that Holland proposed to fight an unlawful duel in the king's own garden (namely Spring Gardens), and was not mollified by Holland's defence that he merely wished to issue the challenge there as it was a convenient public place. One's sympathy for Charles in coping with his courtiers increases when one notes that he had not only to disentangle the principals but also their supporters, for Lord Fielding had challenged Holland's friend Goring for impugning Weston's courage. Ibid., and see also C.S.P. Ven. 1632–36, pp. 82, 100, 221–2; H.M.C. 9: Manuscripts of the … Marquess of Salisbury … xxii (London, 1971), 274–5Google Scholar; Howell's Familiar Letters, quoted in Faulkner, Thomas, History and Antiquities of Kensington … (London, 1820), p. 70.Google Scholar
38 H.M.C. 55: Var. Coll. vii, 412–13; C.S.P. Ven. 1636–39, p. 598.
40 Knowler, 11, 156.
41 H.M.C. 77: Manuscripts of … Viscount De L' Isle … vi (London, 1966), 70. As ambassador in Paris and later as suitor for the lord deputyship of Ireland, Leicester stood in need of friends at court.Google Scholar
42 Knowler, 1, 101.
43 Ibid. 11, 124; 1, 479.
44 Chamberlain, 11, 30, 227; Birch, Thomas, The Court and Times of James the First … (2 vols., London, 1848), 11, 120–1Google Scholar, 137; C.S.P.D. 1611–18, p. 400; C.S.P.D. 1619–23, p. 2; D.N.B. ‘ Henry Rich’. For Holland's friendships see e.g. Whitelocke, n, 551: ‘the earl of Holland … was my particular friend, whose memory I honour’, Codrington, Robert, ‘The Life and Death of the Illustrious Robert, Earl of Essex…’, Harleian Miscellany (12 vols., London, 1808–1811), vi, 35.Google Scholar
45 Knowler, 11, 276.
46 E.g. C.S.P. Ven. 1632–36, p. 222.
47 Clarendon, 1, 118; ‘Four Letters of Lord Wentworth, afterwards Earl of Strafford…’, Gardiner, S. R. (ed.), Camden Miscellany vii (London, 1883), 4–5Google Scholar; Knowler, II, 125, 258, 283–4; Wedgwood, , Strafford, p. 243.Google Scholar
48 Knowler, II, 230. Of Wentworth's remark in 1633 that the king should cut off Holland's head, Clarendon questioned whether ‘such an injury were capable of aggravation’. Clarendon, 1, 118. On aristocratic pride and sensitivity over threats to status, see Manning, ‘Aristocracy’, pp. 40–1.
49 Wedgwood, , Strafford, p. 346Google Scholar. Gardiner suggests that Holland would originally have been satisfied by Strafford's loss of office without loss of life, but was persuaded to take a stronger stand. Gardiner, Samuel R., History of England…1603–1642 (10 vols., New York, 1965), ix, 361.Google Scholar
50 Chamberlain, 1, 575–6; Webb, E. A., The Records of St. Bartholomew's Priory …(2 vols., London, 1921), 11, 247.Google Scholar
51 Ibid. 11, 233.
52 It seems likely that, with rising rents until 1642, the amount of ‘improvement’ forecast in 1616 proved conservative. Cf. Stone, Lawrence, Family and Fortune … (Oxford, 1973), pp. 111, 114, on Salisbury's St Martin's Lane property. The parish also produced a steady small income from Bartholomew Fair; in 1629 the net profit was £81.185.3d. Webb, 1,311–12.Google Scholar
53 Ibid. 11, 233; Stone, , Family and Fortune, p. 110Google Scholar; Jonson, Ben, ‘Bartholomew Fair’, The Induction, Complete Plays (2 vols., Everyman edition, London, 1910), 11, 182Google Scholar; H.M. 3: Fourth Report, Pt. 1 (London, 1874), p. 292. The population of the parish had already greatly increased with Lord Rich's development, as is shown by the change from an open to a select vestry in 1607, the parish being ‘much increased by many buildings, [and] the parishioners finding many inconveniences by a disagreeing multitude’. Webb, 11, 390. In 1636 the inhabitants of the parish tried to prevent the setting up of gold and silver works, fearing ‘stench, ill fume, or vapour of lead or smoke or noise of hammers’, but were apparently unable to stop the renting of premises for this purpose. C.S.P.D. 1635–36 P. 157.Google Scholar
54 Stone, , Aristocracy, p. 761Google Scholar; Loftie, , Kensington, pp. 64–9Google Scholar; Dietz, 259; Soame fo. 51; C.S.P. Ven. 1625–25, p. 411. In 1632 Holland's Knollys great-uncle, the earl of Banbury, left him the manor of Cholsey in Berkshire, but although his descendants profited from it Holland himself did not as the widowed countess of Banbury, who had a life interest, outlived him. The Victoria History of the County of Berkshire (4 vols., London, 1906–1924), III, 297–8Google Scholar, C.S.P. 1629–31, p. 199; Calendar of Proceedings of the Committee for Compounding, &cc, 1613–166 Green, M. A. E. (ed.) (5 vols., London, 1889–1892), III, 2011–12.Google Scholar
55 L.J. viii, 44–45; Commons' Journals (C.J.), iv, 380–1Google Scholar; Cooper, J. P., ‘The Fortune of Thomas Wentworth, Earl of Strafford’, Economic History Review, 2nd series, xi (1958), 246.Google Scholar
58 L.J. vii, 45; C.S.P.D. 1628–29, pp. 49, 254, 259.
57 Chamberlain, 11, 491, 625; C.S.P.D. 1623–25, pp. 247, 479; C.S.P.D. 1625–26, pp. 534, 579.
58 Chamberlain, 11, 623. Chamberlain was sceptical of the truth of Buckingham's claim.
59 C.S.P. Ven. 1629–32, p. 205.
60 Cf. the warrant of June, 1628, to pay Holland £2,000 for the king's ‘secret service’ – unspecified – from the duchy of Cornwall revenues. C.S.P.D. 1628–29, p. 171. This may possibly have been the first payment on his 1628 pension.
61 Aylmer, , King's Servants, p. 473,Google Scholar
62 Ibid. p. 339; L.J. VIII, 45; Cooper, ‘Strafford’, p. 246. In 1635 he was apparently paid only ££16. 13s. 4d as Justice in Eyre, C.S.P.D. 1635, p. 80.
63 Keeperships of parks, etc., were not in general highly lucrative; see Aylmer, King's Servants, passim. See also H.M.C. 6: Seventh Report, Pt. 1 (London, 1879), p. 42; C.S.P.D. 1652–53, pp. 420–1.Google Scholar
64 L.J. VIII, 45; H.M.C. 55: Var. Coll. viii (London, 1913), pp. 194–5.Google Scholar
65 See Notestein, Wallace, Relf, Frances Helen, and Simpson, Hartley, Commons Debates 1621 (7 vols., New Haven, 1935), vii, 375Google Scholar, for a partial classification. See also C.S.P.D. 1603–10, pp. 158, 174–5, 342, 483; C.S.P.D. 1611–18, p. 578; C.S.P.D. 1619–23, pp. 61, 509; and Pearl, Valerie, London and the Outbreak of the Puritan Revolution … (Oxford, 1961), pp. 80, 84, for a few examples of the sub-divisions of the office. See C.S.P.D. 1636–37, p. 111, for an example of the jurisdictional difficulties resulting from the multiplicity of grants.Google Scholar
66 The chief source for the ensuing account is Calendar of the Proceedings of the Committee for Advance of Money, 1642–1656, Green, M. A. E. (ed.) (3 vols., London, 1888), 11, 628–31.Google ScholarStone, , Aristocracy, p. 442, assigns Holland another valuable legal sinecure, the Post Fines (fines for licence of concord, pro licentia concordandi,.), but I have found no evidence for this. Stone appears to allot the price and profit cited in 1645 for the Greenwax to the Post Fines, although Holland specifically referred to the Seal Office, L.J. viii, 45, and see also Committee for Advance of Money. 11, 628–30. The Post Fines were part of the Greenwax in its wider sense. They were granted to Lord Knollys (later earl of Banbury) in 1608; in 1625 he and his brother-in-law Thomas Howard, Viscount Andover (later earl of Berkshire), who had held the reversion of the office, were granted a forty-eight year lease. After Banbury's death in 1632 Berkshire was joined by his brother Lord Howard of Escrick; although Stone says Holland had bought the office in 1636, in 1638 Berkshire and Howard were still the farmers of the Post Fines. Thus although it is not impossible that Holland later acquired the office, or that he inherited some interest from his great-uncle Banbury, it seems improbable that he did so, especially as he laid no later claim to the office, nor did sequestrators try to take it from him. C.S.P.D. 1603–10, p. 438; C.S.P.D. 1611–18, pp. 60, 88, 101, 225; C.S.P.D. 1625–26, p. 537; C.S.P.D. 1635–36, p. 167; C.S.P.D. 1637–38, p. 152.Google Scholar
67 Aylmer, , King's Servants, p. 213. Sir Thomas and Lady Stafford had an interest in minimising rather than maximising the debt, as they had ‘forgotten’ to include it among their assets when Sir Thomas first compounded for his delinquency. Committee for Compounding, 11, 1301–2. Lady Stafford's first husband's name is mistakenly given as ‘Peter’, but cf. the index.Google Scholar
68 See note 54 above.
69 Aylmer estimates that by 1656–7, out of the gross yield of £5,000, the net value of the office after deducting standard bureaucratic expenses was £2,345, of which £1,910 was consumed by Holland's ‘heirs, legatees, and creditors’, leaving only £435 net profit for the current managers. Aylmer, , King's Servants, p. 213Google Scholar. Lady Holland was not so impoverished that she was unable to indulge in more building at Holland House. She succeeded, in the years after Holland's death, in salvaging much of the estate from sequestration. Faulkner, , Kensington, pp. 67–8; Committee for Advance of Money, 11, 630; Committee for Compounding, iv, 2935–36.Google Scholar
70 In 1635 Berkshire apparently held some £19,000 for the Post Fines. C.S.P.D. 1635, p. 244. On the value of such cash balances to office–holders, see Ashton, Robert, ‘The Disbursing Official under the Early Stuarts…’, Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research, xxx (1957), 163Google Scholar; Cooper, , ‘Strafford,' pp. 233–4.Google Scholar
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73 Calendar of State Papers Colonial 1574–1640 (C.S.P. Col.), pp. 260, 307; C.S.P.D. 1636–37, p. 312; C.S.P.D. 1637, p. 189; Pearl, London, p. 88.
74 C.S.P.D. 1627–28, p. 403; C.S.P. Ven. 1628–29, p. 459; C.S.P.D. 1631–33, p. 448. He may also have shared with Henrietta Maria a £12,000 fine, of which £10,000 was actually paid, imposed on Sir Giles Alington for marrying his niece. SirPeyton, Edward, The Divine Catastrophe of the Kingly Family of the House of Stuarts … (London, 1731), p. 26; Gardiner, vii, 251–2.Google Scholar
75 C.S.P.D. 1637, pp. 477–8. Cf. the offer to Jermyn in 1641 of £4,000 to favour Leicester over Vane for the Lord Deputyship of Ireland. H.M.C. 77: De L'Isle, vi, 367.
76 H.M.C. 6: Seventh Report, Pt. 1, p. 42; L.J. x, 397, 523–4.
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80 Clarendon, 1, 49; C.S.P. Ven. 1632–36, p. 558. Carlisle's generous provision for his second wife was at the expense of a son whom he disliked. For the Crown's £42,000 debt to Carlisle, see Gardiner, vii, 166.
81 Duke, of Manchester, , Court and Society from Elizabeth to Anne … (2 vols., London, 1864), 1, 330Google Scholar; C.S.P. Ven. 1629–32, p. 37. The only estimate of a lump sum for benefits received by Holland from the Crown appears to refer to this period. Sir Edward Peyton said that in a few years after Buckingham's death Holland had nearly £150,000 from the king. Peyton, scurrilous and unbalanced, does not always inspire confidence, but in any case this estimate is too vague to be helpful as it fails to discriminate between gifts, offices, and other perquisites, and the length of the ‘few Years’ remains unspecified. Peyton, , Divine Catastrophe, p. 26.Google Scholar
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84 Dietz, 258–9.
85 Gardiner, VII, 166. Dietz, 259, mentions two debts totalling £52,800, apparently a little before 1630, so that by 1630 the crown had substantially reduced its indebtedness. L.J. vni, 45; C.S.P.D. 1640, p. 149.
86 Chamberlain, 11, 58; L.J. viii, 45; Aylmer, , King's Servants, p. 221.Google Scholar
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88 Rubens noted that many courtiers could not afford to live as court life demanded, ‘Therefore, public and private affairs are to be sold here for ready money’. Quoted in Gardiner, vii, 105.
89 C.S.P.D. 1641–43, p. 29; C.S.P.D. 1639–40, p. 143; Slingsby, , Diary, pp. 32Google Scholar, 51; Faulkner, , Kensington, p. 68; H.M.C. 77: De L ' lsle, vi, 158.Google Scholar
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91 C.S.P.D. 1640, p. 278; C.S.P. Ven. 1640–42, p. 247.
92 [Wilford, John], Memorials and Characters…(London, 1741), p. 173Google Scholar; Chamberlain, 1, 516; H.M.C. 77: De L'lsle, vi, 94, 158; C.S.P. Ven. 1636–39, pp. 285, 416–17; L.J. vi, 85. On the threat posed by Arminianism to the true, and basically Calvinist, religion see Nicholas Tyacke, ‘Puritanism, Arminianism and Counter-Revolution,’ in Russell, , Origins of the English Civil War, pp. 119–43Google Scholar. For arguments by early seventeenth-century Calvinist Anglicans for obedience and adherence to the Church of England as a true church in spite of its faults, see e.g. Shuckburgh, E. S. (ed.), Two Biographies of William Bedell Bishop of Kilmore (Cambridge, 1902) pp. 215–18Google Scholar, and Grosart, A. B. (ed.), The Complete Works of Richard Sibbes, D.D. (3 vols., Edinburgh, 1862–1867), 1, cxv-vi.Google Scholar
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91 C.S.P.D. 1640, p. 278; C.S.P. Ven. 1640–42, p. 247.
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96 E.g. C.S.P.D. 1628–29, p. 525; C.S.P.D. 1633–34, pp. 269–70, 464.
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102 E.g. C.S.P.D. 1633–34, pp. 189, 209, 458, 464–5; C.S.P.D. 1637, p. 413; Gardiner, VII, 199.
103 C.S.P.D. Add. 1625–49, PP. 432, 435; C.S.P.D. 1633–34, p. 209.
104 Gardiner, vii, 104–5; C.S.P.D. Add. 1625–49, pp. 415, 417, 433–4.
105 C.S.P.D. 1637, p, 308; C.S.P. Col. 1574–1640, pp. 169, 183, 235, 275; Newton, A. P., The Colonising Activities of the English Puritans (New Haven, 1914), p. 61Google Scholar. The future earl of Manchester, Warwick's son-in-law, inherited part of Sir Nathaniel's share in the Company, so the close family connexion continued. C.S.P. Col. 1574–1640. pp. 234, 245; Newton, , op. cit. p. 242.Google Scholar
106 C.S.P. Col. 1574–1640, pp. 108, 131, 146, 260, 290.
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108 On the Scottish campaign, cf. Clarendon, 1, 94–6, and Slingsby, , Diary, p. 36Google Scholar. H.M. 7: Eighth Report, Pt. 11 (London, 1881), pp. 55–6Google Scholar; Whitelocke, , Memorials, 1, 92–4.Google Scholar
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111 For the negotiations and plots of 1640–2, for the important role of the aristocracy in leading the opposition, and for its retention of the methods and approach of court faction, see Manning's enlightening article, ‘The Aristocracy and the Downfall of Charles I’, op. cit.
112 Ibid. pp. 62, 72; Gardiner, ix, 361; C.S.P. Ven. 1640–42, pp. 142, 179, 183, 209, 212; L.J. VIII, 45; H.M.C. 7: Eighth Report, Pt. 11, 56.
113 C.S.P. Ven. 1640–42, p. 222.
114 Gardiner, x, 3; Clarendon, 1, 214, 229, 234. Clarendon commented that ‘the Courtiers of that time look'd upon whatsoever was Denied to them, as Taken from them’, ibid. p. 229. Gardiner's estimate of the value of the barony was more conservative than Clarendon's: ‘a few thousand pounds’. Although Clarendon correctly drew attention to the Forest Courts as an albatross around Holland's neck (see below), I think he exaggerated its importance at this time. This is not to say, however, that Holland was free of apprehension on that score.
115 Manning, ‘Aristocracy’, p. 72.
116 C.S.P. Ven. 1640–42, pp. 141–2.
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122 Clarendon, 11, 256. Clarendon said of Holland, ‘[he] allways consider'd Himself in the first place’.
123 Ibid. II, 281–3.
124 Ibid, 11, 247; The Letters and Journals of Robert Baillie…(3 vols., Edinburgh, 1841–1842), 11 99.Google Scholar
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131 H.M.C. 77: De L'lsle, vi, 560–2, 565.
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135 His enemies saw it as a repetition of the situation in 1643: in [the] low condition of the parliament, [he] revolted again’. Memoirs of Edmund Ludlow (London, 1771), p. 109Google Scholar. On the social threat, cf. the explanation of Willoughby's support of the City presbyterians followed by defection to the king in 1647: he was ‘jealous that monarchy, and consequently degrees and titles of honour, were in danger to be wholly abolished’. Whitelocke, , Memorials, 11, 366.Google Scholar
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143 Clarendon, 11, 280. Although their earlier influence had declined, both Warwick and Manchester remained active and significant figures up to 1649. Manchester's military deficiencies should not obscure his political durability.
144 Clarendon, III, 209.