APPENDIX

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A LIST of some of the printed authorities upon which the present monograph has been based, in addition to the unpublished State papers at Simancas, in the Archives Nationales (Paris), and in the British Museum, etc.:—

Calendar of Spanish State Papers, Elizabeth, Rolls Series, volumes i. to iv., 1892-1897.

Prescott, History of the Reign of Philip II., 3 volumes, London, 1855.

Estudios sobre Felipe II. (translation of articles by G. Maurenbrecher, M. Philippson, and C. Justi, with prologue and appendices by Ricardo Hinojosa), Madrid, 1887, 1 volume.

Cabrera de Cordoba, Felipe II. Rey de EspaÑa, Madrid, 1619.

Leti Gregorio, Vita del Catolico RÉ Filippo II., Cologne, 1679.

PorreÑo, Vida y Hechos del SeÑor Rey Felipe II., el Prudente (new edition), Valladolid, 1863.

Cervero de la Torre, Testimonio autentico y verdadero de las cosas notables que pasaron en la dichosa muerte del Rey Felipe II. (an account of Philip’s death by his Chaplain), Valencia, 1589, 1 volume.

Fernandez MontaÑa, Nueva Luz y verdad historica sobre Felipe II. (an unrestrained panegyric of Philip from a Catholic priest’s point of view), Madrid, 1891, 1 volume.

Fernandez MontaÑa, Mas Luz y verdad historica sobre Felipe II. el Prudente (supplement to the same), Madrid, 1892, 1 volume.

Correspondence de Granvelle (edited by C. Piot), Brussels, 1884.

Papiers d’État de Granvelle (edited by Weiss), Paris, 1843.

H. Forneron, Histoire de Philippe II., Paris, 1880.

Martin Hume, The Year after the Armada (for accounts of Philip’s marriage, the English attack on Portugal, the social condition of Spain, etc.), London, 1896, 1 volume.

Documentos ineditos para la historia de EspaÑa, Madrid, in progress. (A large number of these volumes contain valuable papers referring to the reign of Philip II.)

Flores, Reinas Catolicas, Madrid, 1770 (an account of the Queens of Spain).

Philippson, Ein Ministerium unter Philipp II., Berlin, 1895 (an account of Granvelle’s ministry in Spain, 1579-1586).

Gachard, Correspondence de Philip II., Brussels (correspondence mainly on Flemish affairs).

Gachard, Correspondence de Philippe II. avec ses filles, Paris, 1884, 1 volume (familiar letters from the king to his two children in 1580-1581).

M. la Fuente, Historia General de EspaÑa, Madrid, 1885.

Strada, Histoire de la Guerre de Flandre, Brussels, 1712, 3 volumes.

Muro, Gaspar, La Princesa de Eboli, Madrid, 1877, 1 volume (with valuable preface by SeÑor Canovas de Castillo).

Perez Antonio, Relaciones, etc., Geneva, 1649, 1 volume.

Mignet, Antonio Perez et Philippe II., Paris, 1881.

Llorente, Histoire critique de l’Inquisition, Paris, 1817.

Fernandez Duro, Estudios historicos del Reinado de Felipe II., Madrid, 1890 (an account of the disaster of Los Gelves, etc.).

Fernandez Duro, La Armada Invencible, 2 volumes, Madrid, 1885 (a Spanish account of the Armada).

Baumstark, Philippe II. Roi d’Espagne (French translation by G. Kurth), LiÈge, 1877 (German Catholic view of the king).

Du Prat, Elizabeth de Valois, Paris, 1850 (Life of Philip’s third wife).

Ranke, Zur Geschichte des Don Carlos (in the “Wiener JahrbÜchen der Literatur,” vol. xlvi., gives all the early relations about Don Carlos), Vienna, 1829.

Schmidt, Epochen und Katastrophen: Don Carlos und Philipp II., Berlin, 1864 (against Philip).

Alberi, Relazioni degli Ambasciatori Veneti, 15 volumes, Firenze, 1839-1863.

V. la Fuente, Historia eclesiastica de EspaÑa, Madrid, 1874. Calendars of Venetian State Papers, Rolls Series, in progress.

Sepulveda, De Rebus Gestis Philippi II., Opera, vol. ii., Madrid, 1780.

Motley, The Rise of the Dutch Republic, London, 1859.

Gachard, Don Carlos et Philippe II., Brussels, 1863.

Campana, Vita del catolico Don Filippo secondo, con le guerre dei suoi tempi (Vicenza, 1605).

Calderon de la Barca, J. M., Gloriosa defensa de Malta, Madrid, 1796 (best account of the siege of Malta).

Morel Fatio, L’Espagne au 16me et 17me SiÈcles (accounts of Madrid, letters from Don Juan, etc.), Paris, 1878.

Mendoza, Guerra de Granada, Valencia, 1795 (contemporary account of the Morisco war).

THE END
Printed by R. & R. Clark, Limited, Edinburgh.

FOOTNOTES:

[1] The bull is printed in full for the first time in DÖllinger’s BeitrÄge.

[2] The destination of Drake was kept so secret that the first hint that he might attack Cadiz was only made by Stafford, the English ambassador in Paris (who was a traitor in Philip’s pay), to Mendoza on April 9. He told Mendoza that not a living soul but the queen and Cecil really knew what the design was, the lord admiral himself being kept in the dark, “as the queen considered him a frank-spoken man.” It was only by chance hints that Stafford surmised that Cadiz might be the destination. In the letter by which Philip conveyed the news of Drake’s ravages in Cadiz to Mendoza he says that he grieves not so much for the actual harm done, as for the daring insolence of the thing.

[3] Immediately after Drake had sailed from Plymouth, AndrÉ de Loo arrived in London with a peaceful proposal from Farnese, and the queen was much distressed that her efforts to recall Drake were ineffectual.

[4] This evidence will be found printed at length in the fourth volume of the Calendar of Spanish State Papers of Elizabeth now (August 1897) in the press.

Typographical errors corrected by the etext transcriber:
arrear=> arrears {pg 56}
the investure from the new pope=> the investure from the new pope {pg 165}






                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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