England’ in Michael Braddick and John Walter (eds.), Negotiating Power in Early Modern Society: Order, Hierarchy and Subordination in Britain and Ireland (Cambridge, 2001), pp. 63-75.
26.Jeremy Goldberg, ‘The Right to Choose: Women, Consent and Marriage in Late Medieval England’, History Today 58, 2 (2008).
27.Cited by Barbara J. Harris, ‘Power, Profit, and Passion: Mary Tudor, Charles Brandon, and the Arranged Marriage in Early Tudor England’, Feminist Studies 15 (1989), 85.
28.See Byrne, ‘Sexual Deviance’.
29.Gilbert Burnet, The History of the Reformation of the Church of England (A Rhanes for R. Gunne, J. Smith and W. Bruce, 1683, 3 vols.), IV, 71, p. 505.
30. LP, XVI, 1426.
31.Burnet, Reformation, III, 72, p. 130.
32.Roper, Oedipus and the Devil, p. 68.
33.PRO, SP, I, vol. 167, f. 130; LP, XVI, 1320.
34.Roper, Oedipus and the Devil , p. 55.
35.PRO, SP, I, vol. 167, f. 136-137; LP, XVI, 1321. See also LP, XVI, 1400.
36.Angus McLaren, Reproductive Rituals , p. 81; Keith Thomas, Man and the Natural World , p. 39.
37.Annie Tock, ‘Literary Law Enforcement: Gender in Crime Ballads in Early Modern England’, Eastern Illinois University (2 April 2006); available at http://www.eiu.edu/~historia/2004/Literary2.pdf.
38.Breitenberg, ‘Anxious Masculinity’, 378, 389.
39.PRO, SP, I, vol. 167, f. 137; LP, XVI, 1321.
40. The Calendar of the Manuscripts of the Marquis of Bath Preserved at Longleat, Wiltshire Vol. II, pp. 8-9.
41.Anthony Fletcher, Gender, Sex, and Subordination in England 1500-1800 (New Haven and London, 1995), pp. 192-3.
42.L. Leneman, ‘“A Tyrant and Tormentor”: Violence Against Wives in Eighteenth- and Early Nineteenth-Century Scotland’, Continuity and Change 12 (1997), 31.
43. Calendar , pp. 8-9.
44. The Remains of Thomas Cranmer, D.D, Archbishop of Canterbury (Henry Jenkyns, ed., 2 vols., Oxford, 1883), I, pp. 307-10.
45.NA SP 1/167, f. 155.
46.Baldwin Smith, A Tudor Tragedy, p. 54; Denny, Katherine Howard , p. 121.
47.S. Mendelson and P. Crawford, Women in Early Modern England 1550-1720 (Oxford, 1998), p. 65.
48.Warnicke, Wicked Women , p. 56.
49.Hilton, Queens Consort: England’s Medieval Queens , p. 100.
50.Roper, Oedipus and the Devil , p. 61. See also Barstow, Witchcraze, p. 136.
51.See Garthine Walker, ‘Rereading Rape and Sexual Violence in Early Modern England’, Gender & History 10 (2002), 4.
52.Burnet, Reformation , IV, p. 505.
53.Ibid.
54.Ibid, p. 504.
55.Eric Carlson, ‘Courtship in Tudor England’, History Today, 43, 8 (1993).
56.Goldberg, ‘Right to Choose’.
57.Ibid.
58.Henry Swinburne, A Treatise of Spousals, Or Matrimonial Contracts (New York, 1985), pp. 51, 70-3.
59.Walker, ‘Rereading Rape’, 5.
60.James A. Brundage, Law, Sex and Christian Society in Medieval Europe (Chicago, 1987), p. 531.
61.Manon van der Heijden, ‘Women as Victims of Sexual and Domestic Violence in Seventeenth-Century Holland: Criminal Cases of Rape, Incest, and Maltreatment in Rotterdam and Delft’, Journal of Social History 33 (2000), 624-5.
62.Barstow, Witchcraze , p. 132.
63.See http://www.aifs.gov.au/acssa/pubs/seets/rs2/.
64.Burnet, Reformation , IV, 71, p. 505.
65.Baldwin Smith, A Tudor Tragedy , pp. 56-7.
66.Cited by Denny, Katherine Howard , p. 220.
67.Walker, ‘Rereading Rape’, 6.
68.Byrne, ‘Sexual Deviance’.
4) ‘Strange, Restless Years’
1. Hall’s Chronicle , p. 819.
2.Hume, Chronicle of Henry VIII, pp. 72-3.
3.Holinshed , Chronicle.
4. Lords’ Journals, p. 84; Statutes of the Realm, 28 Henry VIII.
5. Hall’s Chronicle , p. 819; Holinshed, Chronicle.
6. Lords’ Journals, Statutes of the Realm, 28 Henry VIII.
7.Wriothesley, Chronicle , p. 70.
8. Life and Letters of Thomas Cromwell, p. 19.
9.Wriothesley, Chronicle , p. 48.
10. LP, X, 1021; XI, 7.
11.Wriothesley, Chronicle , p. 50.
12.Ibid, pp. 53-4.
13.Cottonian MSS., Vespasian, F. xiii, f. 75.
14. House of Howard , p. 188.
15.Wriothesley, Chronicle , pp. 54-5.
16.Ibid, p. 51.
17. Hall’s Chronicle , p.