Anne Boleyn. Her Life as told by Lancelot de Carle's 1536 Letter.

In 1536, two weeks after the execution of Anne Boleyn, her brother George and four others, Lancelot du Carle, wrote an extraordinary letter that described Anne's life, and her trial and execution, to which he was a witness. This book presents a new translation of that letter, with additional material from other contemporary sources such as Letters, Hall's and Wriothesley's Chronicles, the pamphlets of Wynkyn the Worde, the Memorial of George Constantyne, the Portuguese Letter and the Baga de Secrets, all of which are provided in Appendices.

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Strype Ecclesiastical Memorials

Strype Ecclesiastical Memorials is in Georgian Books.

Strype Ecclesiastical Memorials Volume 1

Strype Ecclesiastical Memorials Volume 1 Part 1

Strype Ecclesiastical Memorials Volume 3

Strype Ecclesiastical Memorials Volume 3 Chapter 28

The authors he is beholden to for assisting him with the materials of his history, are four especially: the first is, Patten's Account of the Expedition into Scotland, by the Duke of Somerset, in the first year of the king (which author is transcribed into Hollingshed, whence, I suppose, he had it), and that is the reason he is so large and particular in that affair: but that author assists him no farther than where that expedition ended. His second assistant is HoUingshed's History, which he often transcribes, and sometimes mends the speeches which he meets with there, by his own fancy and additions. His third author is King Edward himself, in his excellent Journal, which, it seems, he had the perusal of by the favour of Sir Robert Cotton; and so he acknowledges: but this Journal containing but short and imperfect notices of things that fell out, our author hath taken too much liberty sometimes, to fill up and add unto them by his own mere conjectures, confidently related as matters of truth, which yet sometimes prove mistakes; and where the Journal is at an end (for it concludes in November, 1552) his history is well near ended too, though there were eight months between that and the king's death. The fourth author he makes use of, is Nicolas Sanders, "De Schism. Anglicano;" a most profligate fellow, a very slave to the Roman see, and a sworn enemy to his own country, caring not what he writ, if it might but throw reproach and dirt enough upon the reforming kings and princes, the reformers and the reformation. From this man he ventures to take some things that he sets down in his book, scurrilous and false: but as for records, registers, manuscript letters, to improve or justify his history, and to present his readers with some new things, and unknown before, he offers nothing else.