Constituency | Dates |
---|---|
Devizes | 1626, 1628 |
Midhurst | 1640 (Apr.) |
Boroughbridge | 1661 – 13 July 1673 |
Household: sec. to James Ley†, 1st earl of Marlborough (ld. treas.), bef. 20 Apr. 1625-Mar. 1629.6E404/234; CSP Dom. 1625–49, p. 722.
Civic: burgess, Devizes 1626; member of the twelve, 1627–d.7Wilts. RO, G20/1/17, ff. 40, 56.
Local: jt. recvr. of recusancy forfeitures, Glos., Essex 22 Sept. 1628.8CSP Dom. 1628–9, p. 334. Commr. sewers, Deeping and Gt. Level 26 Nov. 1629-aft. Dec. 1641;9C181/4, ff. 31, 94v; C181/5, ff. 11, 215; Lincs. RO, Spalding Sewers/449/3–5. Lincs., Lincoln and Newark hundred 26 Nov. 1629-aft. Aug. 1639;10C181/4, ff. 41, 156; C181/5, f. 149v. East, West and Wildmore Fens, Lincs. 27 Mar. 1630-aft. Mar. 1636;11C181/4, ff. 46, 149; C181/5, f. 42v. Holland Fen 16 Mar. 1637;12C181/4, f. 66v. Mdx. and Westminster 27 May 1664–d.13C181/7, pp. 253, 632. Recvr.-gen. Mdx., Essex, Herts., London 1637.14T56/7, pp. 7–8; PSO5/5, unfol.; C66/2390/3; CSP Dom. 1625–6, p. 567. Commr. examining bailiwick of St James, ?Oct. 1640;15CSP Dom. 1640–1, p. 208. commr. survey (roy.), Bewdley Park, Worcs. 11 Mar. 1643; Shotover and Stowood forests, Oxon. 18, 27 May 1643;16Docquets of Letters Patent ed. Black, 18, 38, 42. rebels’ estates (roy.), Hants 14 Mar. 1644; sequestrations and recvr.-gen. (roy.), Glos., Wilts., Hants, Som., Dorset 1644–5;17Som. RO, DD/WHb/30; Docquets of Letters Patent, ed. Black, 167; Wilts. RO, 413/501; CCC, 950; HMC Pepys, 203. corporations, Yorks. 1662–3;18HMC 8th Rep. 275a; SR. subsidy, Westminster 1663; assessment, 1664, 1672; Surr. 1664, 1672.19SR. J.p. Surr. Feb. 1665–d.20C231/7, p. 252.
Court: gent of privy chamber, extraordinary, 4 Oct. 1632; in ordinary by Feb. 1639-aft. 1641.21LC5/132, p. 308; LC3/1, unfol.; CSP Dom. 1638–9, p. 419. Sec. to prince of Wales, 1645–9.22Clarendon, Hist. iv. 22; v. 323; SP2/54, f. 3.
Mercantile: jt. projector for drainage, Holland Fen 30 Apr. 1633.23CSP Dom. 1633–4, p. 35. Commr. compounding with tobacco planters, ?1634, 21 Apr. 1636;24CSP Dom. 1634–5, 395; 1635–6, p. 377. preventing export of butter, Feb. 1636;25CSP Dom. 1635–6, pp. 240, 250. provision of victuals for army, 13 Mar. 1639.26Coventry Docquets, 88.
Military: jt. commry. royal army, Mar. 1639.27CSP Dom. 1638–9, p. 556.
Central: recvr. of recusancy forfeitures (south) by May 1639–1646, 1660–d.28T56/8, p. 196; C66/2427/19; CSP Dom. 1639, p. 119; 1640, p. 451; 1640–1, pp. 114, 513; 1641–3, pp. 23, 57; CTB i. 22. Surveyor and woodward-gen. to Henrietta Maria, c.1638–46, by 19 Jan. 1661–1669;29CSP Dom. 1638–9, p. 273; 1640–1, pp. 547, 551; 1641–3, p. 324; 1660–1, p. 478; CCSP v. 74; CTB i. 183. treas. and recvr.-gen. 1671–d.30CTB iii. 867, 882. Clerk of pleas, exch. (roy.) bef. Dec. 1642;31SP16/493, f. 132. writer of tallies and auditor of receipt (roy.), 11 Aug. 1643,32Docquets of Letters Patent ed. Black, 348. Oct. 1643–46, 1662–d.33CSP Dom. 1641–3, pp. 494, 498; Exchequer Officeholders (L. and I. Soc. spec. ser. xviii), 208; CTB i. 395; E403/2525, ff. 62v-65. Sec. of state (in exile) by Mar. 1649-Feb. 1652.34CCSP ii. 9; Clarendon, Hist. v. 323; HMC Pepys, 255; Add. 37047, ff. 1–2. PC, 14 May 1649-Jan. 1652, 3 July 1672–d.35PC2/54, f. 3; Nicholas Pprs. i. 128; Clarendon, Hist. v. 2; CSP Dom. 1672, p. 313. Recvr. Princess Henrietta, 1661.36CTB i. 183. Jt. kpr. Somerset House 1664–d.37CSP Dom. 1663–4, p. 505.
Likenesses: oil on canvas, P. Lely;42NT, Belton House. oil on canvas, attrib. J. Huysmans.43NPG.
Robert Long, the scion of one of the most prominent and wealthy gentry families in Wiltshire, entered Lincoln’s Inn in 1619 with prominent patrons, Robert Mason† and Edward Sherfield.45LI, Admiss. Bk. 5, f. 34v. Before being called to the bar, he became secretary to his kinsman, James Ley†, 1st earl of Marlborough, who was then lord treasurer.46CB. Through Marlborough, in 1626 and 1628 Long was elected to Parliament as Member for Devizes, and in the meantime acquired reversions to lucrative financial positions.47CSP Dom. 1625-6, p. 567; 1627-8, pp. 293, 299, 302, 314; 1628-9, p. 181; HP Commons 1604-1629; PSO5/5, unfol.; C66/2390/3; C66/2427/19; T56/8, p. 196.
Long remained at court after the death of Marlborough in 1629. In 1630 he received a royal patent as an undertaker of drainage of Lincolnshire fens, with Robert Bertie, 1st earl of Lindsey (lord great chamberlain), Sir William Killigrew† (vice-chamberlain to the queen) and Francis Russell†, 4th earl of Bedford.48C181/4, ff. 31, 41; CSP Dom. 1629-31, p. 426; 1631-3, pp. 405, 534; 1635, p. 78; 1635-6, p. 26; 1636-7, p. 258; 1637, pp. 184, 380, 435, 477; 1637-8, pp. 56, 151, 522; 1638-9, p. 67; 1639-40, pp. 49, 198, 451; 1640, pp. 60, 87; 1640-1, p. 284. Long was among a group of courtiers that was closely involved in this and similar fen drainage projects during the 1630s.49Lindley, Fenland Riots, 46-7, 48, 50, 54, 55. He became a gentleman of the privy chamber in 1632, by 1633 he was being styled as a ‘servant’ of Charles I, and in 1638 he was appointed surveyor and woodward general to Queen Henrietta Maria.50LC5/132, p. 308; LC3/1, unfol.; Strafforde Letters, ii. 149, 152; CSP Dom. 1633-4, p. 35; 1638-9, pp. 273, 419. As a prominent courtier, in February 1639 Long was summoned to attend the king at York with arms, ‘after the fashion of a cuirassier’, and was appointed joint commissary for the army, although he was quickly replaced because of his commitments to fen drainage.51CSP Dom. 1638-9, pp. 419, 556, 572, 617. In particular, Long was involved in defending Lindsey’s project from critics in matters of law.52CSP Dom. 1638-9, p. 637; SP16/416.
Long was returned to Parliament in spring 1640 as burgess for Midhurst in Sussex, a constituency to which he had no prior attachment. On the face of it, his office as a collector of recusancy fines should have rendered him unacceptable to the Catholic Browne family, Viscounts Montagu of Cowdray, whose influence had been strong earlier in the century, so either he had been unusually sympathetic to them or his candidacy was promoted by an alternative court interest.53HP Commons 1604-1629. Long was nominated to the committee for privileges on 16 April, but otherwise made no recorded impression on the House.54CJ ii. 4a. His main aim may have been to protect the interest of the fen drainage projectors from criticism he was informed would surface in the Commons.55CSP Dom. 1640, pp. 34, 41, 76.
This threat did not materialise until the early weeks of the Long Parliament, when Long was among those specifically mentioned by petitioners from the Fens to the Commons.56CSP Dom. 1640-1, pp. 308-10, 316, 451. But Long was not a Member of this Parliament, although it is unclear whether he had sought re-election. His position at court enabled him to remain influential, not least during the discussions over new political appointments in the early months of 1641. In particular, he lobbied for Robert Sidney†, 2nd earl of Leicester, to become lord lieutenant of Ireland. Sir John Temple opined that Henry Jermyn*, the most influential member of the queen’s circle, took counsel ‘only with Long’.57HMC De L’Isle and Dudley, vi. 360, 362, 366-7, 369-70, 375-6, 378-9, 382-4, 386-7, 391, 396.
Long remained a close adviser of the queen during the civil wars.58Bodl. Nalson XIII, ff. 56-9; CSP Dom. 1641-3, p. 187. In 1643 he was appointed to office in the exchequer at Oxford but he spent much of his time as an administrator with the prince of Wales in the royalist army.59CSP Dom. 1641-3, pp. 494, 498; Bodl. Clarendon 26, ff. 72, 190; CCSP i. 289, 297; Add. 37047, f. 189v; CCC 950. With a pass issued on 1 March 1646, Long followed the prince of Wales into exile, and by May, when they were in Paris, he had become his secretary.60Stowe 184, f. 213; CCSP i. 315, 324; Bodl. Tanner 59, f. 641; Carte 130, f. 246; Add. 18982, ff. 119, 126; Clarendon, Hist. iv. 226. As an ally of Lords Jermyn and Colepeper (Sir John Culpeper*), Long attracted criticism from rival royalist figures, particularly Edward Hyde*, who saw him as one of the most enthusiastic supporters of a policy of alliance with the Scots.61Clarendon, Hist. iv. 341; HMC Pepys, 224, 228, 231-41, 246-7, 250-61, 272-8, 282, 284, 286-93. Long and Culpeper were suspected by some of corruption, although even Hyde, who noted that Long was ‘thought to love money too well’, suspected that they were not as guilty as was claimed.62Clarendon, Hist. iv. 372-3, 415.
By February or March 1649 Long was Charles’s secretary of state at The Hague and he became a member of the privy council.63Add. 18982, ff. 200-1; CCSP ii. 9; HMC Pepys, 255; Add. 37047, ff. 1-2.; Bodl. Carte 130, ff. 81-2, 91-3, 126-34, 144; Nicholas Pprs. i. 128, 130-1; Clarendon, Hist. v. 2. Travelling with the exiled court in 1649 and 1650, he was a leading figure in the ‘Louvre’ group, who surrounded the queen.64CCSP ii. 14; Nicholas Pprs. i. 261; Add. 30305, f. 146; CSP Dom. 1650, p. 88; PC2/54, ff. 5-13. Dominant in 1649, they were prepared to make alliances with the Scots and their English Presbyterian allies, rather than rely on English cavalier uprisings.65Underdown, Royalist Conspiracy, 10, 32; Nicholas Pprs. i. 135, 151-2; HMC De L’Isle and Dudley, vi. 476. Frequently disparaged by Hyde and Sir Edward Nicholas, Long was styled Jermyn’s ‘spy’.66Nicholas Pprs. i. 149; CCSP ii. 46, 55. Nicholas even accused Long of being an atheist, because he was reported to have said that ‘honour and conscience are bugbears’.67Nicholas Pprs. i. 156, 172.
Long accompanied Charles to Scotland in June 1650.68CCSP ii. 32, 30; Add. 15858, ff. 58, 60; Clarendon, Hist., v. 134. Opposed to making substantial concessions to the Covenanters, Long was among the king’s counsellors responsible for ‘the Start’, the plan to break the influence of Archibald Campbell, 1st marquess of Argyll, and the kirk.69Bodl. Carte 130, ff. 126-34, 179-80. As a result, in the autumn the Scots ordered him to leave.70CCSP ii. 69, 77, 85; Clarendon, Hist. v. 134; CSP Dom. 1650, p. 321. By June 1651 he was living in Rouen, from where he moved to Amsterdam.71Nicholas Pprs. i. 206-8, 255; Add. 4162, f. 208. Before the end of the year he was back in Paris.72Nicholas Pprs. i. 263; Clarendon, Hist. v. 212; Harl. 6852, f. 351; Bodl. Carte 130, f. 210; CCSP ii. 113. Fears of a resurgence in the influence of the Louvre group may have prompted the orchestration of accusations levelled against him in January 1652 by Colonel Edward Wogan, a former parliamentarian who claimed that in 1646 Long had been in treasonable correspondence with Parliament which had encouraged General Sir Thomas Fairfax* to attack Torrington.73CCSP ii. 115; Bodl. Clarendon 42, f. 280; Nicholas Pprs. i. 285. Long wrote a detailed defence and may have fought Wogan in a duel, but although found not guilty, in February 1652 he was removed as secretary of state.74CCSP ii. 12, 115-6, 118-23, 125; Bodl. Clarendon 42, ff. 281, 283, 287-304, 307-13v, 335, 357-61, 379-81, 398;400-2, 404r-v; 43, f. 23; Carte 130, ff. 175v, 181, 189-95, 244-56v; Add. 37047, f. 185-91, 193, 195-203v. That spring he was compromised further by the discovery that a trunk of papers which he had left at Jersey had fallen into the hands of the Rump regime.75CCSP ii. 124-7; Bodl. Clarendon 43, ff. 15, 17, 18r-v, 31; HMC Pepys, 294-307; Nicholas Pprs. i. 288, 290; Add. 37047, ff. 204-5, 207; Stowe 184, ff. 189-223v. Long removed to Holland, from where he sought to regain his position as secretary, viewing Hyde and ‘his cabal’ as his chief obstacle.76CCSP ii. 214; Clarendon, Hist. v. 323-4; Add. 37047, ff. 216, 231-2, 235-6v. In 1653 he schemed with Sir Richard Grenville and Henry Jermyn to undermine Hyde by circulating rumours of treacherous correspondence, but in January 1654 the case against Hyde was dismissed and Long failed to regain the king’s favour.77CCSP ii. 231, 248, 259, 286, 288-9, 299; Bodl. Carte 130, ff. 175-6, 182, 184, 187, 197, 200, 202-4; CSP Dom. 1653-4, pp. 359, 365; Nicholas Pprs. ii. 35, 39, 45, 47, 49-51, 53-5, 58-9; Clarendon, Hist. v. 323-6, 329; Add. 37047, ff. 224-32; Eg. 2534, ff. 155-59, 162-63v; Add. 37047, ff. 221-2v.
Long’s estates in Wiltshire and Yorkshire had been sold by the treason trustees, but his enforced exile from the court of Charles II may have prompted his return to England in or before June 1654.78CCC 3293; CCSP ii. 379. Shortly afterwards rumours emerged that he had provided information which foiled a royalist plot.79TSP, ii. 395. Probably unwittingly, he revealed to Colonel Joseph Bampfield, a spy employed by John Thurloe*, intelligence valuable to the protectorate. Following Long’s return to France in 1655, Bampfield informed Thurloe that he could make Long ‘useful to your service’.80Nicholas Pprs. ii. 315; TSP iv. 43, 51, 194-6. Thereafter, however, Long appears in the record only in May 1659, when at Paris, and the following December, at Rouen.81Nicholas Pprs. iv. 145; Bodl. Carte 130, f. 217.
Long returned to England permanently at the Restoration. Resuming his offices in the exchequer and the queen’s court, he lived at Whitehall.82CCSP iv. 676; Bodl. Clarendon 72, ff. 25-6; CSP Dom. 1660-1, p. 478; CTB i. 183; iii. 867, 882. He was returned for Boroughbridge to the Cavalier Parliament.83HP Commons 1660-1690. At his death on 13 July 1673 he left an estate worth over £2,600 per annum. Being unmarried, his chief heir was his nephew, Sir James Long†, elected to Parliament four times for Malmesbury from 1679.84C33/246, f. 714; PROB11/341/54; CB; HP Commons 1660-1690.
- 1. Bodl. Carte 130, f. 117.
- 2. Wilts. Vis. Peds. 1623 (Harl. Soc. cv, cvi), 118; Misc. Gen. et Her. new ser. iii. 58.
- 3. L. Inn, Admiss. Bk. 5, f. 34v; LI Black Bks., ii. 270..
- 4. C231/7, p. 186.
- 5. CB; Regs. of St Peter, Westminster ed. J.L. Chester (Harl. Soc. x), 181.
- 6. E404/234; CSP Dom. 1625–49, p. 722.
- 7. Wilts. RO, G20/1/17, ff. 40, 56.
- 8. CSP Dom. 1628–9, p. 334.
- 9. C181/4, ff. 31, 94v; C181/5, ff. 11, 215; Lincs. RO, Spalding Sewers/449/3–5.
- 10. C181/4, ff. 41, 156; C181/5, f. 149v.
- 11. C181/4, ff. 46, 149; C181/5, f. 42v.
- 12. C181/4, f. 66v.
- 13. C181/7, pp. 253, 632.
- 14. T56/7, pp. 7–8; PSO5/5, unfol.; C66/2390/3; CSP Dom. 1625–6, p. 567.
- 15. CSP Dom. 1640–1, p. 208.
- 16. Docquets of Letters Patent ed. Black, 18, 38, 42.
- 17. Som. RO, DD/WHb/30; Docquets of Letters Patent, ed. Black, 167; Wilts. RO, 413/501; CCC, 950; HMC Pepys, 203.
- 18. HMC 8th Rep. 275a; SR.
- 19. SR.
- 20. C231/7, p. 252.
- 21. LC5/132, p. 308; LC3/1, unfol.; CSP Dom. 1638–9, p. 419.
- 22. Clarendon, Hist. iv. 22; v. 323; SP2/54, f. 3.
- 23. CSP Dom. 1633–4, p. 35.
- 24. CSP Dom. 1634–5, 395; 1635–6, p. 377.
- 25. CSP Dom. 1635–6, pp. 240, 250.
- 26. Coventry Docquets, 88.
- 27. CSP Dom. 1638–9, p. 556.
- 28. T56/8, p. 196; C66/2427/19; CSP Dom. 1639, p. 119; 1640, p. 451; 1640–1, pp. 114, 513; 1641–3, pp. 23, 57; CTB i. 22.
- 29. CSP Dom. 1638–9, p. 273; 1640–1, pp. 547, 551; 1641–3, p. 324; 1660–1, p. 478; CCSP v. 74; CTB i. 183.
- 30. CTB iii. 867, 882.
- 31. SP16/493, f. 132.
- 32. Docquets of Letters Patent ed. Black, 348.
- 33. CSP Dom. 1641–3, pp. 494, 498; Exchequer Officeholders (L. and I. Soc. spec. ser. xviii), 208; CTB i. 395; E403/2525, ff. 62v-65.
- 34. CCSP ii. 9; Clarendon, Hist. v. 323; HMC Pepys, 255; Add. 37047, ff. 1–2.
- 35. PC2/54, f. 3; Nicholas Pprs. i. 128; Clarendon, Hist. v. 2; CSP Dom. 1672, p. 313.
- 36. CTB i. 183.
- 37. CSP Dom. 1663–4, p. 505.
- 38. CSP Dom. 1637, pp. 195-6; 1638-9, p. 498; 1639, pp. 436-7; 1640, p. 474; 1640-1, pp. 33, 255; CCC 2105.
- 39. E214/311.
- 40. CCC 3293.
- 41. SO3/15, p. 210.
- 42. NT, Belton House.
- 43. NPG.
- 44. PROB11/341/548; PROB11/343/405.
- 45. LI, Admiss. Bk. 5, f. 34v.
- 46. CB.
- 47. CSP Dom. 1625-6, p. 567; 1627-8, pp. 293, 299, 302, 314; 1628-9, p. 181; HP Commons 1604-1629; PSO5/5, unfol.; C66/2390/3; C66/2427/19; T56/8, p. 196.
- 48. C181/4, ff. 31, 41; CSP Dom. 1629-31, p. 426; 1631-3, pp. 405, 534; 1635, p. 78; 1635-6, p. 26; 1636-7, p. 258; 1637, pp. 184, 380, 435, 477; 1637-8, pp. 56, 151, 522; 1638-9, p. 67; 1639-40, pp. 49, 198, 451; 1640, pp. 60, 87; 1640-1, p. 284.
- 49. Lindley, Fenland Riots, 46-7, 48, 50, 54, 55.
- 50. LC5/132, p. 308; LC3/1, unfol.; Strafforde Letters, ii. 149, 152; CSP Dom. 1633-4, p. 35; 1638-9, pp. 273, 419.
- 51. CSP Dom. 1638-9, pp. 419, 556, 572, 617.
- 52. CSP Dom. 1638-9, p. 637; SP16/416.
- 53. HP Commons 1604-1629.
- 54. CJ ii. 4a.
- 55. CSP Dom. 1640, pp. 34, 41, 76.
- 56. CSP Dom. 1640-1, pp. 308-10, 316, 451.
- 57. HMC De L’Isle and Dudley, vi. 360, 362, 366-7, 369-70, 375-6, 378-9, 382-4, 386-7, 391, 396.
- 58. Bodl. Nalson XIII, ff. 56-9; CSP Dom. 1641-3, p. 187.
- 59. CSP Dom. 1641-3, pp. 494, 498; Bodl. Clarendon 26, ff. 72, 190; CCSP i. 289, 297; Add. 37047, f. 189v; CCC 950.
- 60. Stowe 184, f. 213; CCSP i. 315, 324; Bodl. Tanner 59, f. 641; Carte 130, f. 246; Add. 18982, ff. 119, 126; Clarendon, Hist. iv. 226.
- 61. Clarendon, Hist. iv. 341; HMC Pepys, 224, 228, 231-41, 246-7, 250-61, 272-8, 282, 284, 286-93.
- 62. Clarendon, Hist. iv. 372-3, 415.
- 63. Add. 18982, ff. 200-1; CCSP ii. 9; HMC Pepys, 255; Add. 37047, ff. 1-2.; Bodl. Carte 130, ff. 81-2, 91-3, 126-34, 144; Nicholas Pprs. i. 128, 130-1; Clarendon, Hist. v. 2.
- 64. CCSP ii. 14; Nicholas Pprs. i. 261; Add. 30305, f. 146; CSP Dom. 1650, p. 88; PC2/54, ff. 5-13.
- 65. Underdown, Royalist Conspiracy, 10, 32; Nicholas Pprs. i. 135, 151-2; HMC De L’Isle and Dudley, vi. 476.
- 66. Nicholas Pprs. i. 149; CCSP ii. 46, 55.
- 67. Nicholas Pprs. i. 156, 172.
- 68. CCSP ii. 32, 30; Add. 15858, ff. 58, 60; Clarendon, Hist., v. 134.
- 69. Bodl. Carte 130, ff. 126-34, 179-80.
- 70. CCSP ii. 69, 77, 85; Clarendon, Hist. v. 134; CSP Dom. 1650, p. 321.
- 71. Nicholas Pprs. i. 206-8, 255; Add. 4162, f. 208.
- 72. Nicholas Pprs. i. 263; Clarendon, Hist. v. 212; Harl. 6852, f. 351; Bodl. Carte 130, f. 210; CCSP ii. 113.
- 73. CCSP ii. 115; Bodl. Clarendon 42, f. 280; Nicholas Pprs. i. 285.
- 74. CCSP ii. 12, 115-6, 118-23, 125; Bodl. Clarendon 42, ff. 281, 283, 287-304, 307-13v, 335, 357-61, 379-81, 398;400-2, 404r-v; 43, f. 23; Carte 130, ff. 175v, 181, 189-95, 244-56v; Add. 37047, f. 185-91, 193, 195-203v.
- 75. CCSP ii. 124-7; Bodl. Clarendon 43, ff. 15, 17, 18r-v, 31; HMC Pepys, 294-307; Nicholas Pprs. i. 288, 290; Add. 37047, ff. 204-5, 207; Stowe 184, ff. 189-223v.
- 76. CCSP ii. 214; Clarendon, Hist. v. 323-4; Add. 37047, ff. 216, 231-2, 235-6v.
- 77. CCSP ii. 231, 248, 259, 286, 288-9, 299; Bodl. Carte 130, ff. 175-6, 182, 184, 187, 197, 200, 202-4; CSP Dom. 1653-4, pp. 359, 365; Nicholas Pprs. ii. 35, 39, 45, 47, 49-51, 53-5, 58-9; Clarendon, Hist. v. 323-6, 329; Add. 37047, ff. 224-32; Eg. 2534, ff. 155-59, 162-63v; Add. 37047, ff. 221-2v.
- 78. CCC 3293; CCSP ii. 379.
- 79. TSP, ii. 395.
- 80. Nicholas Pprs. ii. 315; TSP iv. 43, 51, 194-6.
- 81. Nicholas Pprs. iv. 145; Bodl. Carte 130, f. 217.
- 82. CCSP iv. 676; Bodl. Clarendon 72, ff. 25-6; CSP Dom. 1660-1, p. 478; CTB i. 183; iii. 867, 882.
- 83. HP Commons 1660-1690.
- 84. C33/246, f. 714; PROB11/341/54; CB; HP Commons 1660-1690.