the City sends him 1,000 marks,id.;the birth of a prince, 138;takes the City into his own hands, 146;issues "a charter of service," 151;the City lost to, 155, 156;his death, 159.Edward III, his birth, i, 138;the conduits run with wine in his honour, 139;his accession, 160;his charters to the City, 160, 180, 188, 196, 208;charges the citizens with having assisted in the revolt of Lancaster, 166;visits London, 167;sends copy of Lancaster's charges to be read at Guildhall,id.;his marriage, 171;pays homage to the King of France, 178;goes to France, 182, 185;his unexpected return, 187;makes a truce with France, 189;renews the war, 190;sets sail for France, 191;his success in Normandy, 191-192;returns, 193;again goes to France, 199;his death, 211.Edward, Earl of March, afterwards Edward IV, enters the City with Richard, Duke of York, i, 290;attainted, 296; marches to London, 298, 299;admitted into the City, 305;his claim to the crown acknowledged by the citizens, 306;proclaimed king,id.; accession of, 307;his charters to the City, 307-308; his marriage, 309;takes flight, 311;returns and is admitted into the City, 313;recovers the throne, 314;prepares to invade France, 317;grants a general pardon to the City, 318;entertains the citizens with a day's hunting,id.;his death, 319.Edward V, birth of, i, 317;preparations for his coronation, 319; welcomed by the City, 320;lodged in the Tower,id.; deposed, 322.Edward VI, birth of, i, 396;his accession and coronation, 418, 420-421;conducted by the citizens to Westminster, 431;removed by Somerset to Windsor, 435;dines with Sheriff York, 439;his charter to the City re Southwark, 442;incorporates the four City hospitals, 452;his death, 453;his will disposing of the crown,id.Edwards, Sir James, ordered to attend every evening at Whitehall during last illness of Charles II, ii, 505.Edwin, Sir Humphrey, sheriff, ii, 530.Effingham, Earl of, refuses to serve in the army against the American colonies, iii,155;his conduct compared with that of Lord George Sackville,161.Eleanor, Queen, wife of Henry III, insult offered to, i, 94;presented with the custody of London Bridge, 101;her death, 125.Eldred, John, ii, 71.Eleven Members, the, the army's charge against, ii, 246;withdrawal of, 250;six members escape to the Continent, 262.Elizabeth of York, married to Henry VII, i, 328;her coronation, 329;account of the manner of receiving her corpse, 336.Elizabeth, Queen, birth of, i, 389;declared illegitimate, 396;re-instated in right of succession, 420;accession of, 484;coronation of, 485;her policy of moderation, 486;closes English ports to Flemish vessels, 492;opens the Royal Exchange, 499;refused a loan by the Merchant Adventurers, 506;seizes Spanish vessels, 508, 509;excommunicated, 516;her shifting policy towards Spain and France, 518;Dutch envoys to, 530;Babington's plot to murder, 532;visits the camp at Tilbury, 545;assists Henry IV of France, 548;her death, 566.---- Princess, daughter of James I, married to the Elector Palatine, ii, 59.Elliot, General, afterwards Lord Heathfield, his gallant defence of Gibraltar, iii,201.Elsing, William, mercer, founder of Elsing Spital, i, 386.Eltham, Sir John de, i, 170.Empson, Richard, his extortionate conduct in the city, i, 337, 338;executed, 343.Engagement, the, taken by Lilburne with reservation, ii, 319.See alsoTreasonable Engagement.Ermin Street, i, 5.Essex, Robert Devereux, 2nd earl of, City present to, i, 548, 549;capture of Cadiz, 556;attempts to raise an insurrection in the City, 561-563.---- Robert, 3rd Earl of, ii, 154, 91, 200, 202;takes command of parliamentary army, 172;applies to the City for a loan,id.;takes Reading, 188;his jealousy of Waller, 191;relieves Gloucester, 194;withdraws to Reading, 196;leaves Reading,id.;surrenders to the royalists, 210;resigns, 215.Essex, Earl of.SeeMandeville, Geoffrey de.Estfeld, William, mayor, performs customary service at the coronation of Henry VI, i, 275.Etaples or Estaples, treaty of, i, 330.Ethelred, alderman, made governor of London, i, 12-13.Ethelred the "Unready," his weak government, i, 16, 17;institutes the payment of Danegelt, 17;betakes himself to Normandy, 19;returns to London, 20;expels Cnut, 21;his death, 22;his laws for regulating foreign trade,id.Eton, Hugh, punished for making a disturbance in church, i, 422.Eugene, Prince, obtains a loan from the citizens, ii, 624;visits London, 645.Everard, John, gives information of proposed attack on the City, ii, 275;City's petition to parliament thereon, 276.Evesham, battle of, i, 98.Evil May-day, i, 355-357.Ewen, John, mercer, his benefaction to the Grey Friars, i, 402.Exchequer, the, closed by Charles the Second, ii, 444.---- Court of, removed to York, i, 162.Exclusion Bill, the, before the Commons, ii, 458;passed by the Commons, rejected by the Lords, 462.Exton, Nicholas, deprived of his aldermanry, i, 223;elected mayor, 228, 229;continued in office, 232;stands aloof from the king's attempt on the life of the Duke of Gloucester, 233;an attempt to get him removed from mayoralty, 239.Eyles, Sir John, mayor, ii, 530;summoned to attend proclamation of George II as king, iii,31.Eyre, James, recorder, refuses to attend presentation of address to the king, iii,101.Fabyan, Alderman, his chronicle, i, 313;placed in command of the city's gates, 332.Fairfax, Sir Thomas, ii, 214, 216, 219;Parliamentary army under, defeated in the north, 189;Leicester surrenders to, 220;defeats Hopton, 233;correspondence between the City and, 243, 245, 247, 248, 249, 251, 255, 264, 265, 269;the City surrenders to, 259;entertained by the City, 261;appointed constable of the City, 262;endeavours to force a loan from the City, 264, 265, 268, 275;threatens to quarter troops on the City, 267;puts down rising in Kent, 280, 281;success of, at Colchester, 290;informs the City of his intention to enter London, 293;demands money from the City, 293, 296, 301;enters London, 294;seizes the treasury at Weaver's Hall, 295, 296;again entertained by the City, 312;gift of plate to, 313;superseded by Cromwell, 328.Falaise, John de, announces birth of Edward the Third, i, 138.Falconbridge, Thomas.SeeFauconberg.Falkirk, battle of, i, 129;General Hawley defeated at, iii,55.Falkland, secretary, ii, 179.Farndon, Nicholas de, deposed from the mayoralty by the king, i, 146;placed in the mayoralty chair by the kinglocoChigwell, 153.Farringdon ward, divided, i, 243.Farringdon, co. Hants, fortifications at, captured by King Stephen, i, 53.Fauconberg, Thomas, rising in Kent under, i, 314;his letter to the City and answer, 314, 315;attempts to force London Bridge, 315, 316;beheaded, 316.Fawkes, Guy,alias"John Johnson" joins Gunpowder Plot, ii, 13.Felton, John, i, 516.Fenton, John, Lieutenant-Colonel, ii, 339.Fenwick, Sir John, bill of attainder against, ii, 600.Ferdinand II, Emperor, loses the crown of Bohemia, ii, 74.Ferrar, Nicolas, skinner, his bequest to the college in Virginia, ii, 48.Fielding, Sir John, his house attacked by Gordon rioters, iii,183.Fifth-monarchy men, outbreak in the City of, ii, 386-388, 396.Finch, Sir Heneage, recorder, chosen Speaker, ii, 97, 132.---- Sir John, ii, 108.Finchley, the camp at, iii,52,53.Finsbury, Manor of, the City's lease of, i, 493.Firebrace, Sir Basil, charged with mis-using the money of the East India Company and committed to the Tower, ii, 593, 595-596;receives his liberty, 597;created a baronet,id.Fire of London, the, ii, 414-425.See alsoLondon.Fisher, John, Bishop of Rochester, committed to the Tower for denying the king's supremacy, i, 392;beheaded, 393.---- Captain John, ii, 121.Fishmongers of London contribute to a gift of £500 to the king, i, 201;attempt to break up the monopoly of free fishmongers, 222, 224;subscribe towards furnishing soldiers for war with France, 347;subscribe to bounties for soldiers, iii,64.Fitz-Athulf or Olaf, Constantine, hanged for treachery, i, 82.Fitz-Eylwin, Henry, first mayor of London, i, 66.Fitz-James, Richard, Bishop of London, dies of the plague, i, 366.Fitz-Otes, Hugh, Constable of the Tower, appointed warden of the City, i, 101, 103.Fitz-Reiner, Richard, sides with John, i, 62.Fitz-Thedmar, Arnald, compiler ofLiber de Antiquis, i, 67;opposed to the Barons,id.;deprived of his aldermanry, 90;opposed to popular policy of Fitz-Thomas in relation to City guilds, 93, 94;his prejudice against Walter Hervy, 107.Fitz-Thomas, Thomas, mayor, organization of guilds under, i, 93;refused admittance to the mayoralty, 95;swears fealty to the king, 97;accused of meditating a wholesale massacre of citizens, 99;summoned to Windsor, 100;his fate, 101, 103;results of his policy, 110.Fitz-Walter, Robert, Baron of Dunmow, elected leader of the Barons, i, 74;his duties as Castellain of London, 75;his feud with king John, 76, 77;fails to raise the siege of Rochester, 78;taken prisoner at Lincoln, 80;his death, 81.Fitz-William, Thomas, recorder, his speech at the Guildhall in favour of Richard, Duke of Gloucester, i, 322.---- William, made sheriff by Henry VII, i, 338.Flanders, interruption of trade with, i, 113;Flemings expelled from England, 115;peace concluded with, 116;increase of trade with, 171;Flemish weavers invited to settle in England, 178;English ports closed to Flemish merchants by Elizabeth, 492;Flemish merchants seized in London, 510;forces under the Earl of Leicester sent to, 531.Flanders, Countess of, seizes English merchandise, i, 112;negotiates for peace, 115, 117.Fleet, Sir John, M.P. for the City, ii, 554, 598, 607, 613;mayor, 570;unsuccessfully contests the City, 609;his death, 642.Fleet Prison, the, fired by Gordon rioters, iii,184.Fleetwood, Charles, Lieut.-Gen., confers with the City, ii, 357, 359;promises a free parliament, 360.Fletcher, Dr., remembrancer, sent as special messenger to James I, ii, 2.Flete, William de, i, 134.Flower, Charles, sheriff, iii,242.Fogwell Pond, Smithfield, water supply taken from, ii, 20.Folkmote, i, 13.Foote, Sir Thomas, alderman, ii, 236;elected mayor, 316.Forced Loan, the, ii, 100, 102.Foreigners or strangers, in the country, i, 84;in the City, 475-476, 504, 532; iii,297-299.Fowke or Foulke, John, alderman, ii, 197, 218;placed on commission for trial of Charles the First, 301;charges brought against when mayor, 337;sent Commissioner to meet Monk, 365;reports to Court of Aldermen Monk's intention of leaving the City, 370;M.P. for the City, 392.Fowlke, Christopher, sent to Guildford with food for the City's soldiers, i, 414.Fox, Charles, joins the Newcastle Ministry, iii,57;leader of the House of Commons,60;assaulted by a mob,115;appointed Secretary of State under Rockingham,197;Secretary of State under the Duke of Portland,204;his East India Bill,id.;joins the ministry of "all the talents,"265;his death,266.Fox, Stephen, supports Luttrell's candidature for Middlesex, iii,87.France, war with,temp.Edward III, i, 180, 190, 195, 197, 199, 201, 204;the crown of, claimed by Henry V, 257;war with,temp.Henry V, 257, 258, 262;a truce withtemp.Henry VI, 281;French descent on south coast, 293;war with,temp.Henry VIII, 345, 347;league against, 373;the king of, taken at Pavia, 374;peace concluded with, 377;renewal of the war with, 408, 409;peace with, proclaimed, 415;Mary declares war against, 477;the king of, defeated at St. Quentin, 479;recovery of Calais by, 480;Elizabeth's war with, 489;peace with, signed, 492;assassination of king of, 548;Charles I at war with, ii, 102;a cry for war against (1678), 455;William III at war with, 559, 568;peace made at Ryswick with, 603;war conducted by Marlborough against, 614, 616, 621, 629, 630;peace with, 647;declaration of war with (1744), iii,49;alliance with America,168;convention with,212;outbreak of revolution,220;war declared with,221;negotiations for peace,227;the French army encamped at Boulogne,259.Franklin, Benjamin, Ambassador for the United States at Versailles, iii,168.Fraunceys, Adam, mayor, i, 197;contributes to a loan to the king, 202.---- John, first alderman of Farringdon without, i, 243.Fray, John, commissioner to enquire into cases of treason, &c. in the city, i, 269.Frederick, Prince of Wales, his marriage, iii,39;presented with the Freedom of the City in the Saddlers' Company,40.---- Elector Palatine, marries Elizabeth, daughter of James I, ii, 59;the City's present to, 60;elected King of Bohemia, 74;the City of London renders assistance to, 75, 77, 89;driven out of Bohemia, 77;a Londoner punished for insulting, 83.Frederick, Sir John, mayor, ii, 397.Freeman, Ralph, ii, 72.Free Trade Bill, ii, 10.Frestlyng, Bartholomew, M.P. for the City, i, 202."Frith-gild" of the City, i, 14-16.Frobisher, Sir Martin, pursues the Armada, i, 541;monument to, in St. Giles's, Cripplegate, 544.Frowyk, Henry, mayor, i, 279.Fryer, Sir John, mayor, iii,16,17.Fuller, Nicholas, M.P. for the City, ii, 8.Fulsham, Benedict de, M.P. for the City, i, 162;his contest for the mayoralty, 165.Furnese, Sir Henry, subscribes to loan to Prince Eugene, ii, 624.Galeys, Henry le.SeeWaleys.Gardiner, Stephen, bishop of Winchester, liberated from the Tower by Queen Mary, i, 457;made chancellor, 458;severely reprimands the lord mayor, 466.---- Sir Thomas, recorder, endeavours to obtain a City loan for Charles the First, ii, 124;his impeachment, 124, 169;the king wishes to make him Speaker, 132;welcomes the king to the City, 148;is knighted, 149;a commission of array addressed to, 188.Garnet, Henry, trial of, at Guildhall, ii, 15.Garrard, Sir John, withdraws from the Militia Committee, ii, 171.---- Sir Samuel, mayor, favours Dr. Sacheverell, ii, 632;evades burning his sermon, 635.Garraway, William, i, 553.Garrett, Sir George, sheriff, entertains Charles I, ii, 157;sent to the King at Oxford, 180.Garway, or Garraway, Henry, mayor, ii, 122;speech of, at Common Hall, 181.Gate, Sir John, the king's bailiff in Southwark, i, 442.Gaunt, Elizabeth, burnt for being implicated in Rye House Plot, ii, 515.Gaveston, Piers de, asks a favour of the City for his friend, i, 133;banished,id.;favoured by Edward II, 136;beheaded, 137.Gayer or Gayre, Sir John, imprisoned by Charles I, ii, 123;released, 125;withdraws from the Militia Committee, 171;committed to the Tower, 266;impeached, 273;the "Lion Sermon" instituted by, 274;deprived of his aldermanry, 308.Geffrey, Thomas, barber, i, 284.George I, accession of, iii,1;welcomed by the City,2;attends lord mayor's banquet,3;his picture and statue,9;goes to Hanover,10;his quarrel with the Prince of Wales,id.;his death,30.George, Prince of Wales, afterwards King George II, his quarrel with his father, iii,10;his accession,31;his coronation,32;attends lord mayor's banquet,33;impudent demand of his cup-bearer,id.;his portrait by Jervas,id.George III, accession of, iii,66;his statue at the Royal Exchange and his picture at the Guildhall,70;his anxiety that Wilkes should be expelled the House,82;indignant at the conduct of Crosby and Oliver,109;his anxiety lest Wilkes should be elected mayor,132;his letter to Lord North touching Lord Gordon,183;his illness, and measures taken for a regency,213;City address on his recovery,214;thanksgiving service at St. Paul's for recovery of,215;assault on,226;celebration of his Jubilee,271;becomes insane,281;his statue in the Council Chamber,id.George, Prince, afterwards King George IV, forwards to the City £1,000 for the poor, during his father's illness, iii,214;appointed Regent,282;declines the Freedom of the City,id.;refuses to receive addresses from the livery seated on the throne,283-285,296-297;entertained at the Guildhall after the Peace of Paris,288;an outrage committed against,306;his accession,314;his coronation,315.Gerard, or Garrard, William, sheriff, attends proclamation of Lady Jane Grey as Queen, i, 454.Gerrard, John, implicated in Gunpowder Plot, ii, 15.---- Sir Thomas, i, 560.Ghent, recovery of, ii, 629.Gianibelli, Frederico, erects waterworks at Tyburn, ii, 19.Gibbon, Edward, grandfather of the historian, his estate sequestrated, iii,22.Gibbs, Alderman, ii, 224, 292.Gibraltar, relief of, by Lord Howe, iii,201;Copley's picture of siege of,202.Gilbert, Sir Humphrey, i, 544.---- Sir John, i, 562.Gill, William, mayor, receives George the Fourth on his visit to St. Paul's after illness, iii,215.Ginkell, General, afterwards Earl of Athlone, ii, 563.Gisors, Anketin de, i, 146.---- John de, M.P. for the City, i, 118;desired by Edward II to hold the City, 136;taken into custody, 146;affords an asylum to Mortimer, 154;appointed Warden of the Tower jointly with Betoyne, 159.Gloucester, siege of, ii, 193-195;letter from, touching the removal of Colonel Massey, 216, 217.---- Gilbert, Earl of, defeats Montfort at Evesham, i, 98;takes possession of the City, 102;comes to terms with Henry III, 103.---- Henry, Duke of, City gift to, at Restoration, ii, 379.---- Humphrey, Duke of, question of his precedence at the Guildhall, i, 257, 258;vicegerent in England, 268;his position settled by Parliament, 269;quarrels with Beaufort, 270, 271, 277;loses the favour of the citizens, 271;appointed Captain of Calais, 280.---- Robert, Earl of, exchanged prisoner for King Stephen, i, 52.---- Thomas, Duke of, his house attacked, whilst Earl of Buckingham, i, 216;his persecution of Brembre,id.;plot of Richard II, against, 232, 233;charges five of the king's counsellors with treason, 233, 234;arrested, 244.Glover, Richardalias"Leonidas," opposes the Spanish Convention, iii,42;his poem "Admiral Hosier's Ghost,"44,45;presides over Committee of Livery,45,46;drafts petition to Parliament touching insufficiency of convoys,47.Glyn, John, recorder, ii, 200, 260, 291;one of the Eleven Members, 246;expelled the House and committed to the Tower, 263;forced resignation of, 315;member of Cromwell's House of Peers, 350;accident to, 391.Glynn, John, recorder, moves that Wilkes be heard at the Bar of the House of Commons, iii,137;hisdictumas to the rights of the Livery in Common Hall,138,140;returned M.P. for Middlesex,144.Godchep, Hamo, i, 153.Godfrey, Sir Edmondesbury, supposed murder of, ii, 457.---- Peter, elected M.P. for the City, iii,4.---- Thomas, opens the City's gates to Cade, i, 284.Godolphin, Lord, dismissed from office, ii, 637.Godrell, Paul, ii, 591.Godsalve, John, the City's right of measuring cloth conferred on, i, 406.Godschall, Sir Robert, a candidate for the mayoralty, iii,45,46;elected M.P. for the City,47;mayor,id.;chairman of Parliamentary Committee to consider insufficiency of convoys,47,48.Godwine, Earl, i, 26, 28.Gold, Henry, rector of St. Mary, Aldermary, executed at Tyburn, i, 390.---- Thomas, nominated for the mayoralty, ii, 476, 490.Goldsmiths of London, their quarrel with the Weavers, i, 154;return of rental of, 252;their pageant at coronation of Henry VIII, 345;subscribe towards furnishing soldiers for war with France, 347;ordered to resume their old quarters in Goldsmith's Row, ii, 110;the Duke of Marlborough entertained by, 617, 618;mayoralty of Sir Owen Buckingham kept in Hall, 617;subscribe to bounties for soldiers, iii,64;disapprove of remonstrance drawn up in Common Hall,93.Gondomar, Spanish ambassador, insulted in London, ii, 79.Goodman, John, reprieve of, ii, 136.Gordon, Lord George, presents petition to Parliament in favour of repeal of Savile's Act, iii,179;riots in the City instigated by,180-184;committed to the Tower,185;offers himself as candidate for the City,192.Gore, Richard, merchant tailor, M.P. for the City, ii, 8.---- Sir William, knighted, ii, 571;elected mayor, 608;stands for the City, 609.Goring, George, Lord (Earl of Norwich), threatens Plymouth, ii, 221;takes the lead in the Kentish rebellion, 282.Gracedieu, Bartholomew, sheriff, knighted, ii, 606.Grafton, Duke of, his relations with Wilkes, 74, 80.---- Richard, printer, i, 485.Grantham, John de, elected Mayor, i, 165;M.P. for the City, 174.Greenland House, siege of, ii, 205.Greenway, Oswald, implicated in Gunpowder Plot, ii, 15.Greenwich Park, muster of citizens in, i, 529.Gregory, William, alderman, his chronicle, i, 287."Grenecobbe," Henry, i, 220.Grenville, Sir John, carries a letter from Charles II to the City, ii, 377;City gift to, 379.---- William, W., Secretary of State, his correspondence with the lord mayor touching removal of the Bank of England guard, iii,218-219.---- Lord, joins with Fox informing the ministry of "all the talents," iii,265;the fall of his ministry,266-267.Gresham, Sir John, mercer, his school at Holt, co. Norf., i, 353;witnesses removal of Duke of Somerset to the Tower, 438;signs counterfeit will of Edward the Sixth, 453.Gresham, Sir John, of Titsey, i, 511.---- Sir Richard, mayor, his letter to Henry VIII,reRoyal Hospitals, i, 404;particulars of, 404 n.;proposes to erect a Burse, 494.---- Sir Thomas, erects the Royal Exchange, i, 495-499;particulars of, 495n.;founder of Gresham College, 502;entertains Cardinal Chastillon, 504;suggests minting Spanish treasure, 512;entertains Count Casimir, 520;his death, 521.---- College founded, i, 502.---- House, municipal offices removed to, after the fire, ii, 421.Grey, Sir Charles, the freedom of the City voted to, iii,223.---- Earl, succeeds the Duke of Wellington as prime minister, iii,332;the freedon of the City voted to,339,344;resigns,340;recalled,342;succeeds in passing the first Reform Bill,343.---- Henry, Lord, repels invasion of Ireland, i, 523.---- Lord, of Wark, fined for disturbance at the Guildhall, ii, 493.---- Lady Jane, appointed successor by Edward VI, i, 453;proclaimed queen, 454;trial of, at Guildhall, 460;executed, 465.---- William de, attorney-general, burnt in effigy on Tower Hill, iii,118.Grey Friars, of London, their house suppressed, i, 398;benefactions to, 402;their house vested in the City, 417;removal of altars and tombs from church of, 428;their buildings converted into Christ's Hospital, 450, 451.Grocers of London, subscribe towards furnishing soldiers for war with France, i, 347;nominate weighers of the Great Beam, 387;tumult at the Hall of, ii, 178;parliament entertained at the Hall of, 234, 356;Fairfax invited to dinner by, 261;the Commons and Council of State at the Hall of, 312;the Lord Protector entertained by, 347;Monk entertained at the Hall of, 372;a conventicle held by Sir John Shorter, mayor, at the Hall of, 525;lord mayor's banquet held at the Hall of, 533, 574;the Bank of England commences business in the Hall of, 586;subscribe to bounties for soldiers, iii,64;disapprove of remonstrance drawn up in Common Hall,93;the freedom of their company conferred on Pitt,207;their offer to send a quantity of porter to the troops in Flanders,222-223;the Military Association in Hall of,224.Guildhall, the, first mention of, i, 14-15;trial of Hamo de Chigwell at, 169;implements of war stored at, 184;trial of Anne Ascue at, 415;trials of Lady Jane Grey and Cranmer at, 460-461;trial of Nicholas Throckmorton at, 467, 468;trial of John Felton at, 516;the rebuilding of, after the Fire, ii, 429, 434;the Lords meet at, after James II's flight, 535;standards taken at Ramillies hung up in, 623;threatened by Gordon rioters, iii,184.Guildhall Library, books borrowed from, by Somerset, and never returned, i, 438.Guilds, early organisation of, i, 93, 94;Hervy's regulations of, 107;their rising importance, 110;reorganisationtemp.Edward III, 200;elections by, 206.See alsoCompanies.Gunpowder Plot, ii, 13-16.Gurney, Richard, mayor, ii, 145, 146;knighted, 149;impeached, 168;refuses to give up the City'sinsignia,169.Habeas Corpus Act, passed, ii, 459;suspended, 599, 627;suspended for a whole year, iii,25;again suspended,307.Hadley, John, appointed joint-treasurer of subsidy, i, 251.Hainault, Jacqueline of, wife of the Duke of Gloucester, i, 270;her ill-treatment, 272.Halifax, Lord, burnt in effigy on Tower Hill, iii,118.Hallifax, Thomas, stands for the mayoralty, iii,127,132,133;refuses to back press warrants, 166.Hamersley, Hugh, haberdasher, ii, 32.Hampden, John, resists the levying of ship money, ii, 118;one of the Five Members, 155;killed at Chalgrove Field, 189.Hanse Merchants, supply wheat to the City, i, 346.Hardy, John, alderman, i, 379.Harfleur, captured by Henry V, i, 258, 259.Harley, Robert.SeeOxford, Earl of.---- Thomas, sheriff, superintends the burning of No. 45 of the