Chapter 32

Pitt's Sedition and Treason Bills,227;his Additional Force Bill,257-258;the livery urge Parliamentary Reform,277-281;the use of the Guildhall refused to reformers,283;City petitions for Parliamentary Reform,306-307;parliamentary elections in the City,309;the passing of the Six Acts,310;elections (1826),326;repeal of Corporation and Test Acts,327;the Catholic Emancipation Bill,327-328;elections (1830),329;the first Reform Bill introduced,332;rejected and Parliament dissolved,334;Reform Bill again brought in and passed by the Commons, but rejected by the Lords,335;City's petition to, urging Reform,340;Reform Bill passed,343;admission of Jews into,346-347.Parma, Duchess of, forbids importation of English wool into Flanders, i, 492-496.Parsons, Humphrey, M.P. for the City, elected mayor for the second time, iii,46;vote of thanks to, vetoed by aldermen,46,47;dies during his mayoralty,47.---- Sir John, mayor, ii, 619.---- Robert the Jesuit, arrives in England, i, 525;escapes, 528.Paterson, William, his scheme for a national bank, ii, 584."Paul of London" the, barge furnished by the City, i, 204, 205.Paulet, William.SeeWinchester.Pecche, John, alderman, deposed, i, 205.Peel, Sir Robert, the Freedom of the City, voted to, iii,327;his letter to the lord mayor touching the postponement of the king's visit to the City,330.Peers, Sir Charles, alderman, iii,13.Pelham, Henry, his ministry, iii,57.---- Sir John, executor of Henry IV, i, 270.Pemberton, Sir Francis, his opinion taken on the question of the aldermanic veto, ii, 454.Pembroke, Philip, Earl of, ii, 200.Pennington, Isaac, alderman and M.P. for the City, ii, 102;a loan of £21,000 raised by his constituents, 134;offers the House a guard of citizens,id.;informs the House that the City refused to advance money on account of Goodman's reprieve, 136;sent to announce to the citizens the danger that threatened the Commons, 155;elected mayor, 168;orders the City's gates to be repaired, 171;re-elected mayor, 173;lieutenant of the Tower, 210;resigns the lieutenancy, 215;directed to summon a Common Hall for election of a mayor upon suspension of Gayer, 266;placed on the Commission for trial of King Charles, 301;member of the Council of State, 303;proposal to confer the honour of knighthood on, 312.---- Sir John, his opinion of ships furnished by the City, ii, 102;letter to, from Thomas Wiseman touching the character of a London mob at Westminster, 151.Perceval, Spencer, becomes Prime Minister, iii,271;assassinated,285.Percival, Sir John, founds a school at Macclesfield, i, 352.Percy, Thomas, takes part in the Gunpowder Plot, ii, 14.Peters, Alice, mistress of Edward III, proceedings against, i, 207, 208;robs her paramour, 211.Perry, Micaiah, M.P. for the City, opposes Walpole's Excise Bill, iii,36.Petitioners, party name of, ii, 460.Petitions, the City's custom, touching presentation of, ii, 217.Petyte, John, grocer, M.P. for the City, i, 381.Pevensey, William I, lands at, i, 30.Philip, Richard, grocer, i, 284.Philip II of Spain, marries Mary, i, 469;leaves England, 476;induces Mary to declare war against France, 477;prepares to invade England, 534;the defeat of the Armada, 537-541;prepares another Armada, 559, 560.Philipot, John, M.P. for the City, i, 202;apologises to the king for the City's attitude towards John of Gaunt, 210;waits upon Richard II at Kennington, 212;appointed joint treasurer of Parliamentary subsidy, 214;removed, 215;his expedition against pirates,id.;opposes the Duke of Lancaster,id.;subscribes to fund for winning back the nobility to the City, 216;knighted, 220;resigns or is deprived of his aldermanry, 223.Philippa of Hainault, her marriage with Edward III, i, 171.Philips, Sir Thomas, ii, 33.Picard, Sir Henry, mayor, his banquet to four kings, i, 200.Pickett, William, lord mayor, endeavours to obtain the removal of the Bank of England guard, iii,218.Pilgrimage of Grace, the, i, 394.Pilkington, Thomas, M.P. for the City, ii, 458, 464, 538;empanels a jury favourable to Shaftesbury, 468;elected sheriff, 473;leader of the Whigs in the City, 478;the Duke of York's action against, 478, 492;committed to the Tower, 480;called to account for his conduct in the election of sheriffs, 487;fined, 493;elected mayor, 547;re-elected, 551;again stands for the City, 553;again elected mayor, 555.Pindar, Paul, refuses to pay tax for maintenance of parliamentary army, ii, 181.Pitt, William, afterwards Earl of Chatham, protests against the importation of mercenaries, iii,58;opposes a proposed tax on plate,id.;takes the lead on resignation of Newcastle,60;dismissed,61;the freedom of the City conferred on,61,62;his coalition with Newcastle,62;subscribes to bounties for soldiers,64;expresses delight at City's address on conquest of Canada,id;.Blackfriars Bridge named after,65;resignation of,67;his letter to Alderman Beckford,id;City's vote of thanks to,68;his acknowledgment,69;attends lord mayor's banquet,id;his indignation at the conclusion of the Peace of Paris,73;recalled to power and created Earl of Chatham,79;introduces an East India Bill,id;recommends Beckford to make no attempt to "fix" Rockingham,99;his eulogy of Beckford's speech,102;the City's thanks to,103;his opinion touching shorter parliaments,id;upholds the conduct of Crosby and Oliver in discharging printers arrested for printing parliamentary debates,114;advises conciliatory measures towards America,149,150;receives the thanks of Common Council and the livery,150,152;his last speech in parliament,168-170;his death and funeral,170-171;his monument in the Guildhall,171;extract from his letter to Lord Temple touching shorter parliaments entered in the City's Journal,178.Pitt, William, the younger, advocates economical and parliamentary reform, iii,198-199;his struggle with the Coalition,206;the freedom of the City and of the Grocers' Company conferred on,207;returned M.P. for Cambridge,id.;his East India Bill,208;his last attempt to carry parliamentary reform,209;his Regency Bill,213;imposes excise tax on tobacco,216;his Loyalty Loan,228-230;his letter to the lord mayor asking the City to subscribe,229;his subsidies to the emperor,231;mobbed in the City,234-235;his income tax Bill,238;resigns,247;again takes office,254;his difficulty in forming a ministry,255;his Additional Force Bill,257;his death,263;his funeral and monument,264.Piwelesdon, or Puleston, Thomas de, accused of meditating a wholesale massacre in the City, i, 99.Plague, the Black Death, i, 194;the sweating sickness, 326-327, 360;divers visitations of, 365, 407, 521;proposal to build a pest-house in the City, 551;(of 1603), ii, 3-5;(of 1625), 95;(of 1665), 409-414.Player, Colonel, ii, 249.---- Sir Thomas, chamberlain, M.P. for the City, ii, 458, 464;fined for creating a disturbance in the Common Hall, 493.Plomer, William, elected sheriff but pays fine, iii,138.Plow-Monday, entertainment of lord mayor's household on, i, 418n.Plumbe, Samuel, alderman, stands for the shrievalty, iii,138;ordered to be disfranchised for refusing to obey lord mayor's precept,139.Plumbe's case, touching the jurisdiction of the Court of Aldermen over the livery companies, iii,138-139.Plymouth, appeals to London for relief, ii, 220.Poitiers, battle of, i, 197.Poll Tax (of 1379), i, 217;(of 1380), 218;established for disbanding the armies, ii, 139.Pont de l'Arche, expected fall of, i, 263.Pontoise, surrender of, i, 264.Poor, the, weekly collections for, at St. Paul's Cross, i, 404;the house of, in West Smithfield, 417, 449;a brotherhood established in the City for relief of, 449;royal gift for relief of, iii,214.Poor debtors, Royal gifts for relief of, iii,3,33.Popham, Sir Home, a vote of thanks to, for re-capture of Cape of Good Hope, refused, iii,265;for capture of Buenos Ayres,266;a sword of honour voted to,id.Popish Plots, ii, 6, 13, 134, 456-458.Porter, Sir William Beauchamp, M.P. for Middlesex, iii,81.Portland, Duke of, prime minister, iii,204;joins Pitt's administration,225;his letter to the lord mayor offering military assistance during bread riots,244;a slight passed on the lord mayor's authority by,246;succeeds Lord Grenville as prime minister,267;resigns,271.Porto Bello, capture of, iii,44.Portreeve, office of, i, 35;title of, changed to mayor, 64.Postal System, attempt by City to establish a, ii, 322, 323.Poter, Walter le, elected sheriff, i, 104;builds the chapter-house of the Grey Friars, 402.Powis, Lord, i, 380.Prat, "Mr.," king's commissioner for surveying the City after the Fire, ii, 431.Pratt, chief justice, afterwards Lord Camden, discharges Wilkes, iii,74;the Freedom of the City voted to,78;his portrait in the Art Gallery,id.Press Warrants, counsel's opinion as to legality of, iii,107;refusal of Sawbridge and Hallifax to back,166.Preston, Lord, at the head of a Jacobite plot, ii, 562.Preston Pans, Sir John Cope defeated at, iii,51.Price, Dr. Richard, the Freedom of the City voted to, iii,165.Pride, Colonel, purges the House of Commons, ii, 294;elected common councilman, 319;opposed to Cromwell assuming regal estate, 349;member of Cromwell's House of Lords, 350.Priour, John, the younger, M.P. for the City, i, 174.Pritchard, Sir William, elected mayor, ii, 490-492;arrested at the suit of Papillon and Du Bois, 500, 501;recovers damages against Papillon, 502;M.P. for the City, 509, 554, 613;stands for the City but is unsuccessful, 599.Proby, Peter, sheriff, ii, 63;sent commissioner to Ireland, 64.Prynne, enters London in triumph, ii, 134.Puiset or Pudsey, Hugh de, Bishop of Durham, i, 61.Pullison, Sir Thomas, mayor, his precept for raising volunteers for the low countries, i, 530;appointed jointly with Sir Wolstan Dixie to see that the price of provisions in the City was not enhanced, 541.Pulteney, Sir John de, leader of the City's forces against Scotland, i, 180;gift to, for services in, obtaining City's charter, 181;taken into custody by order of the king, 187.Purveyance, attempt to abolish, ii, 9.Pym, John, supported by the Common Council, ii, 152;refuses to "discontent" the citizens, 153;one of the Five Members, 155;attends Common Hall and hears the king's reply to City deputation sent to Oxford, 180;accompanies a Parliamentary deputation to the Common Council, 184, 185.Quebec, capture of, iii,64.Quebec Bill, the, iii,142.Quiney, Lieut.-Col., assaults Alderman Cornish in the Guildhall, ii, 489.Quo Warranto, writ of, proceedings against the City under, ii, 476, 477, 478, 494-500;judgment entered, 503-504;reversal of judgment on, 541, 542, 543, 554-555.Radyngton, Sir Baldwin de, warden, of the City, i, 242.Rainton or Raynton, Sir Nicholas, sent to prison by Charles I, ii, 123;released, 125;summons a Common Hall for election of mayor, 168.Raleigh, Sir Walter, his expedition against Spain, i, 551.Ramillies, battle of, ii, 622;Standards captured at, set up in the Guildhall, 623.Rawlinson, Sir Thomas, mayor, ii, 623.Ray, Daniel, whipt for insulting the Spanish ambassador, ii, 81.Raymond, Sir Jonathan, a candidate for the mayoralty, ii, 547, 555.Reading, taken by Essex, ii, 188;in the hands of the royalists, 196.Recorder of London, the, customs of the City recorded by mouth of, i, 145.Recusants, laws against, i, 525, 526."Redbridge," the ship, stoppage of, ii, 578-579.Rede, Richard, alderman, sent to the war in Scotland for opposing benevolence, and taken prisoner, i, 411.Refham, Richer de, mayor, obtains a confirmation of the City's liberties, i, 134-135;removed from mayoralty and aldermanry, 135, 136.Reformadoes, City petition for removal of, ii, 250.Reform Bill, the first, introduced, 332;approved by the City, 333;withdrawn, 334;again brought in and passed by the Commons but thrown out by the Lords, 335;City addresses on its rejection, 336-337;agitation in the country, 337-338;again brought in and passed, 343;the rights of the livery of London reserved,id.;entertainment at the Guildhall to commemorate the passing of, 344.Regency Bill, the, iii,282.Reynardson, Abraham, elected mayor, ii, 297;at variance with the Common Council, 299, 376;deposed from the mayoralty and sent to the Tower, 308;restored to his aldermanry, 383;re-elected mayor and declines office, 384.Reynold, Robert, i, 422.---- William, i, 284.Reynolds, Father, executed, i, 392.---- John, attorney, and election agent for Wilkes, iii,100,143,146,147.Reynolds, Sir Joshua, his portrait of Chief Justice Pratt, iii,78.Rich, Sir Peter, a candidate for the shrievalty, ii, 486;elected, 487;sworn in, 488;M.P. for the City, 509;chamberlain, 538, 555.---- Sir Thomas, alderman, ii, 396.Richard I, his accession, i, 61;appoints Longchamp chancellor during his absence,id.;his charters to the City, 68, 71;returns to England, 68;crowned a second time, 69;his death, 71.Richard II, the "Londoners' King," i, 212;charter of, forbidding foreigners to trade by retail, 214;another charter of, 224, 225;meditates an attempt upon the life of his uncle the Duke of Gloucester, 232;a commission of Regency appointed, 233;applies to the City for aid,id.;compelled to submit to Parliament, 234;deposed, 245;doubtful reports as to his death, 247.Richard, Duke of Gloucester, afterwards Richard III, appointed Protector, i, 320;his schemes for obtaining the crown, 320-322;crowned, 323;bold speech of Londoners to, 325;escorted by citizens from Kensington to the City, 326;defeated at Bosworth,id.Richard, King of the Romans, his manor of Isleworth devastated, i, 96;brought prisoner to the Tower,id.Richmond Park, presented to the City, ii, 313;restored to Charles II, 381.Ridley, Nicholas, bishop of Rochester, translated to London, i, 440;his letter of gratitude to Sir Richard Dobbs, mayor, 450;sent to the Tower, 458;burnt at Oxford, 474."Riffleres," street ruffians called, i, 135; ii, 646.Riot Act, the, passed, iii,7.Ripon, treaty of, ii, 131;negotiations removed to London, 135.Roberts, William, nominated sheriff by mayor's prerogative, ii, 471.Robinson, "Jack," iii,121.---- Sir John, mayor, ii, 401.---- Sir Leonard, elected chamberlain, ii, 565;knighted, 571.Roche, Sir William, alderman, M.P. for the City, i, 370;committed to prison, 412.Rochelle, expeditions for relief of, i, 204; ii, 103, 107.Rochester, besieged by King John, i, 78;by the Barons, 96.Rochford, Sir Thomas Boleyn, Lord, i, 380.Rockingham, Lord, attends Beckford's famous entertainment, iii,99;succeeds Lord North as prime minister,197.Rodney, Admiral, defeats the French fleet in the West Indies, iii,199-200;entertained in the City,200.Rogers, John, burnt for heresy, i, 473, 474.Rokesle or Rokesley, Gregory de,opposes Walter Hervy, i, 108;goes to Paris to confer with King Edward I, 116;again sets out for France, 117;master of the Exchange, 118;sent with a gift of money to the king,id.;member for the City,id.;declines to attend the king's justiciars, 120;builds the dormitory of the Grey Friars, 402.Rooke, Sir George, encounters the French fleet in Lagos Bay, ii, 572;captures French fleet in Vigo Bay, 614."Roreres," street ruffians called, i, 135; ii, 646.Rose, Miles, i, 361.Rothschild, Baron Lionel, M.P. for the City, iii,347;founds a scholarship in City of London School,id.Rouen, siege of, by Henry V, i, 263.Rowe, Owen, Colonel, made chairman of the Common Council, ii, 299;placed on commission for trial of Charles I, 302.---- Thomas, mayor, particulars of, i, 511n.Rowley, John, the City's agent in Ulster, ii, 32.Rowton Heath, Charles I defeated at, ii, 222.Royal Contract, ii, 104.Royal Exchange, the, building of, i, 494-499;insurance business carried on at, 499;music and football played in, 501;Royal arms removed from, ii, 330;again set up in, 374;statue of Queen Anne in, 611;the firing of guns under piazza, forbidden, iii,2."Royal George," the, sunk off Spithead, iii,200.Rump, the, expelled by Cromwell, ii, 337;restored, 353;ejected by Lambert, 356;again restored, 362;dissolved, 373.Rupert, Prince, expected in London, ii, 172;before Bristol, 184, 186.Russell, Lord, i, 435.---- Lord John, moves for repeal of Corporation and Test Acts, iii,327.---- Thomas, draper, his school at Barton-under-Needwood, co. Stafford, i, 353, 354.---- Sir William, stands for the City, ii, 599.Rutland, Edward, Earl of, attainted, i, 296.---- Roger, Earl of, committed to the Tower for complicity in the Essex rebellion, i, 562.Rye House Plot, the, discovery of, ii, 502;Burton outlawed for being concerned in, 515;Elizabeth Gaunt burnt for being concerned in,id.Ryswick, peace of, ii, 603.Ryvers, Richard, Lord, i, 289.Sacheverell, Dr., sermon preached by, ii, 631;impeached, 633;trial of, 634;obtains the living of St. Andrew's, Holborn, 648.Sackville, Lord George, afterwards Lord George Germaine, his conduct at Minden as compared with that of Lord Effingham, iii,161.---- Sir Richard, i, 461.Sadler, John, town clerk, removed, ii, 382.St. Albans, the first battle of, i, 291;the second, 304.St. Bartholomew, priory and Hospital of, the priory suppressed, i, 398;the master bound to keep the obit of the mayor and aldermen, 401;re-established, 409;the hospital vested in the City, 417;governors of, appointed, 449.St. Clare, abbey of, called the Minories, injured by fire, i, 402.St. Dunstan, East, insult offered to the mass in church of, i, 423.St. Ewen, or Ewin, destroyed at the reformation, i, 428.St. Helen's without Bishopsgate, priory of, suppressed, i, 400;the nun's chapel of, given to Sir Richard Williams, 401;the refectory of, converted into hall of the Leathersellers,id.St. James, Garlickhithe, parish registers of, i, 403.St. John, Henry.SeeBolingbroke.St. Martin Orgar, insult offered to the mass in church of, i, 423.St. Mary without Bishopsgate, priory and hospital of, suppressed, i, 398;See alsoBethlehem.St. Mary Bothaw, parish registers of, i, 403.St. Mary le Bow, its roof blown off, i, 39.St. Mary Woolnoth, insult offered to the mass in church of, i, 423.St. Nicholas Shambles, church destroyed at the Reformation, i, 428.St. Paul's, Church of, founded by Ethelbert, i, 9;Alphage, Archbishop of Canterbury buried in, 19;Ethelred II buried in, 22;a gemót held in, 28;destroyed by fire (1087), 38;meeting of the barons and citizens in, 63, 72;Richard I returns thanks in, 68;Edward I seizes £2,000 found in, 125;a tablet set up by Earl of Lancaster in, 153;the treasure in, carried off by the mob, 158;Richard, Duke of York, swears allegiance to King Henry VI in, 288;a general reconciliation solemnized in, 294;the bodies of Warwick and Montagu killed at Barnet, exposed in, 315;Henry VI lies in state in, 316;the standards taken at Bosworth, deposited in, 326;the Earl of Warwick exhibited as a prisoner in, 328;marriage of Prince Arthur and Catherine of Aragon in, 336;the corpse of Henry VII brought to, 341;"children" of, 350;solemn thanksgiving in, for pregnancy of Catherine of Aragon, 354;Henry VIII and French Ambassadors at, on occasion of betrothal of the Princess Mary with the Dauphin, 362;the King and Queen of Denmark attend mass in, 371, 372;Te Deumcelebrated in, for capture of French King at Pavia, 374;Convocation at, presided over by Thomas Cromwell, 396;solemn procession to, for health of Jane Seymour and infant prince, 396-397;obit of Jane Seymour celebrated in, 397;removal of images from, 427;the charnel house in churchyard removed,id.;the cloister in Pardon churchyard destroyed,id.;Cranmer conducts service in, 431;order against cattle being led through, 471;the Lollards Tower at, a prison for heretics, 475;restoration of,temp.Elizabeth, 492;lease by the Dean and Chapter to the City, of the Manor of Finsbury, 493;the first public lottery drawn at west door of, 508;thanksgiving service at, for defeat of Turkish fleet at Lepanto, 517;the same for defeat of Armada, 543;state visit of James I to, ii, 76;riots in, 174;thanksgiving service for victory over the Dutch, 345;for peace of Ryswick, 606;for victories of Marlborough, 614, 615, 616, 621, 624;for peace of Utrecht, 647;for peaceful accession of George I, iii,3-4;for suppression of Jacobite rebellion,9;soldiers quartered in, during Gordon riots,192;thanksgiving service for recovery of George III,215;the same for naval victories of Howe, Jervis and Duncan,234;Nelson's funeral in,261;thanksgiving service for the Jubilee of George III in,272;Queen Caroline attends service in,319.St. Paul's Cross, Dr. Shaw's sermon at, i, 320, 321;collections for the poor made every Sunday at, 404;recantation of Dr. Crome at, 414;sermon of Bonner against the King's supremacy preached at, 438;sermon preached by Hooper at, 439;Dr. Bourne's sermon at, 458;sermon by Bishop Gardiner's chaplain, at, 459;sermon by Dyos at, inveighing against the City, 527.St. Paul's school, foundation of, by Dean Colet, i, 350-352.St. Peter, Cornhill, the advowson of church of, conveyed to the City, i, 253.St. Thomas of Acon, hospital of, suppressed, i, 398.St. Thomas's hospital, suppressed, i, 398;purchased by the City, 449, 450.Salamanca, battle of, iii,286.Salomons, David, the first Jew admitted to municipal offices, iii,346,347;founds a scholarship in City of London school,347.Salisbury, Richard, Earl of, enters the City with Richard, Duke of York, i, 290;defeats lord Audley at Blore Heath and crosses to Calais, 295, 296;attainted, 296;returns from Calais and marches to London, 298, 299.---- William of, i, 84.Sampson, David, whipt for insulting the Spanish ambassador, ii, 80.Sandwich, John, Earl of, otherwise "Jemmy Twitcher," produces Wilkes'sEssay on Womanbefore parliament, iii,77;burnt in effigy on Tower Hill,118.---- Ralph de, warden of the City, i, 122.Sauterie, Joan, wife of John, tried for speaking against the sacrament, i, 415.Sautre, William, burnt for heresy, i, 250.Savile, Sir George, his Act in favour of Roman Catholics, iii,179;his house in Leicester fields sacked by Gordon rioters,181.Savoy, the, sacked by the mob, i, 218.Sawbridge, Jacob, director of South Sea Company, expelled from parliament, iii,20.---- John, alderman, iii,20;a member of the society known as the "Supporters of the Bill of Rights,"87;elected sheriff,88;Juniusurges his candidature for the mayoralty,125;Wilkes's opinion of,126;stands for the mayoralty,127;elected M.P. for the City,145;succeeds Wilkes in the mayoralty,161;supports Oliver's motion in the Houserewar with America,id.;his refusal to back press warrants,166;loses his seat in parliament but recovers it,192.Sawyer, Sir Robert, attorney-general, his speech in proceedings under writ ofQuo Warranto, ii, 496, 497.Say, James Fiennes, Lord, executed, i, 285.Sayre, or Sayer, Stephen, elected sheriff, iii,138;committed to the Tower for a supposed conspiracy,160,161.Scales, Thomas, Lord, leads the citizens against Cade, i, 285;holds the Tower for King Henry VI, 300;endeavours to take sanctuary at Westminster, seized and murdered, 302.Scawen, Sir Thomas, elected M.P. for the City, iii,4.---- Sir William, subscribes to loan to prince Eugene, ii, 624.Schools, founded by citizens of London, i, 349-354."Scot," definition of payment of, iii,15,26,29.Scotland, rebellion of under Wallace, i, 129;renewal of war with, 140;Edward III takes the field against the Scots, 161;peace with, 163;preparations for war with, 179;England invaded by Scots, 372;proposed union with England, ii, 8;disorders in, 119;Scottish commissioners in London, 135;"friendly assistance" granted to the Scots, 140;Scottish commissioners attend the Common Council, 228;the union with, 625-626.Scott, Sir John, ii, 640.Scottish army, prepares to march southward, ii, 219, 222;offer to withdraw on terms, 238;news of a fresh army being raised, 274;defeated at Dunbar, 328;enters England, 338;defeated at Worcester, 341.Scrop, Geoffrey le, the king's sergeant pleader at the Iter of 1321, i, 144.Seberht, "sub-king" of London, i, 9;founder of Westminster Abbey,id.Self-denying ordinance, the, ii, 214.Semer, or Seymer, Thomas, opposition to his election as mayor, i, 359, 360;M.P. for the City, 381.Senlac, battle of.SeeHastings.


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