. The annals of England : an epitome of English history, from co[n]temporary writers, the rolls of Parliament, and other public records. uilthouses in and within three miles of London and West-minster1. The Spaniards in Kinsale are obliged to capitulate,June; Tyrone soon after makes his submission, and ispardoned. 1603. Anderson, a seminary priest, is executed,Feb. 17- The queen dies at Richmond, March 24; she is buriedin the chapel of Henry VII. at Westminster, April 28. <* Little was done, says Stow, and small effect followed, morethan of other the like proclamations beforetime made,


. The annals of England : an epitome of English history, from co[n]temporary writers, the rolls of Parliament, and other public records. uilthouses in and within three miles of London and West-minster1. The Spaniards in Kinsale are obliged to capitulate,June; Tyrone soon after makes his submission, and ispardoned. 1603. Anderson, a seminary priest, is executed,Feb. 17- The queen dies at Richmond, March 24; she is buriedin the chapel of Henry VII. at Westminster, April 28. <* Little was done, says Stow, and small effect followed, morethan of other the like proclamations beforetime made, [see p. 290,] and also an act of parliament to that purpose [35 Eliz. c. 6,against new buildings/passed in lo93] ; these cities are stillincreased in building of cottages and pestered with inmates, to thegreat infection and other annoyances of them both. The law,however, was not suffered entirely to remain a dead letter, commis-sions of inquiry being frequently issued, particularly in the time ofCharles I., which raised large sums by composition with the of-fenders ; which practice was revived under the Commonwealth. THE BadgeB of the Stuarts. The royal House of Stuart was, equally with thePlantagenets, descended from our Anglo-Saxon kings,and in the person of James VI. it succeeded to thethrone of Great Britain free from the stain of eitherthe Lancastrian or the Tudor usurpation. From Mar-garet, the sister of Edgar Atheling, was descendedRobert Bruce3; his daughter Margery married Robertthe Steward, and their son became king of Scotland, asRobert II., in 1371b. Seven kings and one queen ofhis house reigned in Scotland alone, and five more inGreat Britain, their rule extending over a period of 343years ( 1371—1714), of which the last twenty-sixyears are, as embracing the reigns of the limited mo-narchs, William and Mary, and Anne, strikingly distin-guished from the long preceding period, which, thoughunbroken by usurpation, was generally of a stormy cha-racter,


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