Începuturile dentisticei in ţările româneşti / [G.Z. Petrescu].
- Petrescu, G. Z. (Gheorghe Zaharia), 1874-1954.
- Date:
- 1934
Licence: In copyright
Credit: Începuturile dentisticei in ţările româneşti / [G.Z. Petrescu]. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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![would have sent for more of her connexions and friends to assist in the inquiry if they had existed. The Appleyard in 1560 (the year in which her death occurred) must have heen John Appleyard, who was sheriff of the county of Norfolk in 1558, and therefore to he presumed a fit as well as most highly interested person to inquire into the circum- stances. Sir Eichard Blount and Mr. Norris, names of no little celehrity in Berkshire, persons of high character, are solicited to attend to the husiness, the result of the whole heing, in my judgment, favourable to the death of lady Dudley having been caused accidentally. Thomas Blounts descnption of lady Dudley s conduct, and his allusion to the tales he had heard of her, which made him to think her of strange mind, would lead me to infer that she was lahourmg under some mental mfirmity, and that care and seclusion in the house of Forster might have heen rendered necessary, seeing the inconvenience her presence or conduct might have occasioned to sir Eohert Dudley when in attend- ance upon the queen at Windsor1 and at Kew, whence his letters are directed. If further evidence he necessary to disprove the charges made against Dudley, it is, perhaps, to he ohtamed from queen Elizabeth herself. In Peck?s Desiderata Cumosa, No. lvi, p. 158, is printed— 11 A proclamation2 addressed to th.e lords and others of the council, to Ferdinando Stanley, lord Strange; William Chaderton, lord bishop of Chester; and to all the other justices of Lancashire and Cheshire; signifying that several libels having been formerly published agamst the queen ; and now lately a most vile book \_Leicester’’s Common- wealth'] against Robert Dudley, earl of Leicester; the queen cannot forbear rebuking some for their great slackness in not suppressing the former libels, and to require them to be now more diligent in taking care of this last; both the queen and they knowing the E. of Leicester to be perfectly clear of those aspersions it contains. jan.25,1585. 27 Eiiz. After oui’ very heartie comendations. MS.Chaderton,foi.29b. <(^ Up()n intelligence geven to her majestie last past, of certeine seditious & traiterous books & libells covertly spred & scat- tered abroad in sondrie parts of her realmes & dominions, yt pleased her 1 He had a large grant of Windsor park, as ample as he could desire, or tlie queen could give. Pat., Q. Eliz., 3rd, p. 5. 2 This proclamation is not included in the extraordmary volume ol procia- mations in the reign of Elizabeth, in the Hon. T. Grenville s collection.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b30629895_0202.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)