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 796 T%e Reformation under Edward VI. Requests, the Courts of Augmentations, First Fruits and Tenths, and the Baga de Secretis, which contains records of the state trials (cf. J. ScargUl-Bird's Guide to the Record Office, 2nd ed. 1896). Acts of Parliament not printed in the Statutes at Large may be found in the Rolls of Parliament at the Record Office, but Acts not entered on the Roll and not printed in the Statutes at Large must he sought at the Parliament Office. The Society of Antiquaries possesses an interesting collection of MS. Proclamations. C. EcCLESIASTICAIi DOCUMENTS. The most important unpublished sources are the episcopal registers, particularly those of the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Bishop of London. The records of Convocation were destroyed at the Fire of London, but a collection of Synodalia, 1547-1580, exists in Brit. Mus. Egerton MS. 2360. In the British Museum the Lansdowne Collection is particularly rich in ecclesiastical mss. ; volumes 335, 388, 389, 819 and 1045 contain some of Foxe the martyrologist's papers, and others are extant in Harley MSS. 416 — 126 and 590. The Royal Collection has other eccle- siastical documents of interest, particularly the report (Royal MS. 17 B xxxix) of the debate in the Lords on the first Act of Uniformity, the earliest report of a parliamentary debate extant (cf. also ms. Class Catalogue, 'Church History,' in Brit. Museum Depai-tment of MSS.). Corpus Christi CoUege, Cambridge, has a valuable collection of Cranmer's papers bequeathed by Archbishop Parker (cf. Nasmith's Catalogus, 1777). There are also some mss. of importance at Lambeth (see H. J. Todd's Catalogue, 1812). CONTEMPORARY PRINTED AUTHORITIES. 1. CaM!NDARS. The Calendar of Domestic State Papers (ed. Lemon, 1856) is inadequate, but the Addenda for Edward VI's reign (ed, M. A. E. Green, and appended 1870 to the Domestic Calendar for 1601-3) is more satisfactory. The Foreign Calendar (ed. TurnbuU, 1861) is also adequate. The Scottish Calendar (ed. Thorpe, 1858) is superseded, so far as Edward VI's reign is concerned, by the Calendar of Scottish State Papers (ed. Bain, Edinburgh, 1898), and the Venetian Calendar (ed. Rawdon Brown, 1873) contains little of importance except Barbaro's Relation (pp. 338 — 362). The Hamilton Papers have been printed in full by the Lord Clerk Register of Scotland (2 vols., ed. Bain, Edinburgh, 1890). 2. Othbb Collections op State Papers. Correspondance Politique d'Odet de Selve. 1546-9. French Foreign Office. Paris. 1888. Ribier, G. Lettres et Memoires d'Estat. Paris. 2 vols. 1666. Teulet, A. Relations Politiques de la France et de I'Espagne avec I'l^cosse. 6 vols. Paris. 1862. Papiers d'Etat relatifs k I'histoire de I'^ficosse au xvi= siecle. Bannatyne Club. 3 vols. Edinburgh. 1851-60. Vei-tot, I'Abbe. Ambassades des Noailles en Angleterre. 6 vols. Leyden. 1763. Weiss, C. Papiers d'jfitat du Cardinal de Granvelle. Coll. de Doc. Inedits. 9 vols. Paris. 1841-52. A few documents relating to the period are also printed in the Hardwicke Papers, edited by the 2nd Earl of Hardwicke, 2 vols., London, 1778; and the Sadleir State Papers, edited by A. Clifford, 2 vols., Edinburgh, 1809.