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Br64.581 Fol. J.-V.)

Beb1.50137

Brit. Hist #7050

Bar Doc 21,25 (3);

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PREFACE.

THE present Calendar of State Papers in the reign of Queen Elizabeth is a continuation of the series of which two volumes were edited by the late Robert Lemon, Esq., of the State Paper Office. Mr. Lemon's volumes were compiled on the principle which regulated the earlier State Paper Calendars, that of indicating rather than describing the contents of the papers. Experience has since proved the advisability of fuller descriptions, such as shall be exhaustive of the important contents of the papers, and shall in most cases preclude the necessity of consulting the originals themselves.

The present system of Calendars has however the disadvantage that the lengthened entries increase their bulk. The present volume includes the papers of four years only, and two more volumes will be required for the remainder of the reign. When it is completed, the Calendars of Domestic Papers will run on in continuous series, from the commencement of the reign of Edward VI., 1547, for a period of nearly a century. There will still probably remain wide intervals to be filled up in the reigns of Henry VIII., Charles I., and Charles II., but all these Calendars are in progress, and when they are completed, and the short reign of James II. added, the scheme of

the Domestic Paper Calendars, from Henry VIII. to the Revolution, that is from 1509 to 1688,-the limit to which it is proposed to carry the Calendars,-will be fully carried out.

Among the most remarkable papers in the present volume are the intelligence letters written by or to Thos. Phelippes, the decipherer. This man, known to the historical student as the decipherer of the papers connected with Babington's conspiracy (and, as believed by many, the fabricator of some of those most deeply implicating the Queen of Scots), had received, in reward of sundry similar services, the office of customer in the Port of London. His place afforded him facilities for the reception and transmission of letters. Part of his correspondence he made a merit of communicating to the Government, but the more important portion consists of his private papers, seized doubtless when he himself got into trouble in the early part of the reign of James I. These are drafts of letters written by him to persons abroad, or by him for other persons, giving such minute details of the proceedings at Court as it was easy for him, through his acquaintance with the Earl of Essex and Sir Rob. Cecil, to obtain (see pp. 21, 38, 47, 64, 74, 97, 117, 309, 314, 328, 341, 353, 358, 360, 369, 419). The papers are sometimes partially in cipher, not deciphered, but decipherable, sometimes in cipher which has baffled all efforts to unravel it, chiefly (see pp. 229, 291, 368,) where conventional, generally mercantile terms are used as a mask to disguise political intelligence, and are to be understood according to an arrangement concerted between the correspondents. A curious instance of this double-entendre, the most difficult of all possible forms of cipher, may be found on p. 459.

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