Notes and Queries, Number 06, December 8, 1849 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 47 pages of information about Notes and Queries, Number 06, December 8, 1849.

Notes and Queries, Number 06, December 8, 1849 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 47 pages of information about Notes and Queries, Number 06, December 8, 1849.

SCOTUS.

Record Publications.

Will any of your readers kindly favour me with a reference to any easily-accessible list of the publications of the Record Commission, as well as to some account of the more valuable Rolls still remaining unpublished, specifying where they exist, and how access is to be obtained to them?

With every wish for the success of your undertaking,

Yours, &c.

D.S.

[The late Sir H. Nicolas compiled an account of the publications of the Record Commission, which was published in his Notitia Historica, and also in an 8vo. vol, and is easily obtainable.  There is also a series of articles in the Gentleman’s Magazine for 1834, which contains a good deal of information upon the subject, with a classified list of the publications.  The principal unpublished records are in the Tower and the Rolls’ Chapel; any record may be inspected or copied at those places, or in any other Record Office, upon payment of a fee of one shilling.]

Katherine Pegge.

Sir,—­Katherine Pegge, one of the mistresses of Charles II., was the daughter of Thomas Pegge, of Yeldersley, near Ashborne in Derbyshire, Esq., where the family had been settled for several generations, and where Mr. William Pegge, the last of the elder branch, died without issue in 1768.  Another branch of this family was of Osmaston, in the same neighbourhood, and of this {91} was Dr. Samuel Pegge, the learned antiquary.  They bore for arms:—­Argent, a chevron between three piles, sable.  Crest:—­A demi-sun issuing from a wreath or, the rays alternately argent and sable.

It was during his exile that the King first met with the fair Katherine, and in 1657 had a son by her, whom he called Charles Fitz-Charles,—­not Fitz-roy as Granger says.  Fitz-Charles had a grant of the royal arms with a baton sinistre, vaire; and in 1675 his Majesty created him Earl of Plymouth, Viscount Totness, and Baron Dartmouth.  He was bred to the sea, and having been educated abroad,—­most probably in Spain,—­was known by the name of Don Carlos.  In 1678 the Earl married the Lady Bridget Osborne, third daughter of Thomas Earl of Danby, and died of a flux at the siege of Tangier in 1680, without issue.

Katherine Pegge, the Earl’s mother, after her liaison with the King, married Sir Edward Greene, Bart., of Samford in Essex, and died without issue by him in ——.  From this marriage the King is sometimes said to have had a mistress named Greene.

There was long preserved in the family a half-length portrait of the Earl, in a robe de chamber, laced cravat, and flowing hair (with a ship in the back-ground of the picture), by Sir Peter Lely; and also two of his mother, Lady Greene:  one a half length, with her infant son standing by her side, the other a three-quarters,—­both by Sir Peter Lely, or by one of his pupils.

Both mother and son are said to have been eminently beautiful.

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Notes and Queries, Number 06, December 8, 1849 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.