Lot

193

Edward VI (1537-1553), King of England and Ireland

In Books & Manuscripts

This auction is live! You need to be registered and approved to bid at this auction.
You have been outbid. For the best chance of winning, increase your maximum bid.
Your bid or registration is pending approval with the auctioneer. Please check your email account for more details.
Unfortunately, your registration has been declined by the auctioneer. You can contact the auctioneer on 0131 557 8844 for more information.
You are the current highest bidder! To be sure to win, log in for the live auction broadcast on or increase your max bid.
Leave a bid now! Your registration has been successful.
Sorry, bidding has ended on this item. We have thousands of new lots everyday, start a new search.
Bidding on this auction has not started. Please register now so you are approved to bid when auction starts.
1/7
Edward VI (1537-1553), King of England and Ireland - Image 1 of 7
Edward VI (1537-1553), King of England and Ireland - Image 2 of 7
Edward VI (1537-1553), King of England and Ireland - Image 3 of 7
Edward VI (1537-1553), King of England and Ireland - Image 4 of 7
Edward VI (1537-1553), King of England and Ireland - Image 5 of 7
Edward VI (1537-1553), King of England and Ireland - Image 6 of 7
Edward VI (1537-1553), King of England and Ireland - Image 7 of 7
Edward VI (1537-1553), King of England and Ireland - Image 1 of 7
Edward VI (1537-1553), King of England and Ireland - Image 2 of 7
Edward VI (1537-1553), King of England and Ireland - Image 3 of 7
Edward VI (1537-1553), King of England and Ireland - Image 4 of 7
Edward VI (1537-1553), King of England and Ireland - Image 5 of 7
Edward VI (1537-1553), King of England and Ireland - Image 6 of 7
Edward VI (1537-1553), King of England and Ireland - Image 7 of 7
Interested in the price of this lot?
Subscribe to the price guide
Edinburgh
Edward VI (1537-1553), King of England and Ireland
Letter signed with woodcut sign-manual, 14 July 1547
single bifolium (29.5 x 20.8cm, hand and flower watermark), written on two sides in a secretary hand, Edward's woodcut sign-manual to head, autograph countersignature of Edward Seymour, Duke of Somerset as Lord Protector ('E. Somerset') to foot, addressed ‘To our trustie and right wellbeloved counsellor Sir William Paget knight of our order and comptroller of our household’ on verso of conjugate blank, wafer seal and contemporary endorsement to the same, short split to head of central fold, short tear to lower inner corner of first leaf, neither affecting text, a few other small holes
Writing in the name of the boy-king Edward VI a few months after his coronation, Lord Protector Somerset instructs his main ally and fellow Tudor magnate William Paget to raise a unit of heavy cavalry in preparation for the renewal of England's campaign against Scotland, launched by Henry VIII in 1544 in order to secure the marriage of the future Edward VI and Mary Queen of Scots, and known to posterity as the ‘Rough Wooing’.As the Earl of Hertford, Somerset had previously commanded the English forces which sacked Edinburgh in 1544, and achieved a superb victory against the French at Boulogne a year later. William Paget, as principal secretary to Henry VIII from 1543, was himself closely involved in his master's wars with Scotland and France, and in consequence formed a fateful double act with the soon-to-be Lord Protector: ‘The [English] military commanders had come to depend on him for communication with the King while they were campaigning, and among them the Earl of Hertford, soon to be raised to the dukedom of Somerset, developed a relationship with Paget which was to be of great importance after the change of sovereign, when Paget became the Protector Somerset’s constant companion … It was the new King, or the Protector Somerset in his name, who gave Paget the Garter, and upon his resignation as secretary made him comptroller of the Household and chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster. While Somerset was with the army in Scotland during the summer of 1547 Paget was the effective head of the government’ (Bindoff, ed., The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1509-1558).England and Scotland had been at peace since the Treaty of Camp in June 1546, but as the present letter demonstrates, this was a period which Somerset used to prepare for war. Professing himself ‘advertysed that our auncient enemies the Scottes prepares tassemble men for the warre in grete nombers’, he requests that Paget send him ‘x [ten] grete horses or good geldings hable and well trimmed to served in a felde' and ‘a convenient nomber of horsemen to serve on horsebacke as demylaunces', to muster at Newcastle by late August. The 14th of July 1547 appears to have been an especially important date in these preparations. On the same day Somerset wrote to Archbishop Thomas Cranmer requesting dispatch of 15 horsemen, and it is presumed that similar demands were sent to other magnates. It is also the first recorded date on which Somerset appears to have assumed sole responsibility for witnessing the king's directives for raising troops, without the countersignature of any other privy councillor, a further expansion of his already near-complete control over the affairs of the realm, in which his access to the king's woodcut sign-manual or ‘dry stamp’, held by his ally in the royal household, vice-chamberlain Sir John Gates, was a key component.Paget's horsemen were doubtless to be involved in the battle of Pinkie on 10 September: the final pitched battle between the independent kingdoms of England and Scotland, it resulted in a swift and crushing English victory; but Somerset's military success was also the start of his downfall, ruining the nation's finances while encouraging him to abandon government in council for personal rule conducted more or less entirely from his own household. Paget was disturbed by Somerset's autocratic turn but remained by his side until the Earl of Warwick's coup in 1549, when he advised Somerset to surrender to his great rival, and in fact arrested him on the latter's behalf. Somerset was eventually executed in 1551; Paget's fortunes endured violent fluctuations with successive changes of regime, but he remained a magnate and died an old man in 1563, his heirs becoming the marquesses of Anglesey.
Edward VI (1537-1553), King of England and Ireland
Letter signed with woodcut sign-manual, 14 July 1547
single bifolium (29.5 x 20.8cm, hand and flower watermark), written on two sides in a secretary hand, Edward's woodcut sign-manual to head, autograph countersignature of Edward Seymour, Duke of Somerset as Lord Protector ('E. Somerset') to foot, addressed ‘To our trustie and right wellbeloved counsellor Sir William Paget knight of our order and comptroller of our household’ on verso of conjugate blank, wafer seal and contemporary endorsement to the same, short split to head of central fold, short tear to lower inner corner of first leaf, neither affecting text, a few other small holes
Writing in the name of the boy-king Edward VI a few months after his coronation, Lord Protector Somerset instructs his main ally and fellow Tudor magnate William Paget to raise a unit of heavy cavalry in preparation for the renewal of England's campaign against Scotland, launched by Henry VIII in 1544 in order to secure the marriage of the future Edward VI and Mary Queen of Scots, and known to posterity as the ‘Rough Wooing’.As the Earl of Hertford, Somerset had previously commanded the English forces which sacked Edinburgh in 1544, and achieved a superb victory against the French at Boulogne a year later. William Paget, as principal secretary to Henry VIII from 1543, was himself closely involved in his master's wars with Scotland and France, and in consequence formed a fateful double act with the soon-to-be Lord Protector: ‘The [English] military commanders had come to depend on him for communication with the King while they were campaigning, and among them the Earl of Hertford, soon to be raised to the dukedom of Somerset, developed a relationship with Paget which was to be of great importance after the change of sovereign, when Paget became the Protector Somerset’s constant companion … It was the new King, or the Protector Somerset in his name, who gave Paget the Garter, and upon his resignation as secretary made him comptroller of the Household and chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster. While Somerset was with the army in Scotland during the summer of 1547 Paget was the effective head of the government’ (Bindoff, ed., The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1509-1558).England and Scotland had been at peace since the Treaty of Camp in June 1546, but as the present letter demonstrates, this was a period which Somerset used to prepare for war. Professing himself ‘advertysed that our auncient enemies the Scottes prepares tassemble men for the warre in grete nombers’, he requests that Paget send him ‘x [ten] grete horses or good geldings hable and well trimmed to served in a felde' and ‘a convenient nomber of horsemen to serve on horsebacke as demylaunces', to muster at Newcastle by late August. The 14th of July 1547 appears to have been an especially important date in these preparations. On the same day Somerset wrote to Archbishop Thomas Cranmer requesting dispatch of 15 horsemen, and it is presumed that similar demands were sent to other magnates. It is also the first recorded date on which Somerset appears to have assumed sole responsibility for witnessing the king's directives for raising troops, without the countersignature of any other privy councillor, a further expansion of his already near-complete control over the affairs of the realm, in which his access to the king's woodcut sign-manual or ‘dry stamp’, held by his ally in the royal household, vice-chamberlain Sir John Gates, was a key component.Paget's horsemen were doubtless to be involved in the battle of Pinkie on 10 September: the final pitched battle between the independent kingdoms of England and Scotland, it resulted in a swift and crushing English victory; but Somerset's military success was also the start of his downfall, ruining the nation's finances while encouraging him to abandon government in council for personal rule conducted more or less entirely from his own household. Paget was disturbed by Somerset's autocratic turn but remained by his side until the Earl of Warwick's coup in 1549, when he advised Somerset to surrender to his great rival, and in fact arrested him on the latter's behalf. Somerset was eventually executed in 1551; Paget's fortunes endured violent fluctuations with successive changes of regime, but he remained a magnate and died an old man in 1563, his heirs becoming the marquesses of Anglesey.

Books & Manuscripts

Sale Date(s)
Venue Address
Live Online
Broadside
2 Powderhall Road
Edinburgh
EH7 4GB
United Kingdom

All collections are by appointment only from our Rare Books department at our Broadside, Edinburgh location (this applies to both carriers and personal collections). 

Rare Books, Lyon & Turnbull Broadside, 2 Powderhall Road, Edinburgh, EH7 4GB

To book or for more information contact info@lyonandturnbull.com or telephone 0131 557 8844.

Please note Lyon & Turnbull are unable to pack or ship sold items. Many clients use the following companies:

Mailboxes ETC
https://www.mbe.co.uk/auctionroom
Morning Rose Ltd
t/a Mail Boxes Etc
12 South Bridge
Edinburgh
EH1 1DD
+44 (0)131 556 6226
mbepacking@gmail.com

 

Pack & Send Edinburgh East
53 Elm Row
Leith Walk
Edinburgh, EH7 4AH
+44 (0)131 201 2244
edinburgheast@packsend.co.uk
www.packsend.co.uk/edinburgheast

 

Important Information

A £6,500 spend limit has been applied to this auction. Bidders intending on spending above this amount will need to provide photo identification to have the spend limit removed. To help manage this, you will be asked to confirm your projected spend as part of the auction registration process. You may receive a request to provide photo ID. We ask that you provide this at your earliest convenience on request, to ensure you are free to bid above the £6,500 spend limit on sale day . Please note it is Lyon and Turnbull’s discretion to ask for identification – you will be also asked to provide this if you have no bidding history.

Bidders should be aware that for items marked with a dagger symbol (†), additional VAT will be payable at the standard rate (20%) on both the hammer price and the buyer’s premium. These items are sold with no reserve.

---

BUYER'S PREMIUM

The buyer shall pay the hammer price together with a premium, at the following rate, thereon.
26% up to £20,000
25% from £20,001 to £500,000
20% thereafter

VAT will be charged on the premium at the rate imposed by law (see our Conditions of Sale at the back of this catalogue).

ADDITIONAL VAT

VAT at the standard rate payable on the hammer price
Reduced rate of 5% import VAT payable on the hammer price
[Ω] Standard rate of import VAT on the hammer price

Lots affixed with ‡ or [Ω] symbols may be subject to further regulations upon export /import, please see Conditions of Sale for Buyers Section D.2.

No VAT is payable on the hammer price or premium for books bought at auction

REGISTRATION

All potential buyers must register prior to placing a bid. Paddle registration must be completed in advance of the sale day. Please note that all first-time, and those returning after an extended period, bidders at Lyon & Turnbull will be asked to supply the following documents in order to facilitate registration:
1 – Government issued photo ID (Passport/Driving licence)
2 – Proof of address (utility bill/bank statement).

By registering for the sale, the buyer acknowledges that he or she has read, understood and accepted our Conditions of Sale.

ARTIST’S RESALE ROYALTY (DROIT DE SUITE)

This symbol § indicates works which may be subject to the Droit de Suite or Artist’s Resale Right, which took effect in the United Kingdom on 14th February 2006. We are required to collect a royalty payment for all qualifying works of art. Under new legislation which came into effect on 1st January 2012 this applies to living artists and artists who have died in the last 70 years. This royalty will be charged to the Buyer on the Hammer Price and in addition to the Buyer’s Premium. It will not apply to works where the Hammer Price is less than £1,000. The charge for works of art sold at and above £1,000 and below £50,000 is 4%. For items selling above £50,000, charges are calculated on a sliding scale. All royalty charges are paid to the Design and Artists Copyright Society (‘DACS’) and no handling costs or additional fees are retained by the Auctioneer. Resale royalties are not subject to VAT. Please note that the royalty payment is calculated on the rate of exchange at the European Central Bank on the date of the sale. More information on Droit de Suite is available at www.dacs.org.uk.

REMOVAL OF PURCHASES

Responsibility for packing, shipping and insurance shall be exclusively that of the purchaser. See Collections & Storage section for more info specific to this particular auction.

Purchase collections will be by appointment from the Rare Books Department at Lyon & Turnbull, Broadside, 2 Powderhall Road, Canonmills, EH7 4GB

CATALOGUE DESCRIPTIONS

All item descriptions, dimensions and estimates are provided for guidance only. It is the buyer’s responsibility to inspect all lots prior to bidding to ensure that the condition is to their satisfaction. Our specialists will be happy to prepare condition reports and additional images. These are for guidance only and all lots are sold ‘as found’, as per our Conditions of Sale.

IMPORT/EXPORT

Prospective buyers are advised that several countries prohibit the importation of property containing materials from endangered species, including but not limited to; rosewood, rhino horn, ivory, coral and tortoiseshell. Accordingly, prospective buyers should familiarise themselves with all relevant customs regulations prior to bidding if they intend to import lots to another country. It is the buyer’s sole responsibility to obtain any relevant export or import licence. The denial of any licence or any delay in obtaining licences shall neither justify the recession of any sale nor any delay in making full payment for the lot.

ENDANGERED SPECIES

Please be aware that lots marked with the symbol Y contain material which may be subject to CITES regulations when exporting outside Great Britain. For more information visit https://www.defra.gov.uk/ahvla-en/imports-exports/cites

Terms & Conditions

UK - Conditions Of Sale For Buyers

These Conditions of Sale and the Saleroom Notices as well as specific Catalogue terms, set out the terms on which we offer the Lots listed in this Catalogue for sale. By registering to bid and/or by bidding at auction You agree to these terms, we recommend that You read them carefully before doing so. You will find a list of definitions and a glossary at the end providing explanations for the meanings of the words and expressions used.

Special terms may be used in Catalogue descriptions of particular classes of items (Books, Jewellery, Paintings, Guns, Firearms, etc.) in which case the descriptions must be interpreted in accordance with any glossary appearing in the Catalogue. These notices and terms will also form part of our terms and conditions of sales.

In these Conditions the words “Us”, “Our”, “We” etc. refers to Lyon & Turnbull Ltd, the singular includes the plural and vice versa as appropriate. “You”, “Your” means the Buyer.

Lyon & Turnbull Ltd. acts as agent for the Seller. On occasion where Lyon & Turnbull Ltd. own a lot in part or full the property will be identified in the catalogue with the symbol (

See Full Terms And Conditions

Tags: Autograph