1. Heraclitus Ridens, no. 1 [1 February 1681]. The periodical was written by a club of Tory writers, headed by Edward Rawlins and Thomas Flatman. See T. F. M. Newton, ‘The Mask of Heraclitus: A Problem in Restoration Journalism’, Harvard Studies and Notes in Philology and Literature, XVI (1934), 145–60.
2. R. Malcolm Smuts, ‘Public Ceremony and Royal Charisma: The English Royal Entry in London, 1485–1642’, in Lee Beier, David Cannadine and James Rosenheim (eds), The First Modern Society: Essays in English History in Honour of Lawrence Stone (Cambridge, 1989), pp. 65–93; David Cressy, Bonfires and Bells: National Memory and the Protestant Calendar in Elizabethan and Stuart England (London, 1989), pp. 50–66, 120; David Cressy, ‘The Protestant Calendar and the Vocabulary of Celebration in Early Modern England’, JBS, XXIX (1990), 31–52
3. Roy Strong, ‘The Popular Celebration of the Accession Day of Queen Elizabeth I’, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, 21 (1958), 86–103
4. Smuts, ‘Public Ceremony’, pp. 74–8. Cf. Jenny Wormald, ‘James VI and I: Two Kings or One?’, History, 68 (1983), p. 204.
5. Thomas Cogswell, ‘The Politics of Propaganda: Charles I and the People in the 1620s’, JBS, XXIX (1990), 192.