1. See especially the pioneering work by Janel Mueller, ‘A Tudor Queen Finds Voice: Katherine Parr’s Lamentation of a Sinner’, in The Historical Renaissance: New Essays on Tudor and Stuart Literature and Culture, eds Heather Dubrow and Richard Strier (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1988), pp. 15–47; ‘Complications of Intertextuality: John Fisher, Katherine Parr and “The Book of the Crucifix”’, in Texts and Cultural Change in Early Modern England, eds Cedric C. Brown and Arthur F. Marotti (Basingstoke: St Martin’s, 1997), pp. 15–36; ‘Devotion as Difference: Intertextuality in Queen Katherine Parr’s Prayers or Meditations (1545)’, Huntington Library Quarterly: A Journal for the History and Interpretation of English and American Civilization, 3, no. 53 (Summer 1990): 171–97.
2. Janel Mueller, ed., Katherine Parr: Complete Works and Correspondence (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 2011).
3. John Foxe, ‘The Story of Queen Katharine Parr, late Queen, and Wife to King Henry the Eighth: Wherein appeareth in what danger she was in for the Gospel, by means of Stephen Gardiner and others of his conspiracy; and how graciously she was preserved by her kind and loving husband the king’, in Actes and Monuments of these latter and perillous dayes, touching matters of the church (London: J. Daye, 1570 [1563]), p. 554.
4. Susan E. James, Kateryn Parr: The Making of a Queen (Aldershot: Ashgate, 1999), p. 280.
5. James Kelsey McConica, English Humanists and Reformation Politics under Henry VIII and Edward VI (Oxford: Clarendon, 1966), p. 201.