D. R. See and . Woolf, Sir William Sanderson, pp.1586-1576

W. Sanderson, , pp.1123-1124

S. Barish, All regicides were not Puritans and were not necessary hostile to the theatre. See S. Wiseman, pp.62-80, 1981.

, The Life and Death of King Charles, p.199, 1676.

R. Manley, , p.94

D. Lloyd, , p.204

J. Gauden, The Bloody Court, or the Fatal Tribunal, p.1660

W. Dugdale, , p.370

R. Perrichief, , p.191

D. Lloyd, , p.205

, As for Lloyd, another royalist historian, he speaks of the "villany of the Actors in this tragedy

R. Perrinchief, one Pulpit Buffoon Peters, vol.63, p.195

. Ibid, , pp.192-193

F. Philipps, The royal martyr. Or, King Charles the First no man of blood but a martyr for his people Being a brief account of his actions from the beginnings of the late unhappy warrs, untill he was basely butchered to the odium of religion, and scorn of all nations, before his pallace at White-Hall, p.1660, 1648.

D. Lloyd, , p.196

E. Hyde, op. cit, vol.4, p.479

S. R. Perrinchief, See also Clarendon's dedication prefixed to the third volume of the first 1st edition published in 1704, op. cit, vol.4, p.492

R. Wunderli, G. Broce, ;. Jefferson, and . Nc:-mcfarland, How a person died was important; it was expected that good people would die well, and that the good and great would die greatly. And what conditions offer more challenges, and hence opportunities, for greatness than suffering and execution? Even the ephemeral, the supposedly "inartistic" writing of the time revelled in descriptions of these events, The Final Moment before Death in Early Modern England, vol.8, pp.259-275, 1979.

É. Épistémè, , vol.20, 2011.

S. R. Perrinchief, He expressed what were His Hopes (fall the Righteous have such) in Death, saying, I have a good Cause and a Gracious God on my side, pp.204-205

R. Perrinchief, , p.197

W. Dugdale, , p.361

A. E. and C. , The Hunted Stag and the Beheaded King, Studies in English Literature, p.551, 1500.

J. Staines, , p.92

, See for instance Nicolas Coeffeteau, Table of Human Passions, tr. E, p.162

E. Reynolds, Treatise of the Passions and Faculties of the Soul of Man, London, 1649; JeanFrançois Senault, The Use of the Passions, tr, The Passions of the Mind, p.1601, 1649.

D. Lloyd, , p.215

R. Manley, , p.203

S. L. Potter, The royal martyr in the Restoration: National Grief and National Sin, op. cit, p.245

J. Staines, , p.105

T. W. Laqueur, The First Modern Society: Essays in Honor of Lawrence Stone, p.306, 1989.

D. Lloyd, , p.198

R. Perrinchief, , p.195

;. R. Ibid and . Manley, We have roughly the same description in D. Lloyd, op. cit, pp.204-205

E. Hyde, op. cit, vol.4, p.486

N. K. See and . Maguire, , p.18

R. Wilcher, The Writing of Royalism, Lamenting the King, p.287, 2001.

B. S. Stewart, The Cult of the Royal Martyr, Church History, vol.38, issue.2, pp.175-187, 1969.

J. Milton and . Eikonoklastes, , p.332

E. Hyde and O. , , p.p. xix

P. Sidney, An Apologie for poetrie, p.1595

G. R. Hibbard, , p.26

R. Baxter, R. Baxterianae, M. Or, and . Richard, Baxter's Narrative of the most Memorable Passages of his Life and Times, London, 1696, Part I, p.63

. Voir-gisèle and . Venet, Shakespeare et ses contemporains, Sweet Violence : The idea of the Tragic, 1985.

J. Rushworth,

J. Rushworth, Containing the Principal Matters Which Happened from the Beginning of the Year 1645 to the Death of King Charles the First 1648, p.1428, 1721.

E. Hyde, op. cit, vol.4, p.488

E. Hyde and O. , , vol.1

D. Hume, Of Tragedy, David Hume, Essays Moral, Political, and Literary, vol.22, pp.223-224