S. R. Gwynn, Roger Morrice and the Huguenot Refugees, McElligott, pp.32-48

I. Angleterre, ?. Juillet, and . Septembre1681, For d'Avaux's commentaries, see Jacques Solé René de Marillac, quartered troops in protestant households, with the assent of both the Minister of War, Louvois and of Louis XIV. 89 Many testimonies began circulating in England picturing the treatment of the French protestants at the hands of the dragoons, with gruesome stories of forced abjurations obtained by torture. 90 Copies of declarations and edicts of Louis XIV circulated widely, as did narratives of the persecutions, newsbook accounts of the events, epistolary exchanges between French and English friends. 91 Works by the former

B. Harris, The Protestant (Domestick) Intelligence: Or, News from both City and Country (previously, Domestick Intelligence: Or News both from City and Country), no. 95 (8 February 1681) and Curtis, True Protestant Mercury, p.16, 1681.

E. Everard, The Great Pressures and Grievances of the Protestants in France and their Apology to the Late Ordinances made against them, 1681.

. France, by the Mareschal Schombert and the Marquis of Ruvigny Sedan minister Pierre Jurieu were also rapidly translated into English. 92 The publishers who issued those tracts sometimes had strong dissenting sympathies, like Langley Curtis, Richard Janeway and Thomas Cockerill, who published one of the major accounts of Louis XIV's Huguenot legislation, with interlinear commentaries by the lawyer Edmund Everard. It is, however, The Humble the Whig newspapers and pamphlets that the battle for the hearts and minds of the English protestants was being waged

. France, Tortured with Pincers' and 'wollen'd' (which meant having a cord passed around one's temples and twisted with a (1681) For a study of these, see Anne Dunan-Page, La dragonnade du Poitou et l'exil des huguenots dans la littérature anglaise: faits et fictions', 2007.

S. La-politique-du-clergé-de-france, R. J. Howells, and P. Jurieu, Amsterdam, 1681) and Les Derniers Efforts de l'Innocence Affligée (The Hague, 1682) translated respectively as The Policy of the Clergy of France (1681) and The Last Efforts of Afflicted Innocence (1682) On those, see, pp.29-37, 1983.

T. Benskins, The Domestick Intelligence: Or News both from City and Country Impartially Related, no

S. Muddiman, Crist has argued that Richard Janeway, Richard Baldwin and Langley Curtis took over the leadership of the opposition press from Francis Smith and Benjamin Harris sometimes after, pp.242-245, 1681.

L. Gazette, For the news in the Gazette, see Peter Fraser, The Intelligence of the Secretaries of State and their Monopoly of Licensed News, pp.1634-1648, 1658.

F. Protestants, And at the same time the Observator Laughs at their Sufferings, and will needs prove them all, but Flea-bitings, p.98

. Observator, See His Majesties Letters to the Bishop of London and the Lord Mayor (1681) The letters are dated 22, pp.112-125, 1681.

A. P. Hands and I. Scouloudi, French Protestant Refugees Relieved through the Threadneedle Street Church, Quarto Series XLIX, pp.1681-1687, 1971.

G. B. Beeman, Notes on the City of London Records Dealing with the French Protestant Refugees, Especially with Reference to the Collections Made under Various Briefs, PHS, pp.7-1901