This lot is closed for bidding. Bidding ended on 2/16/2023
[ELIZABETH I (1533–1603)]. A 17th century manuscript of a sermon preached at the Queen’s funeral. Circa 28 April 1603.
27pp. [22pp. of Latin text in a contemporary hand, 5 blank leaves]. 8vo (203 x 159 mm). Original stitched wrappers, hand–titled on upper cover (some creases, some soiling with few small stains to covers). Includes translation into modern English. Provenance: Lot 300, sold on 20 January 1997 at Locke & England. “After her death on 24th March 1603, the body of Queen Elizabeth I was placed inside a lead coffin and carried by night in a torchlit barge along the Thames from Richmond Palace to Whitehall. There, the Queen was to lie in state until her funeral, giving time for the new king, King James I (VI of Scotland) to travel down to London. While the coffin lay in state, a life–size effigy of the Queen, dressed in her royal robes, was placed on top of it to act as a symbol of the monarchy while there was no monarch in England” (Tudor Society).