User:Revent/Biography/sources/A/Abbot, Maurice

DNB

 * Article title: Abbot, Maurice
 * Author: Lee, Sidney Lazarus
 * LEAD: ABBOT, Sir MAURICE or MORRIS (1565–1642), an eminent merchant, governor of the East India Company, and lord mayor of London, was the fifth and youngest son of Maurice Abbot, a clothworker of Guildford, and was the brother of George Abbot, archbishop of Canterbury, and of Robert, bishop of Salisbury [q. v.].
 * Errata: Dictionary of National Biography, Errata (1904), p.1
 * LEAD: ABBOT, Sir MAURICE or MORRIS (1565–1642), an eminent merchant, governor of the East India Company, and lord mayor of London, was the fifth and youngest son of Maurice Abbot, a clothworker of Guildford, and was the brother of George Abbot, archbishop of Canterbury, and of Robert, bishop of Salisbury [q. v.].
 * Errata: Dictionary of National Biography, Errata (1904), p.1

General

 * Life of Dr. George Abbot, reprinted by Onslow from the Biographia Britannica, with the lives of his two brothers (Guildford, 1777)
 * Remembrancia of the City of London, 166, 304
 * W. N. Sainsbury's Colonial State Papers (East Indies, China, Japan), 1600–24
 * Foster's Collectanea Genealogica, vol. i.
 * Brayley and Mantell's History of Surrey, i. 392–3
 * Heywood's Porta Pietatis, edited by F. W. Fairholt, in Percy Society's Publications, x. part ii. pp. 55–78
 * Calendars of Dom. State Papers, addenda, 1580–1625, and from 1619 to 1639.
 * Porta (sic) Pietatis, or the Port or Harbour of Piety. Exprest in sundry Triumphes, Pageants, and Showes at the Institution of the Right Honourable Sir Maurice Abbot, knight, into the Mayoralty of the famous and fame renowned city London. Written by Thomas Heywood. London, 1638.

Cites

 * Rymer, Fœdera, xvii. 171
 * Rymer, Fœdera, xvii. 467
 * Authentic Documents of the Court of Charles I, i. 15
 * House of Lords MSS., Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. iv. 33
 * Wood, Athen. Oxon. (ed. Bliss), ii. 564
 * Members of Parliament, i. 494
 * House of Lords MSS., Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. iv. 62, 72, 73, 80, 102
 * Cal. State Papers, 1629–31, p. 453