LXXXVII. The pastoral custom and local wool trade of mediaeval Sussex, 1085-1485, by A. Marion Melville, M.A., published June 1932 in Institute of Historical Research (vol. 10, issue 28, article, pp.38-40) View Online
Obedientiary and other accounts of Battle Abbey in the Huntington library, published November 1934 in Institute of Historical Research (vol. 12, issue 35, article, pp.83-101) View Online
The Victoria County Histories, by L. F. Salzman, published November 1935 in Institute of Historical Research (vol. 13, issue 38, article, pp.65-68) View Online
The Organization of a College of Secular Priests as illustrated by the records of the College of Hob Trinity, Arundel (1380-1544), by R. B. K. Petch, B.A.(Leeds), M.A.(London), published May 1949 in Institute of Historical Research (vol. 22, issue 65, article, pp.54-57) View Online
Catholics and Local Office Holding in Elizabethan Sussex, by Roger B. Manning, published May 1962 in Institute of Historical Research (vol. 35, issue 91, article, pp.47-61) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 1429] View Online
Simon de Montfort and the Mise of Lewes, by David Carpenter, published May 1985 in Institute of Historical Research (vol. 58, issue 137, article, pp.1-11) View Online
A Suit of the Duke of Norfolk for Papal Favour, July 1531, by Michael J. Haren, published February 1987 in Institute of Historical Research (vol. 60, issue 141, article, pp.107-108) View Online
The 4th Earl of Dorset and the Politics of the Sixteen-Twenties, by David L. Smith, published February 1992 in Institute of Historical Research (vol. 65, issue 156, article, pp.37-53) View Online
Notes on a source for John Foxe's account of the Marian persecution in Kent and Sussex, by T. Freeman, published June 1994 in Institute of Historical Research (vol. 67, issue 163, article, pp.203-211) accessible at: British Library View Online
A poet in politics: Thomas Sackville, Lord Buckhurst and first earl of Dorset (1536-1608), by Rivkah Zim, published May 2006 in Institute of Historical Research (vol. 79, issue 204, article, pp.199-223) View Online
Abstract:Three elements in the experience of Thomas Sackville - eloquence, money and the law - integrate the achievements of the young poet and the mentality of the mature councillor, and enhance our understanding of him. His poetry had topical, political significance and taught him how to argue persuasively. His wealth gave him the confidence to be outspoken. His legal training, and the emphasis on equity and conscience, which began to affect Tudor jurisprudence (through such works as St. German's), account for many of the assumptions he articulated in public life. Two appended letters provide extended illustrations of these arguments.