Bibliography - Howard
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The Howard Papers, with a biographical pedigree and criticism, by H. Kent Staple Causton, published 1862 accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 17517]

The Early Genealogical History of the House of Arundel: Being an Account of the Origin of the Families of Montgomery, Albini, Fitzalan, and Howard, from the Time of the Conquest of Normandy by Rollo the Great, by John Pym Yeatman, published 1882 (Mitchell and Hughes) accessible at: West Sussex Libraries

Notes on the Collections Formed by Thomas Howard, Earl of Arundel and Surrey, K. G. , by Lionel Cust and Mary L. Cox, published August 1911 in Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs (vol. 19, No. 101, article, pp.278-286)

The Ven Philip Howard Earl of Arundel 1557-1595 English Martyr Vol II, by John Hungerford Polen and William MacMahon, published 1919 accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 1915]

The Life Correspondence & Collections of Thomas Howard, Earl of Arundel, 'Father of Vertu in England', by Mary F. S. Hervey, published 1921 (Cambridge University Press) accessible at: West Sussex Libraries   View Online

Charlie Howard: a Sussex Sportsman, by J. C. Bristow-Noble, published 1929 in Sussex County Magazine (vol. III no. 2, article, pp.84-85) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 2307] & The Keep [LIB/500139]

Sussex and the U.S.A., 2nd series. 2 - Sussex and Francis, Baron Howard of Effingham, Lieutenant-General of Virginia, by David McLean, published 1931 in Sussex County Magazine (vol. V no. 2, article, pp.138-142) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 2310] & The Keep [LIB/500174]

The Fitzalan and Howards of Arundel, by C. E. Snowden, published 1938 in Sussex County Magazine (vol. XII no. 3, article, pp.198-202) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 2317] & The Keep [LIB/500183]

St. Philip Howard. The Life of St. Philip Howard (1557-1595), by Howard Henry Granville and Francis W. Steer, published 1971 (30 pp., Phillimore) accessible at: West Sussex Libraries

The Career of John Howard, Duke of Norfolk, 1420-1485, by Anne Ross, 1975 at University of London (M.Phil. Thesis)

Philip Howard, Earl of Arundel and Surrey 1595, by Mark Elvins, published 1981 (pamphlet, Incorporated Catholic Truth Society) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 7787] & West Sussex Libraries

St Philip Howard, Arundel and the Howard connexion in Sussex, by F. W. Steer, published July 1981 in Studies in Sussex Church History (edited by M. J. Kitch, pp.209-222, London: Leopard's Head Press & The University of Sussex, ISBN-10: 0904920038 & ISBN-13: 9780904920031) accessible at: West Sussex Libraries & East Sussex Libraries

The Deputy Earls Marshall and the Howard Family, by Michael J. Burchall, published December 1983 in Sussex Genealogist and Family Historian (vol. 5 no. 3, article, pp.91-94) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 9173] & The Keep [LIB/501191] & CD SXGS from S.F.H.G.

Lord Arundel and His Circle (Thomas Howard, Earl of Arundel 1585-1646), by David A. Howarth, published 1 July 1985 (264 pp., Yale University Press, ISBN-10: 0300034695 & ISBN-13: 9780300034691) accessible at: West Sussex Libraries

The Patronage and Collecting of Aletheia, Countess of Arundel, 1606-54, by David Howarth, published 1998 in Journal of the History of Collections (vol. 10, issue 2, article, pp.125-137)
Aletheia Talbot (d 1654) married Thomas Howard, 2nd Earl of Arundel in 1606 Arundel was later to be described as the 'father of verlu in England' by Horace Walpole. The purpose of this article is to evaluate the contribution of Lady Arundel to the Arundel collection, the first in Britain to combine Renaissance paintings of the European schools with Greek and Roman antiquities. The issue of how and what Lady Arundel contributed is approached by describing how she acted independently of her husband as patroness and collector, particularly in relation to her extensive travels in Europe when she was without her husband, and at the end of their lives when they lived separately in exile - she in the Low Countries and he in Italy. The difficulties of defining Lady Arundel's own tastes, and identifying what part of the Arundel collection can be regarded as specifically hers, are also raised.

From bootmaker's daughter to Napoleon's mistress, by Graham Taylor-Paddick, published December 2008 in Sussex Family Historian (vol. 18 no. 4, article, pp.214-215) accessible at: W.S.R.O. [Lib 15860] & The Keep [LIB/508971] & CD SFH40 from S.F.H.G.
Preview:
This article concerns a possible cousin of mine, who was a fairly distinguished lady who had grassroots origins in Brighton. I refer to Elizabeth Ann HARYETT who, under the pseudonym Harriet HOWARD, became the mistress and financial backer of Emperor Napoleon III of France.