No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 May 2010
page 146 note * See ante, p. 141.
page 150 note * Vol. I. Plates 25, 60–63, and 66. Of these plates, No. 25 represents the shrine at Hereford, which we learn from Strutt to have belonged to the Bodenham family. The others are illustrations from Matthew Paris' Lives of the Offas: a Manuscript in the Cottonian Library, and of the 13th century.
page 152 note * During a recent visit to Auvergne, I found in public and private collections no less than five enameled reliquaries, more or less perfect, representing the Murder of Becket.—A. W. F.
page 152 note † Engraved in L'Abbaye de Pontigny, by Baron Chaillon des Barres. Paris, 1844.
page 153 note * See a copy of the deed, p. 160.
page 154 note * Rymer, iii. p. 110.
page 155 note * Blomefield, i. p. 675.
page 155 note † Vol. i. p. 675.
page 157 note * Vol. i. 674.
page 157 note † July 13, or July 20, there being Feasts of St. Margaret on both those days, but most probably the latter.
page 159 note * The pleadings in this cause, transcribed apparently from the Roll, may be found in the Cottonian Coll. Titus C. I., and an abstract of them in English in the Harleian Coll. No. 4268; but neither of these MSS. gives the evidence or the final judgment. A brief report of them is printed in Blomefield's History of Norfolk, vol. i. p. 675–7, from “the MSS. of the cause. Pen. P. L. N.,” meaning, I presume, that the MSS. were then in the possession of Peter le Neve. What has become of them I have not been able to ascertain.
page 159 note † For a daughter named Joan was heir, and two years old when the father died, see Collectanea Topog. et Geneal. vol. vii. p. 388.
page 160 note * The context seems to show that the words in brackets were inadvertently omitted.