Part 5 (1/2)

[20] _Orderic Vitalis_, book x, chapter xvii; and _William of Malmesbury_, book v, chapter i

[21] _Norman Conquest_ (Freeeance of Duke William on the men of Alencon”

[22] _Geoffrey de Mandeville_ (J H Round), p 89 and p 334

[23] The kitchens of the period were usually situated at no great distance froht construction; frequently they were only wooden-fras, alls of wattle and daub, and thatched roofs, hence the need for the continual repairs that figure so numerously in the early records

[24] _Mediaeval Military Architecture_ (G T Clark), vol ii, p 257

[25] ”Norwich Castle” (A Hartshorne, FSA), _The Archaeological Journal_, vol xlvi, pp 264, 265

[26] Stubbs's _Introductions to the Rolls Series_, edited by Hassall, p

221

[27] The total cost of erecting Chateau Gaillard des Andelys a to the _Roll of the Norman Exchequer_ for 1198 (edited by T Stapleton; vol ii, pp 309, 310 _et seq_), a sureat outlay upon the works at London in 1191

[28] _Archaeologia_, vol lx, p 239

[29] Roger of Wendover's _Chronicle_ (Bohn's edition), vol ii, p 100, and Roger de Hoveden's _Annals_, _ibid_, vol ii, p 137, sub 1190 ad

[30] _Manuel d'Archaeologie Francaise_ (Enlart), vol ii, section xi, pp 497-500

[31] ”The Nore Castle,” W H St John Hope, _Cae Antiquarian Society's Communications_, vol xi, p 340

[32] _Exchequer Accounts Roll_, 3/15, 5 Edward I

[33] _Peel: Its Meaning and Derivation_ George Neilson, FSAScot

[34] In the ruins of the Palace of the Archbishops of York at Southwell, in Nottinghamshi+re, one of the wall turrets used as a latrine chaelish Domestic Architecture_ (Turner & Parker), vol ii, p 114

[35] Matthew Paris's _English History_ (Bohn's edition), vol i, pp

166, 315, 326

[36] Also known as ”Galighmaes, or Galleyman's,” Tower, but the noed at various tilish Chronicle_ (Bohn's edition), p

443, sub 1119 ad

[38] _Liberate Rolls_, 37 & 39 Henry III, m 5 and m 11

[39] _Ibid_

[40] Many curious particulars of this erie are to be found in Maitland's _History of London_, vol i, p 172 _et seq_ In 1754 there were two great apes called ”the s), one of which killed a boy by throwing a cannon ball at him!

[41] _Liberate Roll_, 24 Henry III, at Westminster, February 24th (1240)

[42] _Liberate Roll_, 25 Henry III, m 20, at Windsor, December 10th