[310] Mun. Acad. 432.
[311] Cf. Lyte, 106.
[312] This at least was the later practice; Clark, Register of the Univ., Vol. II, Pt. I. p. 180: the statute in Mun. Acad. 432 (‘quomodo Regens,’ &c.) may mean that the presiding master proposed the questions; perhaps this refers only to the Arts Faculty.
[313] See decree of 1586 in Clark, Reg. of Univ., Vol. II, Pt. I, p. 120—evidently an attempt to return to an older custom: cf. Mun. Acad. 433-4, though this probably refers only to the Act.
[314] Assisi MS., No. 158, questio 185: Hugh of Hertepol however probably presided in this case; see Part II.
[315] Ibid, questio 159.
[316] Trivet, Annals, p. 306; Lyte, 214.
[317] Bale, Script. Brit., Vol. I, p. 306: ‘in vesperiis Adae.’
[318] Trivet, ut supra.
[319] Mun. Acad. 392: ‘sicut in ecclesia Virginis gloriosae honorem recipit magistralem.’ Perhaps it was always unusual to hold the Act anywhere except in St. Mary’s.