[528] Gross, ii. 155-6.

[529] See Vol. II., Chap. XIV.

[530] Blomefield, iii. 163.

[531] In 1403. Blomefield, viii. 531.

[532] Proceedings of Privy Council, vol. i., 167 (1401).

[533] Hist. MSS. Com. xi. 3, 186-7. In 1307 the mayor and community got a grant of land from the bishop for their basin for water. Ibid. 239.

[534] Hist. MSS. Com. xi. part 3, 240.

[535] Ibid. 213-215.

[536] A will was proved after a proclamation by the serjeant that on such a day it would be read in the Guild Hall before the mayor, and anyone who wished to contradict it must then appear. (Hist. MSS. Com. xi. part 3, 153, 189.) In the earliest wills no mention is made of probate before the ordinary; in later registrations it is recorded that the will had received episcopal probate before coming before the mayor. (Ibid. 155.) The cost of this was what the people desired to avoid.

“For who so woll prove a testament,
That is not all worth tenne pound,
He shall pay for the parchment
The third of the money all round;”