[11] The Miss Hobart who figures in de Gramont's Memoirs was Sir John's sister, one of the first baronet's sixteen children.
[12] There is an illustration of the room that Monmouth slept in at Raynham upon this occasion in King Monmouth.
[13] A Narrative of the Visit of His Majesty King Charles the Second to Norwich, 1671 (1846).
[14] See Secret Chambers and Hiding-Places.
[15] See Memoirs of the Martyr King.
[16] There is an engraving of this room in Nash's Mansions.
[17] The description was written more than twenty years ago.
[18] See King Monmouth.
[19] Illustrations of these relics are in King Monmouth.
[20] The open roof of the manor-house, now a cooper's shop, is also worth inspection.