[1525] Trial, vol. v, pp. 137, 139. In the royal records this privilege is described as having been granted at Jeanne's request; in such a request we cannot fail to discern the influence of her father.

[1526] Ibid., pp. 141, 266, 267.

[1527] Ibid., p. 103.

[1528] Du Cange, Glossarium, under the words Auriacum, electrum, and leto. Vallet de Viriville, Les anneaux de Jeanne d'Arc, in Mémoires de la Société des Antiquaires de France, vol. xxx, January, 1867.

[1529] Trial, vol. i, pp. 185, 238. Walter Bower, ibid., vol. iv, p. 480.

[1530] Sanctissimæ virginis Coletæ vita, Paris, in 8vo, black letter, undated, leaf 8 on the reverse side. Bollandistes, Acta sanctorum, March, vol. i, p. 611.

[1531] Trial, vol. i, pp. 86, 87.

[1532] Ibid., p. 104. H. Jadart, Jeanne d'Arc à Reims, p. 37.

[1533] "These figures (Goliath and David) must have been sculptured at the end of the 13th century." (L. Demaison, Notice historique sur la cathédrale de Reims, s.d. in 4to, p. 44.) The date of the rose window is 1280 (H. Jadart, Jeanne d'Arc à Reims, p. 44).

[1534] According to the Vulgate. First book of Samuel according to the Authorized Version (W.S.).