[258] 1531 new style.
[259] A new edition of this book has recently been published at Brussels, being a photo-lithographic reproduction of the copy in the Bibliothèque du Roi.
[260] See what M. A. de Montaiglon says of this engraving in the Archives de l'Art français, vol. ix, p. 266.
[261] [For original Latin, see Appendix [X], y.]
[262] The borders are the same as those at the beginning and end of the Entree de la Royne.
[263] [For original Latin, see Appendix [X], z.]
[264] These three opuscula are bound together in one volume at the Bibliothèque de l'Arsenal. The Bibliothèque Nationale also owns them all, bound separately and more or less imperfect. The omission of the last of the three from the new catalogue is an error, for it is in the library.
[265] At the shop of M. Potier, bookseller, Paris. M. Alkan, senior, also owns the last leaf of this signature.
[266] If the other three signatures are complete, they should contain six sheets, folded two and two, according to custom.
[267] It will be observed that the judges granted the license for but one year, instead of the three that Tory had asked. I have seen another similar collection of ordinances in the name of Galiot Dupré, dated 1528, for which the judges extended the license to two years.