[37] Ludovici regis ad abbatem Sugerium epist. 58.—Duchesne hist. franc. scrip. tom. iv. p. 512; see also epist. 59, ibid.

[38] Simeonis Dunelmensis hist. ad ann. 1148, apud X script.

[39] Dugdale Baronage, tom. i. p. 122, Dugd. Monast. vol. 7, p. 838.

[40] Ex regist. Hosp. S. Joh. Jerusalem in Angli in Bib. Cotton. fol. 289, a-b. Dugd. Monast. Angl. ed. 1830, vol. vii. p. 820.

[41] Ex. cod. vet. M. S. penes Anton. Wood, Oxon, fol. 14 a. Ib. p. 843.

[42] Liber Johannis Stillingflete, M. S. in officio armorum (L. 17) fol. 141 a, Harleian M. S. No. 4937.

[43] Geoffrey of Clairvaux observes, however, that the second crusade could hardly be called unfortunate, since, though it did not at all help the Holy Land, it served to people heaven with martyrs.

[44] His head and right hand were cut off by Noureddin, and sent to the caliph at Bagdad.—Abulfarag. Chron. Syr. p. 336.

[45] Spicilegii Dacheriani, tom. ii. p. 511; see also Will. Tyr. lib. xvii. cap. 9.

[46] Will. Tyr. lib. xvii. cap. 21. L’art de verifier les dates, p. 340. Nobiliaire de Franche-Compté, par Dunod, p. 140.