[14]Töply, loc. cit., p. 212.

[15]Ibid.

[16]Montagu Burrow’s, ‘Memoir of William Grocyn’, Collectanea, Second Series (Oxford Historical Society), Oxford, 1890, pp. 332 ff.

[17]J. N. Johnson, The Life of Thomas Linacre, London, 1835, pp. 1-12.

[18]G. B. Parks, The English Traveller to Italy. The Middle Ages (to 1525), Stanford, Calif., 1955, pp. 457-60.

[19]R. J. Mitchell, ‘Thomas Linacre in Italy’, English Historical Review, 1935, l. 696.

[20]This sequence was followed in Paris where in particular Guinther of Andernach and Jacobus Sylvius were proceeding from their study of Galen’s medical writings to those of an anatomical nature.

[21]Thomas Fowler, The History of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, 1893, p. 381; Register of the University of Oxford, ed. Boase, Oxford, 1885, ii. 128, where he is mentioned as ‘David Edwardys, disciple of the dyalectic art’.

[22]Ibid.

[23]Fowler, op. cit., pp. 58 and n., 85 n., 369 and n.