[826] Jusserand, op. cit. I, p. 236.

[827] It is interesting to find the Master-General of the Dominicans in 1431 giving Jane Fisher, a nun of Dartford, leave to have a master to instruct her in grammar and the Latin tongue. Jarrett, The English Dominicans, p. 11.

[828] Reg. Walter Giffard (Surtees Soc.), pp. 147-8.

[829] Reg. John le Romeyn, etc. (Surtees Soc.), II, pp. 222-4.

[830] Reg. Epis. J. Peckham (Rolls Ser.), III, pp. 845-52.

[831] Reg. Thome de Cantilupo (Cant. and York Soc. and Cantilupe Soc.), p. 202.

[832] Reg. R. de Norbury (Wm. Salt Archaeol. Soc. Coll. I), p. 257.

[833] Reg. R. de Stretton (ib. New Series, VIII), p. 119.

[834] Reg. W. de Stapeldon, p. 316. See below, p. [286]. In the same year Archbishop Melton writes to the nuns of Sinningthwaite that in all writings under the common seal a faithful clerk is to be employed and the deed is to be sealed in the presence of the whole convent, the clerk reading the deed plainly in the mother tongue and explaining it. V.C.H. Yorks. III, p. 177.

[835] Liveing, Records of Romsey Abbey, p. 105.