[1723] Ib. III, p. 113. The house seems to have been in much the same condition later. A nun had run away in 1372 and the misdeeds of the bad prioress Eleanor came to light in 1396. Ib. 114-5.
[1724] Ib. p. 124.
[1725] Ib. p. 126.
[1726] Ib. p. 161. In 1535 Archbishop Lee found that a nun here, Joan Hutton, “hath lyved incontinentlie and unchast and hath broght forth a child of her bodie begotten.” Yorks. Arch. Journ. XVI, p. 453.
[1727] V.C.H. Yorks. III, p. 164.
[1728] Ib. p. 164.
[1729] Ib. p. 116 and Yorks. Arch. Journ. IX, p. 334.
[1730] Ib. pp. 176-7.
[1731] Ib. p. 175.
[1732] Dugdale, Mon. IV, p. 194; see also Cal. of Pap. Letters, X, p. 471.