Page 118. line 15. Tynouville.] Q. Tignonville.
Page 122. line 11. from bottom, Bar.] Bona de Bar, second wife of count Waleran, by whom he left no issue.
Page 123. line 6. Wife.] Waleran, count of St Pol, married for his first wife Matilda de Roeux, by whom he had one daughter, Jane, married to Anthony duke of Brabant. She died before her father, leaving two sons, John and Philip, who successively possessed the duchy of Brabant as heirs to their father, and the counties of St Pol and Ligny in right of their mother. Guy count of Ligny, father of Waleran, was also father to John count of Brienne, whose son Peter succeeded to the county of St Pol on the death of Philip duke of Brabant, in 1430, without issue.
Page 128. line 12. Bourges.] 'A stoute and prowde bishopp,' says Grafton, p. 447.
Page 132. line 11. Requests.] 'The king was nothing vexed nor unquieted with the sayeings and prowde bragges of the unnurtured archbishopp, but well remembering the sayeing of Salomon, &c. &c. coldely and soberly answered the bishop, saying, 'My lorde, I little esteem your french bragges,' &c.——Grafton.
It is very easy to bestow the terms of pride and insolence on whichever side of the question it is most convenient.
Page 142. line 11. Clarence.] Thomas duke of Clarence.
Page 142. line 11. Glocester.] Humphry duke of Glocester.
Page 142. line 13. York.] Edward duke of York, son of Edmund Langley, fifth son of Edward III.
Page 142. line 13. Dorset.] Thomas Somerset, earl of Dorset and afterwards duke of Exeter, youngest son of John of Gaunt by Catherine Swineford. Holinshed commits two errors,—first, in saying that the marquis of Dorset was made duke of Exeter, whereas the marquis of Dorset was a distinct person from the earl, being the eldest son of John of Gaunt by the same venter, and forfeited his title by treason in 1 H. 4.,—secondly, in fixing the date of creation in 1 H. 5. whereas the earl of Dorset was not made duke of Exeter till 4. H. 5. the year after the battle of Agincourt.