Page 132. line 5. Marquis of Pescara.] Ferdinand d'Avalos, Marquis of Pescara.
Page 132. line 8. Betonde.] Betonde—Bitonto.
Page 132. line 12. Viceroy of Naples.] Don Raymond de Cardona.
Page 132. line 15. Marquis de la Padulla.] Della Palude. See Guicciardini Lib. 10. for an account of this great battle.
Page 132. last line. Utrecht.] More probably Trajetto, Vespasian the son of Prospero Colonna was called duke of Trajetto, and though I do not find his name among those present at the battle of Ravenna, it is not unlikely that he was there under his relation Fabricio Colonna, duke of Palliano who commanded the Italian forces.
Page 151. line 3 from the bottom. Duke of Valois.] Francis count d'Angoulesme the presumptive heir to the crown of France, had lately been honoured with this title.
Page 164. line 5 from the bottom. Brittany.] Francis was duke of Brittany in right of the princess Claude who succeeded to that duchy on the death of her mother queen Anne. For, although the two crowns, the royal and ducal, had been united in the person of Louis XII, yet the duchy remained distinct from the kingdom, and would have passed away from it again had the princess Claude not married the heir of the crown of France. The countries were not incorporated till the reign of Francis I. who procured an act of union and settlement to be passed.
Page 167. line 2. Lord of Alençon.] Charles the second duke of Alençon, son of René and grandson of John II. who was beheaded. He married Margaret the sister of Francis the first, afterwards wife of Henry d'Albret king of Navarre.