[345] Mun. Acad., 265.
[346] Ibid., 261 et seq.
[347] After the Black Death, Trinity Hall, Cambridge, possibly Corpus Christi, Cambridge, Canterbury College and New College, Oxford, were founded, and University (Clare) Hall, Cambridge, was enlarged, partly, at any rate, to repair the ravages the plague had made among the clergy.—Camb. Lit., ii. 354; cf. Hist. MSS., 5th Rep., 450.
[348] Mun. Acad., 267.
[349] Ibid., 266; O. H. S. 35-36, Ansley, 222, 229, 279, 313, 373, 382, 397.
[350] Mun. Acad., 266.
[351] The indenture in which the books are catalogued mentions nine books received before: possibly these were the gift of 1435.—Mun. Acad., 758; O. H. S. 35, Anstey, 177.
[352] O. H. S. 35, Anstey, 184-90.
[353] O. H. S. 35, Anstey, 184.
[354] Mun. Acad., 758.