[6]. None is paged: nor are there catchwords.

[7]. Exclusive of headline, signatures, and marginal notes.

[8]. With fragments of the book, independently of copies.

[9]. As these pages pass through the press I am informed by Mr. E. G. Duff that Lord Crawford possesses an edition of Horace’s Opuscula printed in “1470” with signatures.

[10]. Blades was under the erroneous impression that Koelhoff printed at Lübeck, instead of Cologne: where also books with manuscript signatures occur later than 1472.

[11]. In 1467 Ulric Zel of Cologne (see p. [242]) was unacquainted with the setting-rule, which made evenness easy: he adopted it in 1468–9, but Colard Mansion at Bruges not till 1478 (Blades, Books in Chains, p. 128).

[12]. AELFREDVS . | LEGVM . ANGLIAE . | ACADEMIAE . OXON . | CONDITOR .

[13]. “A nativitate Christi ducentesimae nonagesimae quintae Olympiadis anno. II. VII. Idus Decembres,” = 7 Dec. 1472.

[14]. In 1528 we find a John Scolar, probably identical with the Oxford printer, printing a Breviary at Abingdon near Oxford for the use of the Abbey.

[15]. With privilege.