[1931] Pardessus, Diplomata, etc., Paris, 1849. ii. 309.
[1932] Jaffé, Bibliotheca Rerum Germanicarum, Berlin, iii. (1866) 154. 199. 214. 216-8. 109.
[1933] Doubtless Eadburh, third abbess of Minster in the Isle of Thanet in Kent. She died a.d. 751.
[1934] Pharm. Journ. viii. (1877) 121.
[1935] Eden, State of the Poor, ii. (1797) appendix; Rogers, Hist. of Agriculture and Prices in England, ii. (1866) 543.
[1936] Nicholls, Progresses and Processions of Q. Elizabeth, i. (1823) xxxiv. 118.
[1937] Additional information may be found in two papers by Marshall, in Thomson’s Annals of Philosophy, x. (1817) 241 and 346; see also Leschenault de la Tour, Mém. du Musée d’Hist. nat. viii. (1822) 436-446.
[1938] Op. cit. 252-253.
[1939] Formerly called fardela or fardello, a name signifying in the Romance languages bundle or package. The word fardel, having the same meaning, is found in old English writers.
[1940] Yet the cultivation was far more extensive in the earlier part of the century, as we may judge by the statement that the five principal cinnamon gardens around Negumbo, Colombo, Barberyn, Galle, and Matura, were each from 15 to 20 miles in circumference (Tennent’s Ceylon, ii. 163).