[109] Barbour’s “The Bruce,” bk. xvii., quoted by General R. Maclagan in Journal of Asiatic Society of Bengal, xlv. 30 ff.

[110] Froissart, vol. i. pt. 2, c. 21, p. 332; c. 26, p. 337.

[111] Diedo, “Hist. of the Republic of Venise,” ii. 228 ff.; Paruta, Storia della Guerra di Cipro, 88 ff.

[112] In Coleridge’s “Dict. of the Oldest Words in the English Language.”

[113] State Papers, Dom. Series, iii. 353.

[114] See Table II.

[115] E. Pears, “Fall of Constantinople,” 1885, p. 211.

[116] “Hist of Greece,” iii. 492.

[117] “Voyages,” &c. Trans. par Baratier, 1734, c. 6, p. 50.

[118] “Struphnos ... turned into money not only the bolts and anchors of the ships but their sails and rigging, and left the navy without a single large ship” (ὁ Στρυφνός ... δεινότατος ὢν μὴ μόνον γόμφους καὶ ἀγκύραις χρυσίου ἀλλάξασθαι ἀλλὰ καὶ λαίφεσιν ἐπιθέσθαι καὶ ἐξαργυρίσαι πρότονα, ἀπαξάπαντος πλοίου μικροῦ τὰ νεώρια Ῥωμαίων ἐκένωσε). Nicetæ Hist., “De Alex. Isaac. Ang. Fr.,” l. iii. p. 716. Sea-fire is not actually mentioned, but the man who made away with the fittings of the ships was not likely to spare the ammunition, if saleable.