[133.] “The Gentleman’s Recreation.” 1595.
[135.] “The British Army: its Origin, Progress, and Equipment,” vol. ii. p. 286.
[136.] See the Report in Maitland’s “Hist. of London,” p. 594.
[137.] “An Answer to the Opinion of Captain Barwicke.” (Harl. MSS., No. 4,685.)
[138.] Their numbers, in Mr. Hewitt’s official Tower Catalogue, are 12/10 and 12/11.
[139.] “Brief Discourse of War, 1590.”
[140.] Peck’s “Desid. Cur.”
[141.] Bandoleers consisted of a belt of leather worn over the left shoulder, on which were suspended little metal, wooden, leather, or horn cylinders, each containing one charge. Examples are preserved in the Tower of London.
[142.] Harl. MSS., No. 5,109.