[222] Memorabilia of Glasgow, p. 55.
[223] Alexander Jenkins’ History and Description of the City of Exeter, and its Environs, Ancient and Modern, etc. (1806), p. 384.
[224] Index Monasticus, p. 61. Monasticon Anglicanum (2d edit.), vol. vi. p. 769.
[225] Notitia Monastica, p. 211.
[226] Lord Lyttelton’s History of the Life of Henry II. and of the Age in which he lived. (Lond. 1767.) Appendix of Documents, vol. iv. p. 220.
[227] See Monasticon Anglicanum, vol. vi. p. 643, 2d edit.
[228] Leland’s Itinerary through England and Wales (Hearne’s edit.), vol. iv. p. 105.
[229] Chron. MS. Henrici Knyghton, in Bibl. Bodl. lib. ii. cap. 2; Monasticon Anglicanum (2d edit.), vol. vi. p. 687.
[230] Agnes Strickland’s Lives of the Queens of England, vol. ii. p. 78.
[231] Ryland’s History of Waterford, p. 200. Mrs. Gore has founded one of her latest tales (“The Leper House of Janval”), on the idea of William, the third son of the Empress Matilda, becoming a leper. See her Tales of a Courtier, vol. ii. p. 55. I am not aware whether the tale is so far historically accurate, or merely assumed, as I do not recollect to have met with any notice of the individual history or death of the prince (the youngest of the three grandsons of Henry I.) who is the subject of the story.