Heres Galfridi de Nevile tenet in Lincolnescire,..."
Page 251: "as we gather from Florence [?] ..."
64 Floriacensis Vigorinensis: John of Worcester (fl. 1095-1140), chronicler, the author of the world history formerly attributed to Florence of Worcester. Survives in five twelfth-century manuscripts. Holinshed's last citation is under 1115, ... ~ CATALOGUE OF PRINCIPAL SOURCES USED IN 1577 EDITION OF HOLINSHED'S CHRONICLES COMPILED BY HENRY SUMMERSON
[http://www. cems.ox.ac.uk/holinshed/Catalogue%20of%20principal%20sources.....pdf]
'Stamford Bridge' and 'Stamfordbridge' both appear more than once in this book, and in the First edition. Two instances of 'Stamfordbridge' have been corrected to 'Stamford Bridge', to correspont to the First edition.
Page 323 (in Chaper 'regenbald, priest and chancellor'): A Charter in Anglo-Saxon has been restored from the 1st edition (1895).
Anglo-Saxon letters in this Charter include:
- þ = lower-case thorn;
- Ƿ = Capital Wynn;
- ƿ = lower-case wynn;
- ð = lower-case eth;
- ꝥ (in compliant browsers) = thorn with stroke, an abbreviation for þæt [þt].
þ and ð are also used elsewhere in the book.
Page 381: The printer has used a symbol to simulate a mediaeval scribe's abbreviarion of 'et':