[281] For a reconstruction of the Priory buildings and grounds, and for specific evidence of statements made in the following paragraphs, the reader is referred to J.Q. Adams, The Conventual Buildings of Blackfriars, London, in the University of North Carolina Studies in Philology, xiv, 64.
[282] Feuillerat, Blackfriars Records, pp. 7, 12.
[283] Feuillerat, Blackfriars Records, p. 7.
[284] Feuillerat, Blackfriars Records, pp. 105-06.
[285] In all probability it was separated from the Hall and Parlor by a passage leading through the Infirmary into the Inner Cloister yard.
[286] One reason for the greater height may have been the slope of the ground towards the river; a second reason was the unusual height of the Parlor.
[287] Feuillerat, Blackfriars Records, p. 105.
[288] Ibid., p. 124.
[289] Feuillerat, Blackfriars Records, p. 8.
[290] For the deed of sale see ibid., p. 60.