[65] Journal du voyage de Michel Montaigne, i. p. 17.

[66] In the collection of Mr. Ayr in London.

[67] M. Leprieur, Gazette des Beaux Arts, January 1911.

[68] A contemporary monument in the Cathedral at Tours erected by Anne de Bretagne to the memory of these two little boys has assisted greatly in the identification of these portraits.

[69] At the sale of the collection of Mr. Robert Hoe in New York there came to light another example of Bourdichon’s skill in the Hours of Anne de Beaujeu.

[70] MS. 18014, Bibl. Nat. Paris.

[71] There is a portrait of the same monarch in a MS. at The Hague (copied for Gaignières) to which is attached a note giving its date and the name of the artist as a certain Jean de Bruges, who according to M. B. Prost seems to be identical with Johannes Bandol pictor regis.

[72] The three others, representing Edward III, Charles IV of Germany, and Charles, Duke of Normandy (afterwards Charles V of France), have unfortunately disappeared.

[73] The Magi with the Portraits of Edward III and Queen Philippa as Donors.

[74] History of Art in England (Burlington Fine Arts Club Exhibition, 1909).