[158.] Ibid., Part II. p. 1.

[159.] Ibid., Part II. pp. 25-7.

[160.] Ibid., Part II. p. 30.

[161.] "Another witness of the Minor Friars told the Commissioners he had heard from Brother Robert of Tukenham that a Templar had a son who saw through a partition that they asked one professing if he believed in the Crucified, showing him the figure, whom they killed upon his refusing to deny Him, but the boy, some time after, being asked if he wished to be a Templar said no, because he had seen this thing done. Saying this, he was killed by his father.... The twenty-third witness, a Knight, said that his uncle entered the Order healthy and joyfully, with his birds and dogs, and the third day following he was dead, and he suspected it was on account of the crimes he had heard of them, and that the cause of his death was he would not consent to the evil deeds perpetrated by other brethren."--Ibid., Part II. p. 13.

[162.] F. Funck-Brentano, Le Moyen Age, p. 396 (1922).

[163.] Ibid., p. 384.

[164.] F. Funck Brentano, op. cit., p. 396.

[165.] Ibid., p. 387.

[166.] Dean Milman, History of Latin Christianity, VII. 213.

[167.] E. J. Castle, op. cit., Part I. p. 22.