[185a] 4 Lelandi Collect, p. 211.—See Appendix No. IV.
[185b] 4 Lel. Col. p. 210, 212.—See Appendix No. IV.
[186a] Jasper Tudor, Duke of Bedford, formerly Earl of Pembroke.—See Chap. V.
[186b] John de Vere, Earl of Oxford.—See Chap. VIII.
[186c] George Talbot, fourth Earl of Shrewsbury. He was the son of John, third Earl, and grandson of John, second Earl of Shrewsbury, who was slain at the battle of Northampton, in 1460.—See Chap. III.
[186d] Richard Neville, Lord Latimer, was the son of Sir Henry Neville (the son of George Lord Latimer, by Elizabeth his wife, daughter of Richard Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick), and died in the twenty-second year of Henry VIII.
[186e] Edward Lord Hastings, son of William Lord Hastings (put to death by Richard Duke of Gloucester, in 1488—see Chap. VI.) by Katherine, daughter of Richard Neville, Earl of Salisbury, and widow of William Bonvile Lord Harrington, was created Earl of Huntingdon, in the twenty-first, and died in the thirty-sixth year of Henry VIII.
[186f] Thomas Stanley, first Earl of Derby.—See Chap. II.
[186g] Sir Edward Fielding was the son and heir of Sir William Fielding, who fell at the battle of Tewkesbury, fighting for the Lancastrian party, and was interred there; he was the ancestor of William Fielding, created Earl of Denbigh, in the twentieth year of James I.
[186h] See Chap. VIII.