[35] Matthew Paris's English History (Bohn's edition), vol. i., pp. 166, 315, 326.
[36] Also known as "Galighmaes, or Galleyman's," Tower, but the nomenclature of the various towers has been greatly changed at various times.
[37] William of Malmesbury's English Chronicle (Bohn's edition), p. 443, sub. 1119 ad.
[38] Liberate Rolls, 37 & 39 Henry III., m. 5 and m. 11.
[39] Ibid.
[40] Many curious particulars of this menagerie are to be found in Maitland's History of London, vol. i., p. 172 et seq. In 1754 there were two great apes called "the man tygers" (probably orang-outangs), one of which killed a boy by throwing a cannon ball at him!
[41] Liberate Roll, 24 Henry III., at Westminster, February 24th (1240).
[42] Liberate Roll, 25 Henry III., m. 20, at Windsor, December 10th.
[43] Matthew Paris, ut supra, vol. i., p. 488.
[44] Close Roll, 21 Henry III., m. 11; and ibid. 37 Henry III., m. 2; also The Ancren Riwle (Camden Society), pp. 142, 143.