[63]. C. xxx.

[64]. Nikolas Sæmundarson, abbot of Thingeyrar, who made a journey to the Holy Land about 1151, wrote an itinerary for the use of pilgrims from which the above quotation is taken. The itinerary is summarized in Riant, Expéditions et Pèlerinages des Scandinaves en Terre Sainte, 80-87.

[65]. C. iii. It is likely that English culture found its way into the North along with the French. When King Sigurd sailed to the Orient in 1107, he spent the winter of 1107-1108 at the English court.

[66]. C. iii.

[67]. Hákonar Saga, c. 228.

[68]. C. xxix.

[69]. Rotuli Litterarum Clausarum, I, 382, 506, 509.

[70]. Olafsen, “Falkefangsten i Norge”: Historisk Tidsskrift, Femte Række, III, 351.

[71]. Hákonar Saga, c. 191.

[72]. Ibid., c. 243.