[256.2] Nos. 721, 736, 737.
[257.1] Rolls of Parl. vi. 232.
[257.2] See Nos. 742, 743.
[257.3] An appeal of murder was a criminal prosecution instituted by the nearest relation of the murdered person, and a pardon from the king could not be pleaded in bar of this process.
[258.1] Nos. 740, 746, 747.
[258.2] Nos. 750, 755, 767.
[258.3] Nos. 763, 764.
[259.1] Nos. 461, 627, 692, 693.
[259.2] On the 18th November 1471, Edmund Paston speaks of her as ‘my Aunt Ponynges.’ Before the 8th January 1472 she had married Sir George Browne. Nos. 789, 795.