[98.1] Ellis’s Letters, First Series, i. 11-13.
[98.2] English Chronicle (ed. Davies), 69.
[98.3] Nicolas’s Privy Council Proceedings, vi. 116. According to Fabyan, the king and Somerset set out on the 16th of February. The summons to Lord Cobham, though dated Westminster, was issued on the 17th.
[99.1] Cottonian Roll, ii. 23. See Appendix to this Introduction.
[99.2] Rolls of Parl. v. 346. The statement in the Act of Attainder passed against the Duke of York seven years afterwards, that he was ‘of no power to withstand’ the king on this occasion, is liable to suspicion, but it is confirmed by the testimony of Whethamstede, 348.
[99.3] ‘The Lords, both spiritual and temporal, took the matter in hand.’ Three Fifteenth Century Chronicles (Camden Soc.), 69. So also Chronicle of London, 137.
[100.1] Fabyan.
[100.2] Fabyan. Three Fifteenth Century Chronicles, 69, and the MS. Chronicle, Vitell. A. xvi.
[102.1] These words are not in the copy in the Rolls of Parliament, but they occur in that given in Holinshed’s Chronicle.
[102.2] Rolls of Parl. v. 346.