[164.1] No. 288.

[164.2] Nos. 294, 295.

[164.3] No. 291.

[164.4] No. 295.

[165.1] See Rymer, xi. 366.

[165.2] No. 287.

[165.3] No. 303.

[165.4] No. 303. See also a brief account of the same affair in W. Worcester’s Itinerary, p. 114.

[165.5] Jenkins’s History of Exeter, p. 78.

[166.1] Rolls of Parl. v. 285. It may be observed that the bishopric was at this time vacant, and the dean, whose name was John Hals, had received a papal provision to be the new bishop, but was forced to relinquish it in favour of George Nevill, son of the Earl of Salisbury, a young man of only three-and-twenty years of age. Godwin de Præsulibus. Le Neve’s Fasti. Nicolas’s Privy Council Proceedings, vi. 265.