[190] Dugdale, under Bermondsey.
[191] The “Pedlar of Swaffham” and some Welsh stories refer to the bridge in the same way. See Rhys, Celtic Folklore.
[192] Hist. MSS. Report of St. Paul’s Documents, p. 49.
[193] See T. H. Round, Commune of London.
[194] Geoffrey de Mandeville, p. 436.
[195] Thorpe, pp. 97-103.
[196] London and the Kingdom. In Winton Domesday is written Chenictes tenebat la chenictehalla ubi potabant gildam suam.
[197] Does this mean the lost charter constituting the mayor?
[198] Camden Society.
[199] Lick up the penny—Howell writes, “Some call London a Lickpenny, as Paris is called a Pick-purse, because of feastings and other occasions of expense.”