[407] Quoted by Addy, op. cit. p. 179 and note.
[408] J. C. Cox, in Curious Church Customs, p. 1.
[409] J. C. Jeaffreson, op. cit. pp. 344-5. Cf. Barnabe Googe, Popish Kingdome, 1570, translated from the Latin of Naogeorgus, Bk IV. ll. 789-92.
[410] Fabric Rolls of York Minster (Surtees Soc. XXXV. 1859), p. 271.
[411] W. Harrison, Elizabethan England, ed. Lothrop Withington, N.D., p. 65. The first edition of Harrison’s work was published in 1577.
[412] W. Harrison, op. cit. p. xxiii.
[413] E. Lega-Weekes, in Notes and Queries, 1910, 11th Ser., I. p. 346. Concerning Guilds, see E. L. Cutts, Parish Priests and their People in the Middle Ages of England, 1898, pp. 473-85.
[414] A. Jessopp, Before the Great Pillage, 1901, pp. 29-31. Parsonage houses are described by E. L. Cutts, op. cit. pp. 149-163.
[415] P. Stubbes, Anatomie of Abuses in England, 1583, ed. F. J. Furnivall, 1877-9, pp. 150-2. J. Brand, Pop. Antiquities, ed. Sir H. Ellis, 1843, I. pp. 276-284.
[416] F. A. Gasquet, Par. Life in Mediaeval England, pp. 233-7. J. C. Jeaffreson, op. cit. I. pp. 354-5. J. Brand, op. cit. I. p. 282. Athenaeum, 17 Sept. 1910, p. 333.