[86] D’Arbois de Jubainville, Voyage paléographique dans le département de l’Aube, pp. 332-340.
[87] Muntaner, ch. 240; Thomas, Diplomatarium, I. 111; Predelli, Commemoriali, I. 198.
[88] Hist. de’ suoi Tempi, VIII. 50.
[89] Raynaldi, Annales ecclesiastici, V. 22, 23.
[90] Thomas, Dipiomatarium, I. 120-122.
[91] Çurita, Anales de la Corona de Aragon, bk. X. ch. 30.
[92] Τὸ Χρονικὸν τοῦ Μορέως, ll. 8086-8092; Le Livre de la Conqueste, pp. 1, 274.
[93] Rubió y Lluch, Los Navarros en Grecia, p. 309, n. 2; a much more probable explanation, derived from the word bort (“bastard”), than that of Ducange (note to Cinnamus, p. 392), who says that he was so called because our Black Prince had conferred on him the freedom of Bordeaux.
[94] Rubió in Anuari de l’Institut (1907), 253.
[95] La Grèce continentale, 217; Recherches historiques, I. 409.