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Thursday, January 14th, 1869

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 May 2010

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Proceedings
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1870

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References

page 196 note * Vol. vi. p. 85.

page 198 note * Tremoils. The word, so far as I know, occurs only in the Roll in-blazon, temp. Edward III., printed by Sir N. Harris Nicolas, in 1829, in the following entry, (page 19) “Monsire Elmindbright, gules, une chief d'or, en le chief trois tremoiles vert.” The very learned editor was much puzzled by this entry. In a note (page 67) he says that be has found Tremoils in no glossary, and that the name Elmindbright has not been met with elsewhere. The copyist of the roll in 1562 has evidently not understood the word either. Writing, as it would seem, from a roll which was in colours as well as in blazon, he has in the margin given the gloss “harts of the bodie,” and Nicolas, as the tincture is vert, thought that trefoils were meant. But in the Rolls E. and F. edited by myself for the Society, in the Archæologia, vol. xxxix., Adam de Emerugge or Elmerugge (Elmbridge) occurs, bearing “Checquy sable and argent, on a chief or three elm-leaves slipped vert,” doubtless a differenced coat of the same family as that in the first mentioned Roll. Now tremble is at the present day the French for an aspen, “populus tremula,” and I think that there is little doubt that “tremoils” is herald's French for aspen-leaves. It is not accurately used in blazoning the Elmbridge coat, as the leaves there intended must be elm-leaves. However, the pun on elm will not hold in French, so that the exact species of leaf named in the French blazon was of slight importance.

page 198 note † Dugd. Mon. vi. 394.

page 200 note * Cal. Gen. ii. 539, 540.

page 200 note † Ubi supra.

page 200 note ‡ Weever, Fun, Mon. 809.

page 201 note * Blom. Norf., by Parkin, vii. 229.

page 201 note † Ib., x. 199.

page 201 note ‡ Placit. Abbrev. 255.

page 202 note * See his article on the Stowe Bardolfe seals in Herald and Genealogist, iv. 411.

page 204 note * See Memorials of Cambridge, by Cooper, ii. 222.

page 204 note † Arch. Journal, xiii. 90.

page 204 note ‡ Arch. Journal, xv. 178.

page 205 note * Proceedings, 2 S. ii. 444.

page 205 note † So made by Charter a.d. 1373.

page 205 note ‡ See Agreement, as quoted by Sayer, p. 20.

page 205 note § Wyrcester in his Chronicle counts 51 cellars in Wine Street.

page 206 note * Ante, p. 77.

page 207 note * Hutchinson cites : — Inq. p.m. Henrici [Vavasour] ao 5 Hatf. Inq. p.m. Annabells, ao 80 Hatf. Inq. p.m. Henrici ao 110 Hatf. Inq. p.m. Eliz. ux. Will. ao 170 Skirlaw.

page 207 note † Rot. B, No. 53. (Hutchinson's Note.)

page 207 note ‡ But see Misc. Gen. et Her. ii. 133.

page 208 note * See Surtees' Durham, iii. 90, seqq.

page 208 note † And see Surtees' History of Durham, iii, 90.

page 209 note * See his charter, Mon. Ang. vi. 267.

page 209 note † Ib. 269. The witnesses to his charter (quite a different set from those attesting Mr. Brown's, and the Harleian and Cotton Charter), are William and John de Brus, Roger Avenel, Richard de Bosco, Richard de Humez, Hugh de Corm, John de Artuiet, Humphrey de Gardino, Alan Anglʼ, Ralf de Tametun, Engeram de Munceus, Hugh son of Hamelin, Thomas the Clerk, Jordan de Beverel, Robert de Mida, and others.

page 209 note ‡ See Ragman Roll, Bannatyne Club, p. 160.

page 209 note § The other witnesses are Sir John de Bulmer, Sir Adam de Setone, and Sir William Wychard, knights ; William de Brus, Master Adam de Kyrkecuthbrith, William son of Richard son of Seyr, Richard de Romundeby, and John de Redmershyl.

page 210 note * See Ingledew's Hist, of Northallerton, p. 94, and the authorities there cited.

page 210 note † Rymer, Fædera, i. 483, last edition.