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In vol. IV, 469, n.i. Tout states: 'Among the jewels normally kept in the privy wardrobe was the famous 'Croice Gnaythe' which was preserved in a coffer; Pipe, 198/34, 27 Ed. III. A list of plate, received by Mildenhall is in ib. m. 34d'. William Mogie was apparently a clerk in the Privy Wardrobe. No mention of his name or any surname resembling his is to be found in the Issue Rolls, Calendars of Close and Patent Rolls, or in the lists and indexes of the Exchequer Accounts Various, Foreign Accounts, Ancient Petitions and Ancient Correspondence. Chamberlains of the Exchequer; two officials of the Exchequer, who together with the Treasurer, were responsible for receiving and issuing money. Pell of Receipt: roll upon which payments into the Exchequer were recorded. NOTES 1 There is no documentary evidence of the exact date of the gift. 2 Cf. Note 6. infra. 3 The discovery of this figure is due to a photograph taken by Mr. C. J. P. Cave, F.S.A., by whose kind permission the accompanying photographs are reproduced. 4 St. John Hope, Windsor Castle, Vol. II, p. 454. 5 Hope, Vol. II, p. 412. 6 Dr. Hartwell Jones: Celtic Britain and the Pilgrim Movement', Y Cymmrodor, Vol. XXIII (1912), p. 100. 7 Flores Historiarum (Rolls Series), iii, 59, 63. 8 Rymer Foedera, II, 867. 9 Garderobae Quotidianum Edwardi Primi. Printed from the Library of the Society of Antiquaries, 1787, p. 28. Subsequently referred to as Wardrobe Account of Edward I, 1787. 10P.R.O. E.101/370/3. 11 Wardrobe Account of 15 and 16 Edward II. 12 Dr. Hartwell Jones: op. cit., p. 103, n. 5. 13 Quoted in Glossary of Wardrobe Account of 28 Edward I (1787). 14 A sum representing at the present day circa £ 1000. 15 Treasurer's Account, Windsor Records, xv.34.6, 7. Steward's Account, W.R., xv.18.1. 16 P.R.O. E.407/5/100, 25-26 Edward III. Mr. Edward Owen is wrong in stating in Y Cymmrodor, Vol. XLIII, p. 1, that this document is missing from the P.R.O. This document is printed above. 17 A sum representing at the present day circa £ 6300. 18 1. Inventory of 1384-5. Bodl. Library, Oxford. Ashmole MSS. No. 16. 2. Inventory of 1409-10. Bodl. Library, Oxford. Ashmole MSS. No. 22. 3. Inventory of i October 1501. Windsor Records, XI.D.8. 4. Inventory of 1534. P.R.O. Exchequer. Treasury of the Receipt Books, Vol. 113, No. 11. A photostat copy of his inventory is included in N.L.W. MS. 6498. 19 Hope, Vol. II, n. 13, p. 466. 20 Ibid. 21 The translation of the text is by Professor Deanesly, of the Royal Holloway College. 22 Tighe and Davies, L. Annals of Windsor (1868), p. 120, n. 3, quoting B. Museum Bib. Cotton, Vespasian, C. XII. 23 Cf. Note 18 above. 24 Possibly a reference to Aberconway, where the cross was surrendered to Edward I. Cf. Dr. Hartwell Jones, 'Celtic Britain and the Pilgrim Movement', Y Cymmrodor, Vol. XXIII (1912), p. 102. 25 Wriothesley, II, 83. Quoted by Pollard, Political History of England, Vol. VI, p. 73. 26 Archaeologia, Vol. 42 (1869), p. 77: 'Some Accounts of a Visitation of the Royal Chapel of St. George of Windsor in 1552', by the Rev. G. Fyler Townsend. All the documents will be found in Additional MS. B.M.5498, fo. 42, except where they are otherwise referred to. Op. cit., p. 93. Of this inventory no copy has been found. 28 Op. cit., p. 79. State Papers, Domestic Series, Vol. XIV, No. 55. 29 William Franklyn, appointed Dean, 17 December 1536. He was an Etonian and had a distinguished career at Cambridge and under Bishop Tunstal at Durham, ^where he was Archdeacon from 1515. Born circa 1480, he was an old man and infirm. 30 Archaelogia, Vol. 42, p. 95, quoting B.Mus, Cotton MSS., Cal. B., VII, fo. 444-445. 31 Op. cit., p. 96, quoting B.Mus. Additional MSS. 5751, fo. 327. Original Bill on parchment.