226
CPR, Ed III, Vol. 8, 309, 332.
227
CPR, Ed III, Vol. 8, 305.
228
CLB F, 192.
229
CLB F, 192; Horrox 1994, 287–9.
230
CLB F, 192.
231
CPMR, Vol. 1, A6, m1b.
232
CLB G, ix.
233
CHW, Vol. 1, 608, 610; Vol. 2, 80.
234
CHW, Vol. 1, 607.
235
CHW, Vol. 1, 607–8.
236
CHW, Vol. 1, 600, 602.
237
CPR, Ed III, Vol. 8, 347, 354.
238
CPR, Ed III, Vol. 8, 388, 355.
239
Ormrod 1989, 856.
240
TNA SC 2/191/61 m20–24d.
241
CHW, Vol. 1, 641.
242
Riley 1868, 244–7.
243
CPR, Ed III, Vol. 8, 389.
244
CHW, Vol. 1, 567; CLB F, 193.
245
CLB F, 216; CHW, Vol. 1, 596.
246
CPMR, Vol. 1, A6, m2; CLB F, 199.
247
CPMR, Vol. 1, A6, m2b. This had a happy ending since on 13 April 1372, ‘Juliana, daughter of John Sellyng, acknowledged a loan of £3 2s 4d from John Lytlyngton, to be repaid out of 100s rents assigned to her by William de Stoke, tailor, that amount being in the latter’s keeping as her guardian’ (CPMR, Vol. 2, A17, m4b).
248
CHW, Vol. 1, 512, 524; CLB G, 57. De Northerne could not be found, so his properties and goods were seized.
249
CLB F, 207; CHW, Vol. 1, 535, 616.
250
Horrox 1994, 72.
251
CIPM, Ed III, Vol. 9, 302.
252
CPL, Vol. 3, 327.
253
Naphy and Spicer (2004, 32), following Gottfried (1983, 64), claim that 290 deaths per day were recorded between June and September 1349, but no basis for this figure has been found.
254
Horrox 1994, 153–4.
255
CPL, Vol. 3, 42.
256
CHW, Vol. 1, ix: the court was suspended for harvest time, and this clearly included the whole of August and September each year.
257
CHW, Vol. 1, 608–9, 611, 614, 618.
258
CHW, Vol. 1, 616; CPR, Ed III, Vol. 8, 455.
259
CLB F, 110.
260
Röhrkasten 2001, 189.
261
CLPA, nos 66–68.
262
CLPA, no 57.
263
CHW, Vol. 1, 555, 572, 621–2.
264
Luard 1866, 412.
265
CLB F, 199.
266
CPMR, Vol. 1, A6, m3b.
267
CLB F, 199.
268
CPR, Ed III, Vol. 8, 459; CLB F, 210.
269
Horrox 1994, 118.
270
CHW, Vol. 1, 626.
271
CHW, Vol. 1, 625. Richard survived until 1363 but his little sister is not mentioned in his will (CHW, Vol. 2, 77).
272
TNA E 101/472, translated and summarised by Dr Jeremy Ashbee.
273
St Paul’s by 1345, Salisbury Cathedral by February 1349 and Hereford by July 1349: CPL, Vol. 3, 184, 293, 319.
274
Sharpe 1885, 9.
275
Riley 1868, 251–2. De Hethe was apparently afterwards imprisoned for impersonating the Pope’s secretary. Though pardoned in 1352 by the king, he was again accused of impersonation four years later, his role this time that of a canon of Hereford Cathedral (Parry 1912, 244).
276
TNA E 40/2645; CPR, Ed III, Vol. 8, 484.
277
Platt 1997 (3rd imp.), 6.
278
The averaged figure is consistent with the results from the
pestis secunda
, where the average from seven individuals (about 5 per cent of the sample) indicates death at a point 27 per cent of the way through the same period.
279
I am very grateful to Penny Tucker for sharing her analysis of the Husting court sessions with me.
280
TNA CP 40. I am very grateful to Graham Dawson for sharing his preliminary evidence with me.
281
Barber and Thomas 2002, 12–13; Museum of London Archaeology Service unpublished evaluation report site code GLY01.
282
Grainger et al. 2008, 12.
283
The provision of age and sex to any individual skeleton is not 100 per cent certain (e.g. Chamberlain 2006); demographic data are derived from the Centre for Human Bioarchaeology database at the Museum of London and have been grouped into cohorts and matched to archaeological evidence by the author as part of a study on medieval monastic cemeteries:
http://ads.ahds.ac.uk/catalogue/archive/cemeteries_ahrb_2005/index. cfm?CFID=31460&CFTOKEN=63267820
284
S.N. DeWitte, 2007 (data from 490 specimens generously supplied by DeWitte and converted into age/sex categories as used in Table 3a/3b).
285
Grainger et al. 2008, 33.
286
Hatcher 1986, 31.
287
Grainger et al. 2008, 55.
288
CLB G, 15.
289
See, for example, Gottfried 1980, 9: London’s tax returns for 1377 indicate a ratio of men to women of 1.07:1.
290
Hollingsworth and Hollingsworth 1971; though this is not true of all episodes of plague analysed: see S. Ell 1985.
291
Lomas 1989, 130.
292
Laurent 1937, nos 730–865.
293
Evans in prep; the burials were dated, by dendrochronology of the remarkably well-preserved coffins, to 1349 in several instances.
294
For a discussion of this issue, see Gilchrist and Sloane 2005, Chapter 5.2.
295
Gilchrist and Sloane 2005, Table 7.
296
Hawkins 1990, 641, for putrefaction; Gilchrist and Sloane 2005, Chapter 5.2; Gilchrist 2008, 144–7.
297
Gilchrist and Sloane 2005, 102.
298
Horrox 1994, 31–2.
299
Dohar 1995, 39.
300
Lütgert 2000, 258.
301
Horrox 1994, 268–9.
302
C. Thomas, personal communication.
303
Ziegler 1969 (1997 edn), 124; Naphy and Spicer 2004, 31; Olea and Christakos 2005, 299–300.
304
Britnell 1994, 198–9; Röhrkasten 2004, 77.
305
See Nightingale 2005, 40–1.
306
Megson 1998.
307
Hovland 2006, 208–9.
308
Hennessey, 1898. I have also included evidence from the Husting wills which augments Hennessey’s original work.
309
CPP, 234, 395.
310
CPP, 468.
311
St John Hope, 25, 7–8; Kingsford 1908, II, 81–2.
312
TNA E 328/6.
313
Hawkins 1990, 642.
314
CLB G, 85.
315
Riley 1868, 264–5.
316
VCH Middx 5, 49–55.
317
Karlsson 1996, 271, quoting
lslandske Annaler indtil 1578.