By Ghr\. Wordsworth, M.A^. ■-■ s 



567 



Cambridge, where it occurs directly underneath the list of 



altars printed above. 



I have added the dates of accession, &c. 



^[ Nomina Regum in ecchsia Sa,risburiensi. 



In sinistr" 

 parte interi- 

 oris chori 

 S&visburiensis. 



^Le Roy Henry frere au roy William Rous 



Le Roy Stiepne 



Le Roy Henri Counte de Angewe 



Le Roy Henri Jun 



Le Roy Richard 



Le Roy Johan 

 ^Le Roy Henri iii ce 2 



In dextra 



parte int- 



erioris 



chori 



Saxisburien. 



[In aujstrali 

 [parte] chori 

 Sa,risburiensis. 



Old.) 

 [HOG 

 1135." 



1154 

 1183' 

 1189 = 

 1199" 

 1216' 



958 

 975 

 979 

 1042 

 1066 

 1066 

 1087; 



"1272 



'1307' 



1327 



[1377—1399 



[1382 : l 1394 



,Le Roy Edgar 

 Le Roy Edward de Shaftbury 

 Le Roy Etbelred 

 Le Roy Edward de Loundres 

 Le Roy Harold 

 Le Roy William Conquerour 

 ^■Le Roy William Rous 

 Le Roy Edward le primer 

 Le Roy Edward le secounde 

 Le Roy Edward le iij ce 

 Le Roy Richard de Burdeux 

 Le 1 Reyne Anne sa femme 

 Le' Reyne Elizabeth 3 sa femme [? 1395 : cir. 1401] 



This list gives the names of twenty royal personages dating from 

 Edgar, King of the English in the days of Dunstan, A.D. 958, down 

 to Richard II., who resigned the crown in 1399, and died at 

 Pontefract 14th February, 1400. The last name in the list is that 

 of his consort, Isabella (here called Elizabeth) of France, whom he 

 espoused in November, 1396, She left England in 1401, and in 

 1406 was married to Charles of Angouleme, afterwards Duke of 

 Orleans, and she died in 1409, It seems hardly probable that any 

 representation of her should be erected in Salisbury after 1399. 



These personages certainly were not interred at Salisbury; and 

 such representations of them as were oiice " on the south of the 



1 Sic. 



3 The designation of K. Henry is indistinctly written. It appears as 

 ' med." in Dr. James's catalogue. But Edward III. has a somewhat similar 

 ftnal upstroke like a delta. So I venture to read " iii ce " (=tierce) in both 

 [instances. 



5 Elizabeth (sic.) Presumably for Ysabelle, the girl wife who was espoused 

 bo Richard II. for two years before his deposition in 1399, when she returned 

 bo France before she reached her teens. 



