106 Proceedings of the Roijal Irish Acade,my, 



White— Whyte—Whyt, Andrew, 160; 

 Christopher, 100, 107, 123, 126, 144, 

 145; Henry, 2, 85, 125; John, 2, 

 21, 43, 71, 102; Nicholas, chaplain, 

 84, 85 ; Richard, 106, 107, 144, 

 145; Simon, 106. 



Whitrell, Nicholas, 31. 



Whitshed, Mrs. Mary, 47, 56. 



Wicklow, 21. 



"Wills, see Testaments and p. 51. 

 Wodbryd — Wydbryd, Gilbert, 133 ; 



Thomas, 133. 

 Wode, Eobert, 67-69, 72-80, 101, 



116-118. 



Wodelok — Wodlok, Richard, 160; 



Thomas, 61. 

 Woder— Wodere, Nicholas, 35, 38, 39, 



40 ; Peter, 62. 



"Wolton, see Walton. 

 Wood, Richard, 93, see also Wode. 

 Worrall, Barbara, 100, 123. 

 Wybrants, Bartholomew, 53, 54, 55 ; 



Peter, 51-55; Peter, alderman, deed., 



55 ; Stephen, 53, 54. 

 Wych, Roger, 61. 

 Wydon, John, mayor, 130. 

 Wynton, Thomas de, 113. 

 Wyntyr, John, chaplain, 65, 116-118. 

 Wytherton, William de, 129. 



Yong — Yonge, Henry, 85, 135 ; John, 



99 ; John, chaplain, 96, 97. 

 Yonger — le Jonger, Gerald, 59, 60. 



NOTE ADDED IN PRESS. 



Church Cake, pp. 43, 45 (Nos. 10, 13). 



The holy loaf was blessed after the holy water on Sundays, and the deliverance 

 of it was the ground of a demand by the parish clerk for holy loaf halfpenny. At 

 Coventry, one clerk had to see the holy loaf cut, and he distributed to those on the 

 north side of the church ; the second clerk to those on the south side. — See The 

 Clerli's Book of 15^9, ed. J. Wickham Legge. (Henry Bradshaw Society.) 

 Lond. 1903. 



This ancient custom still prevails in certain parts of Normandy and Brittany. 



