Introduction
I
John Le Neve's single volume of Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae appeared in 1716. (fn. 1) Unlike
many antiquarians of the leisured eighteenth century, Le Neve was not a wealthy
gentleman, nor a clergyman with time on his hands, but his work was the result of
stringent financial necessity. His original intention had been to revise and bring up to
date Francis Godwin's De Praesulibus Angliae, which consisted of lists of the bishops
of England and Wales, and was published in 1616. (fn. 2) However, the dean of Peterborough, White Kennett, put his valuable collection of manuscripts (fn. 3) at Le Neve's
disposal, and as he had for years been collecting materials for lists of deans and other
principal dignitaries, Le Neve decided to enlarge the scope of his work to include these,
together with lists of prebendaries in most of the post-Reformation chapters, the
provosts of Eton, deans and prebendaries of Westminster and Windsor, and heads of
the colleges of Oxford and Cambridge.
Le Neve was very conscious of his indebtedness to White Kennett, and frequently
pays tribute to his 'unparallel'd Generosity', declaring that as to his own part, he aims
'at no higher a character than that of a faithful transcriber'. Browne Willis maintained
that 'though Mr John Le Neve has the name and credit of the Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae,
yet the real compiler of that useful work was bishop Kennett'. (fn. 4) Thomas Duffus Hardy
agreed that on comparing Le Neve's book with White Kennett's collection, it seemed
that Le Neve had done little more than publish a different arrangement of those
materials. However, Browne Willis's judgment on Le Neve seems a harsh one, since
in addition to White Kennett's collection, Le Neve worked through several other
collections. He used the library and manuscripts of Sir Robert Cotton (moved from
Cotton House to Essex House in the Strand in 1712), and quotes extensively from the
manuscripts of Matthew Hutton, who had copied many extracts from the diocesan
registers of Lincoln, York, Bath and Wells, and London, with a view to continuing
Godwin's De Praesulibus. He also used the collections of William Fleetwood, bishop of
Ely (on St Asaph), Roger Dodsworth (then in the Bodleian, on York), and John
Featley, prebendary of Lincoln. As further evidence of his industry, he cited a formidable list of manuscripts consulted for the diocese of Canterbury, as a sample of the
work involved. He received assistance from various people besides White Kennett.
One Mr Reynold, registrar of Hereford, provided lists of Hereford deans, Thomas
Tanner gave lists of the prebendaries of Ely, John Evans, bishop of Bangor, the Bangor
deans, and archdeacon Richard Bowchier gave assistance at Chichester. (fn. 1) The list of
chancellors of Norwich was taken from Sir Thomas Browne's Posthumous Works
(London, 1712), checked by Thomas Tanner, and the lists of St Paul's dignitaries
from Richard Newcourt's Repertorium Ecclesiasticum Parochiale Londinense (2 vols.,
London, 1708).
Le Neve based his work where possible on standard works, such as Godwin,
Battely's edition of Somner's Antiquities, Isaacson's Chronology and Wharton's De
Episcopis et Decanis. (fn. 2) He also consulted the bishops' and archbishops' registers in the
various dioceses, and made occasional use of some chapter material. His practice is
generally to give full page references to printed works, but hardly ever to give folio
references to manuscripts. (fn. 3) Moreover, if information were supplied to him by a
person of scholastic eminence, that person's authority was thought to outweigh the
need for full references. (fn. 4) The same applies to information given from memory. (fn. 5) In
other instances, Le Neve gives tantalisingly vague references, such as 'Cart. Orig.',
'Ex cartis in Baga de Dioc. Cicestr.', 'A Deed in the possession of Peter Le Neve,
Esq.', 'In an Old Charter at Chichester', 'in an ancient MS. in the Church of Exeter',
or 'MS. in Bibl. Bodl.'.
Le Neve declares in his Preface that he faced 'many Difficulties and Discouragements' in compiling the Fasti, even to the extent of suffering a 'maliciously contriv'd
Imprisonment, purposely intended to ruin both the author and the design'. (fn. 6) He was
unable to secure access for work on the prebendaries of Rochester, Worcester, Chester
and Durham. There are several indications that he was in a hurry to get the material
printed, which affected the order of the lists, and caused some sections to be included
in the addenda. (fn. 7)
The Fasti were not immediately well received, and in consequence Le Neve did not
produce the supplement which he had intended. Although 750 copies were printed,
there were only forty-five original subscribers. The value of the work was soon apparent
to scholars and antiquarians, and most of the eminent men of the eighteenth century
possessed and annotated copies, and several of them made proposals for a second
edition.
Probably the most assiduous collector of material for a revision was the antiquarian
Browne Willis. He had a copy of Le Neve's Fasti interleaved, in order to insert additions and corrections, (fn. 1) and when he found he had sufficient for a small volume, offered
the material to Le Neve with the request that he should produce a supplement or a
new edition. Le Neve, however, had been discouraged by the reception given to his
work, and refused to continue it, 'alledging that he could not meet with the least
Encouragement'. (fn. 2) Browne Willis therefore published his material in a different form,
as surveys of the four Welsh cathedrals, and of a considerable number of English ones. (fn. 3)
Some of the lists were prepared for him by others. That for Durham was given to him
by Nathanial Ellison (a prebendary there who died in 1721), and enlarged by John
Rymer, head master of the College School (1711-33) and by some of the Durham prebendaries. For York, he used the list of James Torre up to 1693, and continued it to
1722. (fn. 4) William Walmisley, dean of Lichfield, extracted information about the dignitaries at that cathedral from the bishops' and chapter registers. In addition to the
contributions and suggestions of friends such as bishop Kennett, Dr Tanner and Mr
Maker, Browne Willis sought material at the Rolls Chapel, Prerogative and First
Fruits Office, Cottonian and Lambeth Libraries, and also made collections from the
Bodleian, Ashmolean and private libraries, and examined diocesan and chapter archives
for each cathedral in the country, apart from Carlisle. (fn. 5) Being a man of considerable
private means, Browne Willis had the leisure to pursue his researches without the
pressing need that they should yield financial reward, which restricted Le Neve's
activity.
As a result, Browne Willis declares that he was able to add to Le Neve's lists for the
churches of York, Lichfield and Hereford 'no less than 370 Precentors, Chancellors,
Treasurers and Archdeacons . . . besides about 400 Archdeacons and Prebendaries in
the Churches of Durham, Chester, Worcester and Gloucester, that he has made no
Mention of, not to insist on what I have done in other Cathedrals, or my rectifying
numerous Dates of Collations etc.' (fn. 6) Unlike Le Neve, Browne Willis attempted lists of
prebendaries for such of the cathedrals of the old foundation as he dealt with. He also
prepared Fasti for several of the cathedrals not covered in his Surveys. His notes on
these were transcribed by William Cole, and form part of volumes 27-29 of the
Cole MSS. in the British Museum. (fn. 7)
Other antiquarians left annotated copies of Le Neve with materials for a revision.
In the Bodleian Library, in addition to Browne Willis's copy, there is one with
additions by John Blackbourne and Samuel Drake, (fn. 8) and copies formerly belonging to
Thomas Tanner, (fn. 1) Richard Gough, (fn. 2) William Cole, (fn. 3) one Brooke, an attorney, (fn. 4) John
Denne, (fn. 5) Richard Rawlinson and Samuel Carte, (fn. 6) and Robert Masters. (fn. 7) Further copies
were at Cambridge (fn. 8) and in the British Museum. (fn. 9)
It was not until 1854 that a revised edition of Le Neve was eventually produced by
Thomas Duffus Hardy. In his introduction, he describes some of the earlier abortive
attempts. The Rev. William Richardson of St John's College, Cambridge, issued a
Prospectus about 1825 for a new edition in two folio volumes, but lacked sufficient
subscribers to defray the expenses. Edward Herbert, 2nd earl of Powis, purchased an
interleaved copy of Le Neve filled with annotations and additions by several people,
and offered its use to the Roxburghe Club, but the project was not sufficiently popular,
and was abandoned. The Rev. John Gutch of Oxford considered producing a revision,
and 'was only deterred from the undertaking by its extreme labour, and from the
fortunate circumstance of his obtaining the easier and more profitable employment of
Registrar to his University'. (fn. 10) Later, the Rev. Charles Coates would have brought out
a new edition, had the University of Cambridge been willing to publish it. Hardy, likewise, collected materials for many years, but could not find a publisher willing to take
the risk of an expensive production unlikely to sell in large numbers. At length the
Oxford University Press agreed to undertake the work.
Hardy was at this time working at the Branch Record Office at the Tower of London,
and later, in 1861, became Deputy Keeper of the new Public Record Office in Chancery
Lane. Le Neve's single volume was now enlarged to three, and his 11,051 entries to
30,000. Hardy continued Le Neve's lists up to his own day, incorporating additional
lists of prebendaries for some of the post-Reformation cathedrals, and making
occasional corrections and additions from his own researches. He also added a list
of the canons of Southwell collegiate church, prepared by the Rev. J. F. Dimock, and
appended an Index of Persons, although no attempt was made to identify people of
the same or similar names. The principal new sources of information used by him were
the patent, charter and close rolls (then at the Tower and Rolls Chapel), the Church
Books (in the Home Office), and bishops' certificates (at Carlton Ride and Queen Anne's
Bounty Office). He also made use of White Kennett's copy of Le Neve in the library
of Sir Thomas Phillipps, (fn. 11) and that belonging to Earl Powis. He used such of the
diocesan registers as he was able to obtain access to, and consulted local antiquarians,
such as the Rev. G. Oliver, whose Lives of the Bishops of Exeter was published in
1861. (fn. 12) Unlike the first edition, the revision is not based on Godwin and Le Neve's
other authorities, but Hardy declared that he had tried to consult the original authorities
to whom they referred. He admits that he was not able to see many of these documents,
and in these instances he cites the secondary authorities.
If Le Neve is accused of publishing a transcript of White Kennett's material, Hardy
may be accused with even more justice of drawing heavily on Browne Willis. The lists
of prebendaries are often copied verbatim from the Surveys. Often they are abbreviated, and Browne Willis's valuable references to monumental inscriptions are reduced
to an unsupported statement of the date of death. Occasionally some information
from the patent rolls is added with references. The bishops' lists are more independent
of Browne Willis, though in parts the copying was clearly word for word. Hardy
usually abbreviated the biographical material, and added mention of his sources in
the chronicles. For the London prebendaries, Hardy reprinted Newcourt's lists, again
largely unaltered. The other cathedrals for which Browne Willis did not publish lists
(namely, Canterbury, Chichester, Exeter, Norwich, Rochester, Salisbury, Wells and
Winchester) are altered only in small details from Le Neve, and otherwise left entirely
the same, with the addition of lists of prebendaries, based principally on the bishops'
certificates at the Public Record Office. Hardy attempted no pre-Reformation lists of
prebendaries, however. For Salisbury, the list of prebendaries begins in 1538, contains not a single reference in thirty-four pages, and gives the prebendaries in chronological order. Hardy clearly did not consult Browne Willis's notes among the Cole
MSS. or he could very easily have given reasonably complete lists under their respective
prebends. The Wells lists begin about 1537, and although the prebends are listed
separately, the only references are to the Valor Ecclesiasticus or bishops' certificates.
(The list for the prebend of St Decumans goes back to 1295, and a few pre-Reformation prebendaries are also given for Wiveliscombe and Shalford, the latter taken directly
from Newcourt's list of patrons presenting to the vicarage of Shalford in Essex. (fn. 1) ) The
Exeter list begins in 1588, and that for Chichester in 1714, again not given according
to prebends. One is left with the impression that Hardy's alleged attempt to check
Le Neve's secondary authorities by their sources was ineffective. Even his method of
giving references is still far from satisfactory. Incomplete references are given for the
chronicles, and many other references are of the vaguest. (fn. 2) The patent roll references
are given more fully and are generally traceable. Occasionally folio references are given
for bishops' registers, but this is not the regular practice. There are still very many
unsupported statements and dates: whole pages, particularly on Welsh dignitaries, are
completely lacking substantiation.
Hardy's revision is thus not an unqualified improvement on Le Neve. Moreover he
seems to have accepted somewhat uncritically the information given him by others.
Thus his Exeter lists incorporate the mistakes of Oliver, and are less reliable in places
than the 1716 edition. (fn. 3) In addition, in most cathedrals, he still left untouched chapter
act books, account rolls and sundry other records. Small errors and inconsistencies
abound, especially before the Reformation. Sometimes references given are wrong,
and some names seem purely fictitious.
The need for a revision of Le Neve-Hardy has long been apparent. In several
dioceses Fasti have been produced which have succeeded in improving considerably
upon the 1854 work. Much fuller lists of the prebendaries of St Asaph had already
been published in 1801 in Willis' Survey of St. Asaph, considerably enlarged, comp.
Edward Edwards (2 vols., London, 1801). Only forty copies were printed, and Hardy
does not seem to have used it. Oliver's Lives of the Bishops of Exeter was published in
1861, but as Hardy had consulted Oliver, this adds little to the 1854 Fasti. The Fasti
Herefordenses, compiled by F. T. Havergal (Edinburgh, 1869) likewise adds little to
Hardy's work, although it contains fuller biographical detail. Of much greater importance was Edward Yardley's manuscript on St Davids entitled Menevia Sacra,
which although compiled in 1739-61, had disappeared at the compiler's death in
1770, and was discovered in 1879 in the earl of Cawdor's library at Stackpole Court,
Pembrokeshire, and was given by him to the cathedral library at St Davids. (fn. 1) Yardley
had corresponded with Browne Willis, who urged him to publish his work, saying
that the 'series of succession of the Members of each Stall is beyond expectation or
imagination compleat, & what no one else would or ever could have so well digested
& ranged'. (fn. 2) Hardy, therefore, did not see Menevia Sacra, and it is a particularly important compilation as four of the bishops' registers cited by Yardley have been lost
since his time. In fact, Hardy's lists of dignitaries include some (from patent roll
sources) not known to Yardley, but Yardley gives a considerable number of medieval
prebendaries, unlike Hardy whose lists begin in 1714. W. H. Jones produced Fasti
Ecclesiae Sarisberiensis (2 vols., Salisbury and London, 1879-81), a detailed though not
entirely accurate work, making use of chapter material, and of Browne Willis's interleaved Le Neve in the Bodleian Library, and his notes in vol. 29 of the Cole MSS. in
the British Museum. The latter are copies of the annotations made by Browne Willis
in his copy of The History and Antiquities of the Cathedral-Church of Salisbury and the
Abbey-Church of Bath [comp. Richard Rawlinson] (London, 1719), which contains
fairly detailed lists of dignitaries, but exceedingly patchy lists of prebendaries, and is
greatly improved by Browne Willis. Jones added references and much biographical
material. His lists are more complete, as he used the chapter acts fully, and also consulted the lists of prebendaries with prebends in Dorset drawn up in The History and
Antiquities of the County of Dorset, comp. J. Hutchins (2nd ed. London, 1796-1814).
G. Hennessy in his Novum repertorium ecclesiasticum parochiale Londinense (London,
1898) succeeded in improving greatly on Newcourt, and his Chichester Diocese Clergy
Lists (London, 1900), although no references are given, lists many pre-Reformation
prebendaries. Sir Charles Clay has recently produced York Minster Fasti (Yorkshire
Archaeological Society, Record Series, cxxiii, cxiv, 1958-9) covering the period prior
to 1307.
The late Professor A. Hamilton Thompson was particularly concerned about the
importance of a revision, and left his annotated copy of Le Neve-Hardy to the Royal
Historical Society, with especially full notes of York, Hereford and Lichfield. He
indeed planned a new edition for the period up to 1541 with a view to its publication
by the Royal Historical Society. At his death, however, the Society felt unable to
undertake this, and in 1955 the Institute of Historical Research agreed to assume the
responsibility, the period 1300-1541 being chosen as the first portion to be revised. (fn. 3)
Since 1854 several new sources of information for this period have become available.
The publication of the Calendar of Papal Letters and Calendar of Papal Petitions has
revealed far more claimants to prebends and dignities than were previously known, and
has made it possible to fill in the accounts of disputes, or supplement the information
when no bishops' registers exist. The Public Record Office Calendars of patent, close
and fine rolls have likewise produced much more information than Hardy extracted
from the public records. The publication of many bishops' registers, especially when
these are thoroughly indexed, has made it possible to trace individuals more satisfactorily than in an unpublished register. The massive undertaking of the Rolls Series
of mediaeval chronicles, published 1858-96, made access to these sources much simpler,
even though in some cases the indexes are not sufficiently detailed. Moreover in many
cathedrals records have been classified and catalogued for the first time, as archivists
have been appointed.
In the work of preparing the revised edition, all the bishops' registers (printed and
manuscript) in each diocese have been thoroughly combed, together with chapter act
books and other relevant archive material, in order to draw up fresh lists, which have
been checked against earlier ones, but by no means based on them. This has been
supplemented by a thorough search of the archbishops' registers at Lambeth Palace
Library and the registers of the prior and convent of Christ Church Canterbury.
Where dates of death are otherwise unknown, the wills of the Prerogative Court of
Canterbury at Somerset House have been consulted. At the Public Record Office, the
following classes of records have been consulted fairly thoroughly: Chancery Miscellanea, ecclesiastical (C 47), Ecclesiastical petitions (C 84), Exchequer ecclesiastical
documents (E 135), subsidy rolls (E 179) and papal bulls (SC 7), with occasional
reference to others such as plea rolls (CP 40) and coram rege rolls (KB 27), though
these have been by no means exhaustively searched. The Valor Ecclesiasticus, Calendars
of the patent, close and fine rolls, and of papal letters and petitions, together with the
Letters and Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII, have also been fully checked, and a large
number of printed chronicles consulted. All cardinals have been checked in Eubel's
Hierarchia Catholica Medii Aevi (Münster, 1913-23).
II
The compilers of the revised edition of the 1300-1541 section of Le Neve have adopted
a fairly rigid editorial method in order to give uniformity to the series of volumes.
The framework of each volume, however, is not as uniform as it was in the 1854 edition,
where the offices for each cathedral were given in the same order. As the order of
precedence among the dignitaries in fact varied from place to place, the present edition
has followed the order in use in each particular diocese. (fn. 1) The sub-dean has been
included when he was a member of the chapter. The compilers, being faced with a
great variety of forms for the names of the prebends, decided to choose the name used
currently in each diocesan handbook, even though it may occasionally differ from that
at present written over the appropriate prebendal stall. For some dioceses a table of
variant names has been drawn up. (fn. 2) In the case of prebends which now no longer exist,
the present place-name has been used. (fn. 3) This practice has occasionally caused a change
in the alphabetical order of the prebends as given by Le Neve-Hardy. In Exeter where
the prebends were all of the same value and had no distinguishing name, the topographical arrangement of the prebends could not be followed and a chronological one
has been substituted.
The account of each man's tenure of office is headed by his name, degree and dates.
Where there is more than one claimant, they are grouped together, as it is sometimes
difficult to determine which man actually gained possession. Unsuccessful claimants
to the bishopric (where it is relatively certain who was successful) are given in square
brackets. In general, the name chosen to describe a man is that most commonly found
among the variant spellings in the records, for the spelling of names was far from consistent, even within a single diocese. Versions that differ considerably from the principal one are included in the index to each volume, though by no means all the variations found, some of which have only slight differences from each other. If a man was
known by alternative names which are completely different (e.g. William Basyng or
Kingsmill), (fn. 1) these names are given also in the text. Sometimes slightly different names
are given to the same man in different dioceses, (fn. 2) and in this case, the variant names are
brought together in the cumulative index. An attempt has also been made in the
cumulative index to distinguish men of the same name, by giving their date of death
if known, or the period during which they were known to have been active. Unless
there is sufficient evidence for the certain identification of two men with the same
name, they are entered separately. As several members of the same family often had
the same Christian name it is dangerous to conclude that two men of the same name
and period must be one person. Names are normally given in the contemporary form.
Thus 'de' has been left in the names (except in the first volume of the series), until
it was dropped round about 1390. An exception has been made in the case of a few
famous men, such as William of Wykeham, whom it would seem pedantic to refer to
otherwise. This method of following contemporary usage has meant that place-names
used as surnames have not always been rendered by their modern counterpart. John de
Cantebrugg, (fn. 3) for example, is not referred to as John de Cambridge. This method
ensures uniformity of style with the other surnames, and avoids anachronisms and the
numerous pitfalls in identifying a place of origin, especially since this may relate to
the man's forebears several generations previously. Where foreigners occur, their
Christian names have been Anglicized if possible, (fn. 4) and their surnames given in the
language which they appear to have spoken. In the volume on the Welsh dioceses,
personal names have been rendered in the Welsh form, except when it is impossible
to tell whether a man was Welsh or English. (fn. 5) Cross-references in the cumulative
index bring together Welshmen who may be given in both the Welsh form and an
Anglicized form in different volumes.
Dr A. B. Emden's Biographical Registers of the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge (fn. 6) have been followed for degrees, and the forms LL.D. and S.T.P. which occur
on occasion in Le Neve-Hardy have been rejected in favour of D.C.L. and D.Th.
etc. (except in the first volume). The Biographical Register of Oxford was only
partly published when the first volume went to press, and that for Cambridge
was published midway through the revision of the 1300-1541 section of Le NeveHardy. Consequently there are some additional degrees given in the errata and
addenda, especially for men occurring in the earlier volumes of the series. Our
grateful thanks are due to Dr Emden for supplying many of these. The degrees
given are the highest known to have been held at the beginning of a man's tenure
of office (or his first occurrence), rather than the highest which he ultimately
obtained. Thus there will be differences in any one volume in the degrees given to
one man, if he entered various offices at different dates. (fn. 1) The description 'M'
has been given if it is found sufficiently regularly in the sources. This was supposed
to indicate a University graduate, but seems to have been used frequently as a courtesy
title.
After the man's name and degree, details are given of any particularly important
office held at the time of appointment, such as a bishopric or cardinalate. In view of the
varied descriptions of the cardinals' titles, the forms given in Eubel's Hierarchia
Catholica have been adopted throughout. Next, dates have been given for the man's
tenure of the office in question. If both the terminal dates are known with certainty
these are given. If one is uncertain, a question mark is substituted in the heading, and
in the text the earliest or latest occurrence is given with references. It should be
understood that any entry is given to an individual only when he appears explicitly
in the relevant documents. The occurrence of an individual as a canon of a given
church is always specified as such, as it in no wise guarantees his possession of a prebend. If neither terminal date is known, the date of an occurrence is given in the heading, or if more than one is known, the earliest and latest, separated by a comma. The
man may of course be known to occur on other occasions between these two dates.
The first date given for bishops is that of their first claim to the office (not licence to
elect), rather than their consecration. (fn. 2)
The account of a man's tenure of office is not a biography, and not all known
material has been included. Essentially it is a description of how and when the man
secured and left the office. Thus, for each bishop, an attempt has been made to discover the licence to elect, election, archbishop's confirmation and royal assent (unless
the appointment was by papal provision), followed by the consecration or translation,
enthronement, and manner of terminating his tenure of the see. In the case of prebendaries, where possible, the appointment of each (whether by bishop's collation,
royal grant, or papal provision), his admission and installation, and his death, resignation, relinquishment by exchange or deprivation are recorded. If a man terminated
his tenure of office on becoming a bishop, the normal practice in the revised Fasti
has been to give the first date at which he had a claim to the bishopric, as the terminal
date for his tenure of the previous office. If the consecration was delayed for more than
a year, this fact has been noted. (fn. 3) In some dioceses, where there is a dearth of episcopal
and chapter material, lists have been supplied of men occurring as canons, or receiving
papal grants of a canonry with expectation of a prebend. (fn. 1) These men may or may not
have secured actual enjoyment of a prebend. In the dioceses with fairly complete
series of records, lists of this kind have been considered unnecessary, as it is unlikely
that anyone reaching the position of a dignitary or prebendary would not find a mention. It must also be pointed out that it is not within the range of the introduction to
indicate the ways in which this edition offers fresh material for a fuller understanding
of the sort of men who were promoted to be dignitaries of the cathedral churches.
In view of the amount of repetitive material, space has been saved by the use of a
certain number of abbreviations, and by not repeating the year date already given in
the entry. No references are given when a man terminated his tenure by going to
another prebend in the same diocese, or by becoming a bishop, as these may be found
in detail in the appropriate place, or in Eubel in the case of foreign bishops. Nor are
references given if a man entered office by exchange with the previous holder, as
details may be found in the account of the latter's tenure. The titles of printed works
which are cited three or more times in a volume are given in an abbreviated form, and
these abbreviations are listed at the beginning of each volume, together with a full
bibliographical description of the work. These lists of works do not by any means
include all the works consulted.
Where major differences from Le Neve-Hardy occur, for example the omission
through lack of evidence of a name given in the original edition, this fact is noted in a
footnote. It is not overlooked that there are divergences between the revised Le Neve
and other standard works, such as the Handbook of British Chronology, Dictionary of
National Biography, Victoria County History and diocesan histories. These differences,
however, are not mentioned, as the revision is primarily concerned with Le NeveHardy, and has been made from manuscripts and not from secondary authorities. As
references are given for all statements, it is assumed that these can be checked and
compared with those given in secondary works.