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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 March 2016
In recent years there have been several obvious places where an enquirer might learn about the interdict laid by Pope Innocent III on England and Wales. Powicke in the Cambridge Medieval History, Poole in the Oxford History, and Painter in The Reign of King John all described this episode in the history of the English Church and discussed its bearing on political affairs. People who wanted more detail could go to two papers, published in 1948 and 1949, and would find additions to their knowledge in fragmentary documents discovered recently in the Public Record Office and the Canterbury archives, and edited by Dr Powell and Dr Barnes for the Pipe Roll Society in I960. From all these places they would receive roughly the same impression. But last year Messrs Richardson and Sayles published the first volume of The Governance of Mediaeval England.
Page 159 of note 1 Cheney, C. R., ‘King John and the papal interdict,’ BJRL, XXXI (1948), 295–317 Google Scholar (and separately), and ‘King John’s reaction to the interdict on England,’ TRHS, 4th series XXXI (1949), 129-50Google Scholar. Interdict Documents, ed. P. M. Barnes and W. R. Powell, Pipe Roll Society, New series XXXIV (1960); another fragmentary account of some interest, headed ‘Exitus de maneriis episcopi Saresberiensis per manum Rogeri de Molend’, is contained in P.R.O., E. 216.
Page 160 of note 1 Cf. The Governance of Mediæval England from the Conquest to Magna Carta, Edinburgh 1963, 294.
Page 161 of note 1 Constitutional History of England, ch. XII, para. 153 (fourth edition, 1883,I. 559).
Page 161 of note 2 Cambridge Medieval History, VI (1929), 235.
Page 162 of note 1 BJRL, XXXI, 299; PL, CCXV, 1423, 1455; Selected Utters of Pope Innocent III concerning England, ed. C. R. Cheney and W. H. Semple (1953), p. 109 n. 17. Cf. note 10.
Page 163 of note 1 PL, CCXV, 1529.
Page 163 of note 2 PL, CCXVI, 21.
Page 163 of note 3 Chronica Monasterii de Melsa, ed. E. A. Bond, RS, 1866-8, I, 351.
Page 163 of note 4 Annales Monastici, ed. H. R. Luard, RS, 1864-9, II, 282; Ungedruckte Anglo-normannische Geschichtsquellen, ed. Liebermann, F. (Strassburg, 1879), 172 Google Scholar; The Cartulary of Snelshall Priory, ed. J. G. Jenkins, Buckinghamshire Record Society, X (1952), 7; Chronica Johannis de Oxenedes, ed. Henry Ellis, RS, 1859, 296.
Page 164 of note 1 BJRL, XXXI, 300 and Chronicle of Melrose, ed. A. O. and M. O. Anderson (1936), p. 57.
Page 164 of note 2 TRHS, 4th series XXXI, 133.
Page 164 of note 3 BJRL, XXXI, 304, 306.
Page 164 of note 4 Ibid., 299, 316.
Page 164 of note 5 Ibid., 304-5, TRHS, 4th series XXXI, 131-6.
Page 165 of note 1 Rotuli Litterarum Ciausarum .. . (1202-27), ed. T. D. Hardy, Record Commission, 1833-4,I. 130b of 5 June 1212.
Page 165 of note 2 BJRL, XXXI, 304-5, 311-2; TRHS, 4th series XXXI, 147-8.
Page 166 of note 1 The entry on the Misœ roll shows simply that an offering was made ad crucem on behalf of the king and his knights (Documents illustrative of English History in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries, ed. Henry Cole, Record Commission, 1844, 258).
Page 166 of note 2 Historical Works of Gervase of Canterbury, ed. W. Stubbs, RS, 1879-80, II, xciii: ‘Presbiteri in die Passionis sine sollempnitate crucem extra ecclesiam ponent, ut parochiani ipsam cum consueta devotione adorent.’
Page 166 of note 3 Documents, ed. Cole, 237, 249.
Page 167 of note 1 Rotuli de Liberate ac de Misis et Praestitis regnante Johanne, ed. T. D. Hardy, Record Commission, 1844, 115, 137, 170.
Page 167 of note 2 In a footnote they say: ‘Some of his other baths, not precisely dated, may have been taken before he communicated’ (p. 347).
Page 167 of note 3 Selected Letters, 139-40.
Page 167 of note 4 Cf. Decretum, C. 11 q. 3 c. 102-3.
Page 167 of note 5 Selected Letters, 172; PL, CCXVI, 954.