N.B.— f.e. stands for from end and l.l. for last line
Page | Col. | Line | |
8 | i | 16 | Malverne, John: for (d. 1415 ?) read (d. 1414 ?) |
28-29 | for He seems to have died . . . . 1415. read He died before November 1414 (44th Rep. Dep. Keeper, p. 556). | ||
32 | for iv. read ix. | ||
ii | 7 | for MS. 57, ff. 186-8 read MS. 59, ff. 186-9 | |
8 | for 'Consilium contra Pestem' read 'Remedium contra Pestilenciam' | ||
18 | ii | 8 f.e. | Manby, Thomas: for (1766 ? read (1769 |
2 f.e. | after admiral, insert born 1 Jan. 1769, | ||
20 | i | 15 f.e. | for 18 June read 13 June |
14 f.e. | for in 1800 Miss Hamond read in 1810 Miss Julia Hamond | ||
5 f.e. | after France insert Norfolk Archæology, vol. iii. p. 130 | ||
21 | i | 18 | Mandeville, Bernard: for 1785 read 1685 |
35 | ii | 3 f.e. | Manley, Mrs. Mary de la Riviere: for (1672 ? read (1663 |
l.l. | for about 1672 read 7 April 1663 (Sloane MS. 1708, f. 117) | ||
38 | ii | 20 f.e. | Manley, Thomas: for (fl. 1670) read (1628-1690) |
19 f.e. | after 1628 insert third son of George Manley of Lack, Cheshire, by Elizabeth, daughter of Richard Lee of Lee Magna, Kent. He | ||
18-17 f.e. | for In the preceding year read He became king's counsel 18 Sept. 1672. In 1649 | ||
89 | i | 6 | after 1669 insert in 'Usury at Six per Cent.' |
17 f.e. | after literature, insert Manley died 22 March 1690, and was buried in St. Margaret's Church, Rochester. His wife, Jane, was daughter of Richard Lee. | ||
ii | 19-20 | Manlove, Edward: for is separately noticed, read was possibly father of Timothy Manlove [q. v.]. | |
26 | Manlove, Timothy: for (1638-1699) read (d. 1699) | ||
28 | for son read grandson | ||
29 | omit in 1633 | ||
46 | ii | 5 | Manners, Charles, 4th Duke of Rutland: for elder read eldest |
49 | i | 18 f.e. | Manners, Francis, 6th Earl of Rutland: after Cambridge, insert With them he was admitted a fellow-commoner of Christ's College in 1594-5. |
51 | ii | 12 | Manners, John, 8th Earl of Rutland: for 1545-6 read 1645-6 |
53 | i | 11-14 | Manners, John, Marquis of Granby: for He appears to have been in Germany . . . . (ib. p. 201). read On the outbreak in July 1758 of the Seven Years' War Granby went to Germany in command of a brigade of cavalry. |
16 | for at the head of the blues read in command of the second line of cavalry | ||
21-22 | omit Granby and Sackville . . . . but | ||
23 f.e. | after hard drinking insert though the prince was a most abstemious, even ascetic man and the sternest of disciplinarians |
193