Libraries of the 12th century by Beddie.
English manors of La Trinte at Caen, by Birdsall.
Claim of King Henry I to be called learned, by David.
Legal significance of the Statute of praemunire of 1353, by Graves.
Greek visitors to England in 1455-1456, by Gray.
Communal movement in Syria in the 13th century, by J. La Monte.
Witnesses and oath helpers in old Norwegian law, by Larson.
Clerical tenths levied in Eng. by papal authority during the reign of Edward II, by Lunt.
Anti-foreign movement in England, 1231-1232, by MacKenzie.
Henry V's policy of conciliation in Normandy, 1417-1422, by Newhall.
Norman communes under Richard and John, 1189-1204, by Packard.
Alexander III, the licentia docendi, and the rise of universities, by Post.
Canonization of opposition to the king in Angevin Eng. by Russell.
Taxation and representation in the middle ages by Stephenson.
Knight service in Normandy, by Strayer.
Census de rebus in the capitularies, by Taylor.
Use of the classics in the Flores rhetorici of Alberic of Monte Cassino, by Willard.
William of the white hands and men of letters, by Williams.