16. For further details of surviving manuscripts
and where they are located, see D. Bell, An Index of Authors
and Works in Cistercian Libraries in Great Britain (Kalamazoo, 1992).
17. E. Freeman, Narratives of a New Order: Cistercian Historical Writing
in England
c.1150-c. 1220 (Turnhout, 2002), p. 107.
18. Freeman, Narratives, p. 122. Textual similarities indicate that this may
have
been the case, although the precise nature of this relationship is not known.
19. Medieval Ghost Stories: an Anthology of Miracles, Marvels and Prodigies,
ed. A.
Joynes (Woodbridge, 2001), pp. 89, 121. See too M. R. James, ‘Twelve medieval
ghost stories’ English Historical Review 37 (1922), pp. 413-422.
20. Cited in C. Cross, ‘A medieval Yorkshire library’, in Northern
History XXV (1989), pp. 281-290, at p. 281.
21. Cross, ‘A Yorkshire library’, p. 282.
22. C. Cross, ‘Community and solidarity among Yorkshire religious after
the
Dissolution’ in Monastic Studies, ed. J. Loades (Bangor, 1990), pp. 245-254
at pp. 248-249.
23. These are listed by Cross, see ‘A medieval Yorkshire library’,
pp.
285-290.
24. C. Cross, ‘Monastic learning and libraries in sixteenth-century Yorkshire’,
Studies in Church History Subsidia 8 (Oxford, 1991), pp. 255-269, at p. 264.