- John of
Trokelowe (fl. c. 1294–1330) was an
English chronicler and
Benedictine monk of the
fourteenth century. He was a monk of St
Albans Abbey, and in...
- Co. p. 398. Endnotes: Walsingham's Hist. Angl. (Rolls Ser.), ii. 249 ;
Trokelowe et Anon. Chron. (Rolls Ser.), 340; Eulog. Hist. iii. 389 Stubbs's Const...
- cousin—to help
manage Champagne with her. However, the
chronicler John of
Trokelowe reported that
Edmund and
Blanche had also
known of each others' re****tions...
-
Bannockburn 1314. Stroud:
History press. p. 78. ISBN 978-0-7524-4600-4.
Trokelowe,
quoted in Brown, op.cit, p. 90 Brown, op.cit., p. 132 DeVries, Kelly...
-
several notable people, including:
Matthew Paris (c. 1200–1259) John of
Trokelowe (fl. 1294)
Thomas Walsingham (died c. 1422) St
Albans Abbey This disambiguation...
- monk of St. Albans. He
wrote a
short continuation of the
chronicle of
Trokelowe for the
years 1323 to 1324. A
fragment of his
chronicle has been preserved...
- Adam Murimuth, the
continuation of
Nicholas Trivet's ‘Annales,’ John of
Trokelowe, and others. Its text
agrees with the ‘Chronicon Angliæ’ (No. 2 supra)...
- chancel, is ****igned to the year 1280. Some
historians have
claimed (
Trokelowe,
Annales (Rolls Ser.), 78.) that in 1312 the
barons who
leagued against...
-
Carnarvan (1307–1377)
Polychronicon (–1352)
Scalacronica (1066–1362) John of
Trokelowe (1307–1326) Vita
Edwardi Secundi (1307–1326) Castleford's
Chronicle (—1327)...
- Andrew's
Church depicts this legend. The third,
written in 1405 by John de
Trokelowe, a monk, told of a
dragon who
threatened Richard Waldegrave's territory...