1. Jonathan Riley-Smith, The Feudal Nobility and the Kingdom of Jerusalem, 1174–1277 (London, 1973), 122–24.
2. Marwan Nader, Burgesses and Burgess Law in the Latin Kingdoms of Jerusalem and Cyprus (1099–1325) (Aldershot, 2006), 150; John L. La Monte, Feudal Monarchy in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem (Cambridge, 1932; repr. New York, 1970), 106–09.
3. Joshua Prawer, Crusader Institutions (Oxford, 1980; repr. Oxford, 1998), 252–53.
4. Peter W. Edbury, “Law and Custom in the Latin East: Les Letres dou Sepulcre,” Mediterranean Historical Review 10 (1995): 72–73 [= idem, Kingdoms of the Crusaders: From Jerusalem to Cyprus (Aldershot, 1999), no. IX].
5. Benjamin Z. Kedar, “On the Origins of the Earliest Laws of Frankish Jerusalem: The Canons of the Council of Nablus,” Speculum 74 (1999): 330–31; Nader, Burgesses and Burgess Law, 45.