1. Thurlby Malcolm, ‘The west front of Binham Priory, Norfolk, and the beginnings of bar tracery in England’, in Mark Ormrod (ed.), England in the Thirteenth Century, Harlaxton Medieval Studies, I, Stamford, 1991, 155–65; Nikolaus Pevsner and Bill Wilson,The Buildings of England: North East Norfolk and Norwich, London, 1997, 389–92.
2. Draper Peter, The Formation of English Gothic, New Haven and London, 2006, 90; Robert Branner, St Louis and the Court Style, London, 1965, 15–20; Peter Kidson et al.A History of English Architecture, Harmondsworth, 1965, 96; Robert Branner, ‘Westminster Abbey and the French court style’, Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, XXIII, 1964, 7.
3. Louard Henry R, ed (ed.), Monachi Sancti Albani, Chronica Majora, Addimenta by Matthew Paris, London, Rolls Series, 1872–83, VI, 90; David M Smith and Vera C M London,The Heads of Religious Houses: England and Wales, II, 1216–1377, Cambridge, 2001, 92 (I am indebted to Dr David Robinson for this, and for clarifying the chronology of Richard de Parco’s incumbency). On the accuracy of Matthew Paris, see Christopher Wilson, ‘The English response to French Gothic architecture, c.1200–1350’, in Jonathan Alexander and Paul Binski (eds),The Age of Chivalry, exhibition catalogue, London, Royal Academy of Arts, 1987, 76, and Thurlby, op. cit., 162 (note 18).
4. Draper, loc. cit. On Windsor, see Wilson, ‘The English response to French Gothic architecture, c.1200–1350’, in Alexander and Binski, The Age of Chivalry, 76; and Christopher Wilson et al.Westminster Abbey, London, 1986, 27. On Lincoln, see Georgina Russell, ‘The thirteenth-century west window of Lincoln Cathedral’, inMedieval Art and Architecture at Lincoln Cathedral: British Archaeological Transactions, VIII, 1986, 96–97.
5. Wilson,Westminster Abbey, loc. cit.