xxiv Bibliography 1483-1603. By A. D. INNES. v., 1603-1714- By G. M. TREVELYAN. vi., 1714-1815. By C. G. ROBERTSON, vii., England since Waterloo. By J. A. R. MARRIOTT. OMAN, C. W. C. The Great Revolt of 1381. Oxford, 1906. PASQUET, D. Essai sur les Origines de la Chambre des Communes. Paris, 1914. An interesting accotint of the beginnings of the Commons' representation in Parliament to the end of Edward I.'s reign, embodying some of the more recent points of view. PEARSON, C. H. Historical Maps of England during the First Thirteen Centuries. London, 1869. 3rd edition, revised, 1883. The maps are: "Brittania Romana, Brittania Cambrica, Saxon England, Norman England, Monastic England. They bear the stamp of their author's originality and are accompanied by a valuable text. PETIT-DUTAILLIS, C. Studies and Notes Supplementary to Stubls* Con- stitutional History. 2 vols. Manchester, 1908-1914. 2nd edition of vol. £., 1911. A valuable addition to Stubbs* work» and a corrective to his conclusions on several matters of importance. PIKE, L. O. A Constitutional History of the House of Lords. London, 1894. A work of great value; throws light upon related institutions and consti- tutes a history of the English nobility. ------ A History of Crime in England. 2 vols. London, 1873-1876. ------ The Public Records and the Constitution. London, 1907. A lecture delivered at All Souls College, Oxford, at the request of the Regius Professors of Civil Law and Modern History. Contains an elaborate diagram illustrating the evolution, from the Norman king's court, of the chief courts and departments of government of modern times. PLUCKNETT, T. F. T. "The Place of the Council in the Fifteenth Cen- tury.'* Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. Fourth Series, vol. i.f 157-189. London, 1918. POLLARD, A. F. The Evolution of Parliament. London, 1920. Represents recent points of view on Parliament's history: the king's com- manding part in its making, its aristocratic character, its undifferentiated powers. It is of value especially for the very late middle ages and for the Tudor period. POLLOCK, FREDERICK. The Land Laws. London, 1883. 3rd edition, 1896. Especially useful in explaining the cnanges after Edward I.'s time.