^Sohn, Andreas (2020). "Colleges and the University of Paris, Professors and Students, Religion and Politics: Some Remarks on the History of Europe in the Late Middle Ages (Thirteenth to Fifteenth Centuries)". In Goeing, Anja-Silvia; Parry, Glyn; Feingold, Mordechai (eds.). Early Modern Universities: Networks of Higher Learning. Brill. p. 25.
^The modern history is by Nathalie Gorochov, Le Collège de Navarre de sa fondation (1305) au début du XVe siècle (1418): Histoire de l'institution, de sa vie intellectuelle et de son recrutement.
^Gillespie, Alexander (1 December 2016). The Causes of War: Volume II: 1000 CE to 1400 CE. Vol. 2. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 189. ISBN978-1849466455.
^Kittell, Ellen E. (1991). From Ad Hoc to Routine: A Case Study in Medieval Bureaucracy. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 109.
^Strickland, Matthew (2010). "The Wars of Philip the Fair and his Successors, 1285–1328". In Rogers, Clifford J. (ed.). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Medieval Warfare and Military Technology. Vol. 2: East-Menf. Oxford University Press.
^Eubel I, p. 12. V.-B. Henry, Histoire de l'abbaye de Pontigny (Avallon 1882), p. 143
^Menache, Sophia (2002). Clement V. Cambridge University Press. p. 17.
^Waugh, Scott L. (1988). The Lordship of England: Royal Wardships and Marriages in English Society and Politics, 1217-1327. Princeton University Press.