Andrea Corsini, Sabina sagra e profana, antica e moderna (Rome, 1790), p. 143 online.
De excidio civitatis Leodiensis 1420–29 (Boeren), as cited by Richard Vaughan, Charles the Bold: the last Valois Duke of Burgundy (Boydell, 1973, 2002), p. 49, note 8 online.
Eugène Bacha, "Deux écrits de Mathieu Herbenus sur la destruction de Liège par Charles-le=Téméraire," Bulletin de la Commission Royale d'Histoire (de la Belgique) 75 (1907), pp. 385–386 online, citing Mémoire du légat Onufrius sur les affaires de Liége, edition of S. Bormans (Brussels, 1885).
Godefroid Kurth, La Cité de Liège au Moyen-Age (Brussels, 1910), vol. 3, limited preview online.
Bacha, "Deux écrits", p. 386; Sylvan Balau, "Sources de l'histoire du pay de Liége au Moyen Age," Memoires couronnés 61 (1902–1903), pp. 647–648 onlineet passim.
J. IJsewijn, W. Lourdaux, and E. Persoons, "Adam Jordaens (1449–1494), an Early Humanist at Louvain," Humanistica Lovaniensia 22 (1973), p. 84 online.
IJsewijn, "The Coming of Humanism," pp. 252–255 online.
Along with Carlo Marsuppini (Carolus Arretinus), Maffeo Vegio (Mapheus Vegius), and Giovanni Gioviano Pontano (Jovianus Pontanus); cited by Léopold Hervieux, Les fabulistes latins (París, 1883), vol. 1, p. 458 online.
Balau, "Sources de l'histoire du pay de Liége au Moyen Age," p. xxvii, note 1 online.
M. Audin, translated by Edward G. Kirwan Browne, The Life of Henry the Eighth and History of the Schism of England (London, 1852), p. 422 online.
Catalogue of the John Boyd Thacher Collection of Incunabula (1914) p. 101 online.
Nicolas-Louis Achaintre, Decimi Junii Juvenalis Satirae (París, 1810), p. 95 online: non carent isti commentarii subtilitate et argutiis; sed in iis frustra judicium et elegantiam quaeres.
Lilius Gregorius Gyraldus, De poetis nostrorum temporum 25 (Berlín, 1894), Wotke p. 20 online,; Friedrich Gotthilf Freytag, Adparatus litterarius (Leipzig, 1753), vol. 2, p. 1378 online; W. Parr Greswell, Memoirs of Angelus Politianus (Mánchester, 1805), p. 83 online; Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies (1990), p. 104.
Maria Agata Pincelli, Martini Philetici: in corruptores latinitatis (Rome 2000), p. 78 online.
Broteo, Grammatico ("Brotheus the grammarian") is identified as Angelo Sabino in Vincenzo Lancetti, Pseudonimia: ovvero Tavole alfabetiche de'nomi finti o supposti degli scrittori (Milán, 1836), p. 49 online.
See notes on these sources by David Clément, Bibliothèque curieuse historique et critique (Leipzig, 1756), vol. 6, p. 56 online.
The feud is detailed at some length in Italian and Latin by Maurizio Campanelli, Polemiche e filologia ai primordi della stampa: le Observationes di Domizio Calderini (Rome 2001), pp. 21–26 limited preview online.
Pueros cotidie male docet; Lee, Sixtus IV p. 189 online.
Paul Cortese (Paulus Cortesus), De hominibus doctis dialogus in the edition of Gabriel Richards (Florence, 1734), p. 49 online.
Ammianus Marcellinus, Rerum gestarum libri, books 14–31 (originally written in 31 books); A Catalogue of Books Printed in the Fifteenth Century now in the Bodleian Library (Oxford, 2005), p. 154 online; Frederick William Hall, A Companion to Classical Texts (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1913), p. 201 online.
Jean Gimazane, Ammien Marcellin, sa vie et son œuvre (Toulouse, 1889), pp. 416–417 online.
Joseph A. Dane, "On Metrical Confusion and Consensus in Early Editions of Terence," Humanistica Lovaniensia 48 (1999), p. 109 online and 113.
Where the author is identified as Angelus Cneus Sabinus poeta laureatus; see E.G. Gersdorf, Firmiani Lactantii Opera, (Leipzig, 1842), vol. 1, preface p. vii online.
Girolamo Tiraboschi, Storia della letterature italiana, vol. 3, p. 18, as cited by Vannucci; but see Tiraboschi, vol. 9, p. 120 online in the edition of 1781.
Igitur cum per aëris intemperiem ab urbe Roma in Sabinos Cures me recipissem Heroidibusque Nasonis poetae inclyti heroas respondentes facerem, as quoted by Remigio Sabbadini, Le scoperte dei codici latini e greci ne' secoli XIV e XV (Florence, 1905), pp. 176–177 online, noting that "in the Middle Ages, the production of pseudovidiana was rampant."
J.P.N. Land, Epistula Sapphus ad Phaeonem (Katwijk, 1885), pp. 127–128 online; S.G. de Vries, Epistula Sapphus ad Phaonem (Berlín, 1888), pp. 127–128 online.
Wendy Beth Heller, Emblems of Eloquence: Opera and Women's Voices in Seventeenth-Century Venice (University of California Press, 2003), pp. 35 and 308, note 30; Ellen Rosand, Monteverdi's Last Operas: A Venetian Trilogy (University of California Press, 2007), p. 136, note 16 online.
For detailed tracking of Sabino's pen names, see Meckelnberg and Schneider, Responsio Ulixis pp. 4–5, especially note 26 online.