Achille Luchaire "Un document retrouvé," Journal des Savants 3 (1905), 557-568, at p. 561:
Innocentius catolice ecclesie episcopus. 
		Tusculanus
		Palestrinus
		Hostiensis
		Portuensis
		Albanensis,  episcopi
		Cintius item Sancti Laurentii in Lucina
		Cintius item Sanctorum Johannis et Pauli
		Leo item Sancte Crucis et Jherusalem
		Petrus item Sancte Pudentiane
		Guala item Sancti Martini
		Johannes item Sancte Praxedes,  presbyteri
		Stephanus basilice XII apostolorum,
		Robertus Sancti Stephani in Celio Monte
		Guido Sancti Nicolai in carcere Tulliano
		Octavianus Sanctorum Sergii et Bachi
		Gregorius Sancti Theodori
		Johannes Sanctorum Cosme et Damiani
		Petrus Sancte Marie in Aquiro
		Berterannus Sancti Gregorii [Georgii] in Velum.
		
		
Cardinal Stephen Langton, Archbishop of Canterbury (1207-1228), Cardinal Priest of S. Crisogono (1205-1228), is not listed as being present. He had run afoul of Pope Innocent and King John of England, who had become Innocent's vassal, and had been suspended from his functions. He was under arrest in Rome. Charles S. Isaacson, The Story of the English Cardinals (London 1907), p. 32. Folkestone Williams, The Lives of the English Cardinals I (London 1868), pp. 232-234. The suspension is the subject of a letter from Pope Innocent to the clergy of Canterbury, dated November 4, 1215. The suspension had been published by Bishop Peter des Roches of Winchester and the Papal Legate Pandulphus, Bishop-elect of Norwich. The Pope wanted the suspension enforced. Rymer Foedera I, 139; Potthast 5006.
Cardinal Johannes, Deacon of S. Maria in via lata (1205-1216), is not listed as being present.
See Werner, Neues Archiv 31 (Zurich 1906) 584. Potthast, p. 437.
©2011 John Paul Adams, CSUN
  john.p.adams@csun.edu