water, CO. Salop, and of Water Newton, co. Huntingdon, Esq. by Margaret,
daughter and sole heir of Thomas Lunn, of Pocklington, co. Ebor. He
married Joan, daughter of Simon Uorsepoole, of co. Kent, and by her
had a large family. By his Inq. p.m. taken at Huntingdon, 23 March, 1619,
it appears that he was a man of very extensive landed property, which, how-
ever, was heavily encumbered when his father died in 1587. He was knighted
at Greenwich 12 May, 1604, but when the new oath of allegiance was enforced
upon the Catholics he refused it, and for the rest of his life became numbered
among the Popish Recusants, who were the prey of the hungry com'tiers.
Accordingly I find, 19 March, 1610, " Grant to Clement Coriet of the benefit
of the Eecusancy of Sir John Whithroohe, of Bridgenorth, co. Salop."
He must have been thrown into the Fleet about this time, for he had evi-
dently been many years in prison at the time of the brawl which terminated
so disastrously. He received the fatal wound on 7 Oct. 1619, and died the same
day. Chamberlain vrriting to Carleton on the 16th alludes to the fray and
adds, " the matter has not yet come to trial, and that I do not
thoroughly understand the evidence." The jury found Boughton guilty of
manslaughter. {^Cal. Dom. J. I. P R. (). 1604-1618. Bireh's Court and
Times of James I. vol. ii. p. 193. Visit, of Hunts. Camden Soc. Privy
Council Becords Jas. 1. vol. iii. p. 490. The Father's Inq. p. m. Chancery, 29
Eliz. Salop, 185. The Son's, 18 J. I. part i. No. 158. See App. p. 167.)
P. 32, 1. 7. The Lady Whithroohe in her petition. The petition " To the Lords of
his Ma*'''^ most honorable Privy Council ... of Joane La: Whitbrook ..."
is to be found in Bom. Add. Jas. I. vol. xli. n. 86.
P. 33. 1. 2. In March 1621 there was ... A grant to Lionel Batty of the goods
and chatels of Henry Boughton forfeited for felony and for Manslaughter of
Sir John Whithroohe. {Cal. Dom. Jas. I. p. 234, for this year.) He appears
by p. 36, 1. 10, to have been committed as a Popish Recusant.
P. 35, 1. 15. Please correct " fortications " to "/orfv^'cr/fu/H.y." The order of the
Privy Council will be found in App. p. 169.
P. 37. 1. 7. Sir John Meres. He was of Auboz-ne, co. Lincoln, son and heir of
Antho7iy Meres, of Auborne, by Katharine, daughter of Sir Ererard Bighy.
He man-ied (1) Barhara, daughter of Sir William Dallison, Judge of the
NOTES, 189
King's Bench, and (2) Barhara, daughter of Jolni Nevill, of Grove, co. Notts.
He was High Sheriff of Lincoln in ISDO, and was l)uried at Washingborongh,
CO. Lincoln, 16 May, 1G30. (Kindly communicated hy Mr. A. Larkcn, I'ort-
cullis.) He was knighted by James L 23 July, 1603. {iMchoh's I'nnjrrs.^ix of
./: 7. vol. 1. p. 211.)
P. 38. 1.21. Sir Francis Inplrtirld. He was son and heir of John Enfjlrfrhl, oi
Wotton Basset, co. Wilts. Esq. who was a younger brother of Sir Frnnfis
EtKjlcJJiid, of Englefield, co. Berks. On the accession of Q. Elizal)eth his
uncle, Sir Francis, who had been one of the Privy Council and was a devoted
friend to Q. Mary, retired to Spain, and threw in his lot with Philip II. By
a special Act of Parliament passed in the 38 Eliz. his estates were declared
forfeited to the crown, and by a legal artifice his nephew, the Sir Francis of
these pages, was deprived of them. James I. seems to have restored them to
oui- Sir Francis, who was created a Baronet 2.5 Nov. 1G12. It appears that he
was committed to the Fleet in July 1618 as a defaulter in a matter of some
property for which he was a trustee, and was fined 500/. for " contempt fif
Court." Buckingham wrote a letter in October to Bacon interceding for him,
and in Dec. of the same year again wrote, begging that he might have liberty
for a fortnight. Two years later (July 1620) Baconw\-\t\r\g to Buclilngham
says— "I have stayed the tJtovsand j)oiinds set upon Englefield for his
Majesty, and given order for levying it," so that apparently another fine had
been laid upon him in the meanwhile. This second fine seems to have been im-
posed in consequence of his refusal to contribute to the " musters; " for Lord
Hertford writing to the Council on the 26 June of this year says that he had
so refused and " advises that he be dealt with." In Bacon's " Confession and
Submission " (1621) he says " there have been many orders since caused by ;S'//*
F7-ancis EngleficWs contempts." In February 1623-4 he was still in the
Fleet and was again fined, this time 3,000?. " for touching the Lord Keeper
( Williams) with bribery. ' How long he continued in prison I cannot discover,
but he died in 1631, and was buried at Englefield, where there is still a splendid
monument to his memory, i/rtc/^e^ tells us that Abp. Williams forgave him
the fine of 3,000Z. and became eventually a friend to him. How nobly the
great lawyer Plomlcn behaved to Sir Francis, how ungrateful the latter was
to his benefactor, and how that shameful conduct of the young man killed
the old one, may be read — and it is a sad and pathetic story— in Blahn-ag's
Siveriffs of Shroj)shirc, pp. 222 et seq. (See Cal. Dom. James I. 1618, p.
558. Spedding's Bacon's Life and Letters, vol. vi. pp. 342, 448, vol. vii. pp.
110, 258. Bt/rhe's Extinct Baronetage. Birch's Court and Times of James
L vol. ii. p. 449. Hackefs Life of Williams, part i. §. 96. Lords' Debutes,
Camden Soc. pp. 23, 33, 34. Statutes at Large (folio), vol. iv. pt. ii. p. 851.
The Inq. p. m. upon his father sets forth that John Englefield died 1 April,
9 Eliz. and that Francis his son and heir was aged 4 years 9 months and 2
weeks on the 7th May.)
190 NOTES.
P. 45, 1. 25. Sir Eihvard Cleare. He was son and heir of Sir Edward Clere, of
Blickling, co. Norfolk, by Francrs, daughter of Sir Ilichard Fulmersfon, of
Thetford. He was baptized at Blickling 1 Jan. 1563-4. He succeeded his
father in August, 1000, and is said to have married Margaret, daughter of
William Yaxley, of Yaxley, Esq. by whom he had a son Henry, who applied
for and obtained a baronetcy sometime in 1623, which he did not live long to
enjoy. See Ko. 31 of The Genealogist, where I have attempted to unravel
some of the confusion in the popular accounts of this family.
P. 58,1. 16. Beare. Edward Beare (p. 7, 1. 25). Query of Ash in the parish of
Brawnton, co. Devon. {Foley's Rec. iv. 645.)
P. 58, 1. 16. Jennyson. Michael Jemson, of Walworth, in the Bishopric of Durham.
He was 3rd son of John Jettison, of Walworth, by i(/c/ry, eldest daughter of
Sir Thomas Gerard, of Bryn. The Jenisons were very stubborn Recusants,
and their names are frequently occurring in the Records of Eliz. and James
as suffering fines, imprisonment, and other inconveniences. There were no
fewer than eight members of this family who became Jesuits. Of course Mr.
Foley has a great deal to say about them. In the House of Lords' Library
there is a Petition from this Michael Jemson addressed to Henry, Earl of
Huntingdon, dated 18 May, 1621, complaining of his treatment in the Fleet.
This petition seems to have produced no effect, for in the following February
he addressed another to the Lords of the Council, in which he describes himself
as " Michael Jennison, of Grays Inn, Prisoner in the Fleet," and prays "for
release and permission to prosecute by law his complaint against Sir Edw.
Cohe, who caused him to be severely treated in prison." He seems to have
died some time in 1628. {Siirtees' History of Diirhavi,yo\. iii. p. 320. Foley's
Records, vols. iii. and iv. see Index. Cal. Bom. J. I. (1611-1618), pp. 485,
513. Bom. Add. 1580-1625, p. 497 (1619-1623), p. 345. Hist. MSS. Com.
Report, vol. iv. p. 20, vol. iii. p. 23.)
P. 58, 1. 24. Lee. George Lee. See p. 134, et seq.
P. 61, 1. 9. TT7#A blame Query, " ;i7Y/<ot/# blame."
P. 67, 1. 22. Br. Fryer. This is Br. Thomas Fryer, son of Br. John Fryer, who
with his wife and several children died of the plague in 1562. Both father
and son were strict and conscientious Catholics. The father was thrown into
the Tower for attending mass in 1561. The son compounded for his recusancy
more than once and paid heavy fines. There is an account of both men in
Br.Minik'sRollofthe College of Physicians. See, too, O^ie Generation
(fa Norfolk House, ch. ix.
P. 68, 1. 32. The Lord Chancellor. Bacon. The Lord Chief Justice. Sir Henry
Montagve, afterwards Earl of Manchester.
P. 77, 1. 9. Thirty years past Sir Francis Inglefield, &c. This must have been at
the time when measures were being taken to despoil Sir Francis of the pro-
perty inherited from his father. See note on p. 38, 1. 21. The expression in
the next line baffles me. I can only conjecture that " prisoners of 3 or 4
NOTES. 191
jnlls" must be some ahin/f expression, and that " pill " must mean rohhcry or
rascality.
V. 86, 1. 19. Bis/ioj}j> of Gloucester. Apparently Richard Cheyney, Bishop of
Gloucester from 15G2 to 1579. For an account of him see Cooper's Ath.
Cantab, vol. i. p. 400.
P. 99, 1. 30. When the Thames was twice frozen over.
" The Thames is now quite frozen over, so that people have passed over to
and fro these four or five days ; but not so freely as in the great frost, for
the winds and high tides have so driven the ice in heaps in some places that
it lies like rocks and mountains, and hath a strange and hideous aspect. It
hath been seldom seen that this river should be twice frozen over in one
winter; and the watermen are quite undone to lose the benefit of term and
parliament both.
Letter from John Chamberlain, Esq. to Sir Dudley Carleton, dated Lon-
don, February 3, 1620-1. (Birch's Covrtand Times of James I. vol. ii. p. 217.)
P. 108, 1. 14. Dureing the vacancy of a Chancellor. Sir Francis Bacon's con-
fession was read in the House of Lords on 24 April, 1621; the great seal
was put in commission on the 1st of May. Bp. Williams received the great
seal by the title of Lord Keeper on the 10th July.
P. 108, 1. 30. Anno 21 Jac. Sj'c. The date given is wrong, it should be 18° Jac.
The Proclamation for the Abolition of Bills of Conformity was issued 81
March, 1621. It may be found in the eighth vol. of Bymer's Foedera, xvii.
290. " Bills of Conformity were exhibited into his Majesty's Court
of Chancery and other his Courts of Equity by sundry persons against their
Creditors, of purpose to enforce them to accept less than their just debts
and damages or to give longer days or times of payment than the said
Creditors overe willing to do." The Proclamation was issued to remedy
the evils that had arisen in consequence of the increase of these Bills of
Conformity. [I am indebted to 3Ir. Gardiner for the reference to this
passage.]
P. 110, 1. 24. Sir Ri. Skipwith. He was of Ormesby, co. Lincoln. In 1.582 he
received a grant of the office of Clerk of the Treasury of the Court of Com-
mon Pleas. He was ancestor of the Skipworths of Newbold Hall, who became
extinct in 1790, after keeping the Baronetcy upwards of a century. The
Queen rewarded him for his twenty years' service by granting him the lease
of Gransden Manor, co. Cambridge, late parcel of the Bishopric of Fly (.'),
on March 31, 1602. {Cal. Bom. Eliz.)
P. 118, 1.9. George Beynell. He appears to have succeeded Joachim. Newton as
Warden about 1.597, and to have become Marshal of the King's Bench
Prison in the following reign. James I. knighted him, but when I have not been
able to discover. About a year after the prisoners in the Fleet mutinied and
complained of Harris, the prisoners in the King's Bench did precisely the same,
and in the P. R. O. there is a narrative of their outbreak which affords a curious
192 NOTES.
parallel to that of Harris {Dam. vol. cxvi. N. 46. See App. III.) Sir George
PAiZZi^w reporting in the House of Commons on Bacon^s malpractices says:
" That there was also much corruption said to be in the suit betwixt Pecueh
and Sir George Rhcnill, which is not examined;" and Bacon in his confession
says to the nineteenth article of the charge, " videlicet, In the cause between
Reynell and Peacock, he received from Reynell two hundred pounds and a
diamond ring worth five or six hundred pounds."
" I confess and declare. That at my first coming to the Seal, when I was at
Whitehall, my servant Hunt delivered me two hundred pounds from Sir
George Eeynell, my near ally, to be bestowed upon furniture of my home,
adding further, that he received divers former favours from me; and this was
as I verily think before any suit begun. The ring was i-eceived certainly
pendente lite, and though it were at new year's tide yet it was too great a
vaiue for a new year's gift; though, as I take it, nothing near the value men-
tioned in the article."
In Bacon's will he mentions this diamond " To my wife a box of
rings, save the great diamond I would have restored to Sir George Reynell."
{Cal. Bom. J. I. 1618-1620, pp. 168, 172. Add. 1580-1625, p. 552. Od^ford
Bcbates, vol. i. p. 207. Sjiedding's Bacon, vol. vii. jjp. 228, 258).
r. 120, 1. 6. 3Ir. George Leicester, &c.
Uriah Babington was a London merchant, who appears to have been con-
cerned in extensive Government contracts at the close of Queen Elizabeth's
I'eign and at the beginning of that of James I. In 1609 his wife having been
left a widow was in some way involved in losses which her husband had sus-
tained. She is described as " a very wilful woman," and is hard pressed by
her creditors. The proceedings against her extend over some years, and on
her marriage with George Leicester, appai-ently early .j 1617, he became
involved in the suit. (See Cal. Dom. J. I. 1604-1618.) Among the Lords'
MSS. is her petition to the House of Commons, praying for discharge from
prison, and setting forth her grievances, in 1620. {Hist. MSS. Coin. Rep.
vol. iv, p. 120.)
P. 123, 1. 13. Sir Henry Slmgshy (sic.) Probably Sir Henry Slingsby, of Scriven,
CO. York, who was M.P. for Snaresborough in several Parliaments during the
reigns of James I. and Charles I. Sir Walter Scott published his Com-
mentaries in 1806.
P. 128, 1. 27. Don-nes. Another victim of the penal laws against the " Popish
Recusants." He was son and heir of Boiert Boirnes, of Melton Hall, co.
Norfolk, Esq. concerning whom see One Generation of a JVorfolk House,
ch. iii. n. (10) and (11). In 1604 an Act was brought into the House of
Lords " for the sale of certain lands of Edward Don-nes, Esq. for pa3'ment of
his debts," which was rejected on the 3rd reading (3 July). The draught of
it is in the P. R. O. {Certiorari Bundle, No. 66). After this I lose sight of
him, and conjecture that he died in the Fleet.
NOTES. 193
P. 140, 1. ii-L Jlr. Trcy'uin. Francis Tnrjlan, eldest son of Francis Tirgian. of
Volvedon alias Golden, co. Cornwall, Esq. See the painfully-interesting
narrative in Mr. Morris's Troubles of our Catholic fort^athers, series i. pp.
61-143. Francis the father was in prison from 1577 to 1605. Soon after the
accession of James I. he was liberated and banished. He retired to Lisbon,
where he died 25 Sept. 1608. Francis, the son, appears to have been sent
across the channel when his father's troubles began. On the 31 Sept. 1586 he
entered at the English College, at Eheims, when he was described as having
been " in Augensi schola ernditus." He appears to have remained at Eheims
for the next six years, and left it 11 Jidy, 1592. The next two years he
seems to have spent in travelling on the Continent; but 23 May, 1594, Beard,
the spy, writes that " Trcgian's eldest son is coming over shortly." When he
was thrown into the Fleet I have not been able to discover, but he evidently
had been there many years when lie died there in 1619. (Morris, u. s. Cal.
Dom. 1591-1594, p. 506. Add. 1619, p. 613, 1598-1601, p. 520. Doual Dlarg,
under the dates given.)
1'. 143. TJte Lady Amy Blunt. She was third daughter of George Tucket, Earl
of Castleharen and Lord Avdley, and wife of Edward Blunt, of Arleston,
CO. Derby, Esq. Sometime in the summer of 1619 she had, or thought she
had, reason to complain of injustice at the hands of Sir Francis Bacon, then
at the zenith of his power, and she addressed a Petition to James I. com-
plaining of the treatment she had received. Summoned before the Council 9
June, 1619, she was asked to deliver up the writer of the petition, and on
her refusal she was committed to the Fleet on the 6th July. She was
detained there for 27 weeks, and then transferred to the Marshalsea, where I
find her as late as Nov. 1620. (From information kindly furnished by 2Ir.
LarTien, T>-rtculli«. Hist. MSB. Com. Rep. iii. p. 285. Cal. Bom. J. 1. 1619,
1620, pp. 53, 68, 144, 190. Prirg Council Becords.)
CAMD. SOC. 2 C
INDEX NOMINUM.
Abbot, George. Archbishop, 47, 186
Abel, John, 129
Aborne, John (query is he the John
Abel of p. 129), 44
Anderson, Sir Edmund, 118 (Lord Chief
Justice of Common Pleas)
Andrews, Bishop of Ely, 186
Androwes, Walter, 162, 163
Anslowe, Brian (formerly Warden of
Fleet), 9, 17, 115, 118. 185
Appleworth, 62
Aprice, Sir William, 158
Arundell, Earl of, 168, 169, 170
Babington (formerly Warden of Fleet),
9
Babington, Mrs. widow of Uriah Ba-
bington, 120
Babington (Uriah), 120, 192
Bacon, Sir Francis, 115, 116. 118, 186,
190-19,3
Bacon, Sir Nicholas, 153
Barbar, John, 164
Bate, Anthony, 162, 163
Batty, Lionel, 188
Beard, 192
Beare, Edward, 7, 58, 190
Beare, Gilbert, 158
Beestone, 109
Bland, Mr. 182
Blechenden, James, 187
Blunt, Lady Amy, 7, 72, 143-145, 193
Blunt, Edward, 143, 145, 193
Boughton, Henry, 33,34-42, 44-46, 151,
188
Boyer, Sir Edmund, 171
Briggs, Mr. 181
Brittaine, Thomas, 164
Brockas. Richard, 180
Brockas, Mrs. Elizabeth, 181
Brough, Robert, 115
Browne, Elizabeth, 187
Browne, William, 187
Brownfennell, Baron, 86
Bryant, Christopher, 141
Bullingham, 61
Burleigh, Lord, 1 62
Ciesar, Julius, 165
Calvert, Mr. Secretary, 168, 170
Carew v. Carie, Sir Nicholas, 171
Carleton, Sir Dudley, 190
Carrie, John, 153
Catlin, Sir Robert, 153, 154
Cawlton, John (formerly Warden of
Fleet), 9, 185
Chamberlayn, Edmund, 7, 23, 26, 44, 45,
60, 62, 71, 72, 85, 120, 158, 188
Chamberlayn, Sir Thomas, 188
Chamberlayn, Sir John, 188
Chappell, John, 148
Cheyney, Richard, Bishop of Gloucester,
191
Cleare, Sir Edward, 45, 190
Cocke, Robert, 164
Coke, Sir Edward, 12, 49, 105, 126, 130,
168, 169, 171, 190
Cooke, Henry (Porter of Fleet), 6
Cooke , a keeper at Newgate, 45
Copeman, , 61
Coppin, Edward, 7, 42-46, 62, 68, 151
Corbet, Clement, 188
Cordell, Sir William, 153, 154
Cowdrey, Walter, 181
Dallison, Sir William, 188
Dallison, Barbara, 188
Digby, Lord, 168, 169, 170, 185
Digby, Katharine, 188
Digby, Sir Everard, 188
Downes, Edward, 128, 192
Downes, Robert, 192
Dubbleday, Edmond, 171
Ducy, Sir William. Bart. 181
Dyer, Sir Francis, 153, 154
Edmondes, C. 117
Edmondes, Sir Clement, 167
Edolph, Symon, 181
Edolph. Sir Thomas, 181
Englefield, Sir Francis, 7, 38, 44, 58, 59.
62,76,77,83,93, 139, 142, 158, 189, 190
Englefield, John, 189
INDEX NOMINUM.
19o
Facey, Mrs. Anne, 1 81
Feltwell, John, HM
Fleming, Serjeant Thomas, 118
Fletcher, tailor at the Fleet, 44
Fowler, Thomas, 165
Fryer, Dr. Thomas, 67, 190
Fryer, Dr. John, 190
Fnlmerston, Sir Richard, 190
Fulmerston, Francis, 190
Gerard, Gilbert. 158
Gerard, Mary, 190
Gondomar, 187
Gongh, Sir Thomas, 62
Grymes, Sir Thomas, 171
Gulston, , 148
Hamon, Thomas, 164
Hardwicke, , 166
Hare, Richard, 181
Harvey, William, 7, 35, 36, 38, 151
Harvye, John, 160, 161
Hayne, Thomas, 52-54
Higginson, William, 181
Hobart, Sir Henry, 148, 150
Holman, 140
Holmes, Robert, clerk of Fleet, 6, 35
Horsepoole, Joan, 188
Horsepoole, Simon, 188
Hunt. 191
Huntingdon, Henry, Earl of, 191
Huntley, John, 158
Hutton, Sir Richard, 150
Jackson, Hamlet, 185,
Jennison (Michael), 58, 70, 190
Jenuison, John, 190
Jones, John,
Kennel, Richard, 7
Kennel, Christopher, 55, 94
King, Bishop of London, 186
Lane, Elizabeth, 44, 45
Lee, George, 7, 74, 134-138, 140, 158,
190
Leicester, George, 23, 120, 185, 192
Lock, Mr. 182
Lunn, Thomas, 188
Lutwyche, Mr. Justice, 180
Machen, John, 181
Manlove, Richard, Warden of Fleet, 180
Manning, Mr. 181
Marston, Robert, 169
Martin, John, 158
Maunsell, Richard, 6, 35
Meercs, Sir John, 37, 121, 188, 189
Meeres, Anthony, 188
Meeres, Barbara, 188-189
Mennell (query Kennell), 94
Montague, Sir Henry, Earl of Manches-
ter, 190
Mott, James, 180
Mynors, 61, 129
Naunton, Sir Robert, 49, 50, 170
Nevill, Barbara, 189
Nevill, John, 189
Newport, Thomas, 160, 161
Newton, Joachim (Warden of Fleet), 9.
162, 163, 185, 191
North. Lord (Dudley, 3rd Lord), 115.
185
Nowell, Robert, 153
Oliver, , 58
Owen, George, 158
Parker, Peter, 164
Peacock, 191
Peck, Ashburnham, 7, 23, 72, 74, 129, 167,
187
Peck, Mary, 187
Pemberton, John, 181
Petre, Sir William, 153, 154
Pettus, Sir John, Bart. 181
Pewe, Richard, 140
Phillips, Sir George, 191
Phillips, AVarden of Fleet, 9
Pitt, John, 182
Pitt, Moses, 181, 182, 183, 184
Plowden, 189
Price, Sir William, 7
Pricket (a preacher), 48
Putsay (Pudsey), Sir George, 181
Raymon. John, 164
Reynell, Sir George f Warden of Fleet),
9, 92, 115, 118, 170,185, 191, 192
Rith, 73
Robynson, John, 164
Roflfe, Henry, 164
Rookwood, Alice, 187
Rook wood, Dorothy, 187
Rookwood, p:dward, 7, 26, 37, 44, 48, 67
98, 100, 128, 133, 158, 187
Rookwood, Elizabeth, 187
Rookwood, Nicholas, 7, 49, 60, 68, 131.
312, 158, 167, 187
Rookwood, Robert, 187
196
INDEX NOMINUM.
Rookvvood, Susan, 187
Rookwood, William, 187
Sackfoi-d, Thomas, 15;3
Sanders, Sir Edward, 153, lo-l
Scott, Ciithbcrt, Bishop of Chester, 18.")
Segar, John, 7,08, 158
Segar, Thomas, 1(54
Sharpe, Edmund, 7, 45, 72, 147-150
Shirley, John, 7
Shotbolt, 17
Skevington, Richard, 165
Skipwith, Sir Richard, 110, 191
Skynner, Vincent, 165
Slingshy, Sir Henry, 123, 192
Smith, Philip, 115, 118
Smyth, Mr. 163
Southampton, Earl of, 168
Spiller, Sir Henry, 171
Sturgys, John, 164
Thompson (a servant of the "Warden's),
53, 62
Thraske, John, 23, 47, 48, 50, 51, 69,
180, 185, 186, 187
Thurland, , 110
Thurmnn (Ashburu Peck's wife's
father), 74
Tirrell, Edward (Warden of the Fleet),
9, 16, 17, 19, 171, 1S5
Tirrell, Richard (Warden of the Fleet),
153
Tregian, Francis, 140, 158, 192, 193
Trenche, (Warden of the Fleet). 9
Trussell, Thomas, 110
Tucket, George, Earl of Castlehaven and
Lord Audley, 193
Upman, Stephen, 182
Warren, John, 7, 158, 181
Welman, , 149
Wheatley, George, 45
Whithrobke, Sir John, 29, 30, 32, 33. 36-
42, 60, 68, 69, 73, 121-125, 140-142,
151, 158, 167, 188
Whitbrook, Lady, 7, 32, 188
Williams, Lord Keeper, 189, 191
Willis, Timothy, 35
Woomelayson, 35
Yaxley, Margaret, 190
Yaxley, William, 190
Zanchi, Julius, 187
Westminster: Printed by J. B. NlCHOLg AND SoNS, 25, Parliament Street.
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