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571:, and despite his behaviour on this occasion, a man of good reputation. A scene of comical disorder ensued when Everard was placed in the chair and refused to vacate in favour of the government candidate. Davies, always a very heavy man, was seized by his own supporters and lifted bodily into his opponent's lap; Everard was then ejected from the chair and withdrew from the chamber with 98 supporters, whereupon the vote was taken in their absence. Davies was approved as speaker by Chichester, and delivered a memorable speech on the history and role of parliament in Ireland. Everard, his rival, was summoned to England and briefly imprisoned, but was quickly pardoned and thereafter loyally supported the Crown.
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649:, gained him the favour of James I, by which he won promotion in Ireland. The three-part poem is written in decasyllabic quatrains, and is concerned with one's self-knowledge and the immortality of the soul. A. H. Bullen described it as being "singularly readable for such a subject: highly accomplished verse, no Elizabethan quaintness, both subtle and terse".
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addressed her, "I pray you weep not while I am alive, and I will give you leave to laugh when I am dead". She is said to have accurately foretold the date of his death and wore mourning clothes for the three years leading up to the predicted time: as the date approached – three days before – she "gave him pass to take his long sleep".
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Davies was very much committed to reform not just in the law but in religious affairs too. He was all for banishing
Catholic clergy from Ireland and for enforcing church attendances, and strict measures to this end were taken on his return. He delivered a powerful speech on 23 November 1605 in the
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During the marriage, Eleanor published numerous books of prophecy, particularly anagrammatic prophecies; her prophetic writings were a source of conflict in the marriage and Davies burned a set of the prophecies that
Eleanor had been writing. Davies was exasperated by his wife's excesses and once
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after his appointment as
Attorney General. In the summer he travelled through counties Monaghan, Fermanagh and Cavan, and a year later through Meath, Westmeath, Longford, King's and Queen's counties, both of which circuits he reported to Cecil. Davies always looked at Ireland as a stepping-stone
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Finding pestilence and famine all over
Ireland, Davies noted that the courts still commanded respect, but that the sloth of the protestant clergy and the ruin of the churches were detrimental to religion. He condemned the practice of issuing debased coinage and, in pursuit of the establishment of
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In
February 1598, Davies was disbarred for the offence of entering the dining hall of the Inns in the company of two swordsmen and striking Richard Martin with a cudgel. The victim Martin was a noted wit who had insulted him in public, and Davies immediately took a boat at the Temple steps and
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and believed she heard the voice of the prophet; she wrote about the experience and took it to the
Archbishop of Canterbury. When Davies found and burned her writing she predicted he would die within three years, and went into mourning. In November 1626, Davies was appointed to high office in
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In May 1609, Davies was made serjeant, with a grant of lands valued at £40 p.a. He revisited
England in 1610 on plantation business, which had so advanced that he thought his assistance to the commission charged with bringing the project to fruition would no longer be needed.
602:. In 1619 he returned to England permanently, in the expectation that his chance of gaining office there would be improved by his presence. He practised as king's serjeant, and eventually went on circuit as a judge. He was a founder member of the
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England. In early
December, following her husband's appointment, Eleanor started weeping during a dinner with friends. When asked why, she explained it was in anticipation of Davies's funeral. Davies was found in his home, dead of
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was included in a list of published works that the state ordered to be confiscated and burned. In 1601 he was readmitted to the bar, having made a public apology to Martin, and in the same year sat as the member of
Parliament for
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In 1633, Eleanor was brought before the high commission in
England on charges relating to her religious anagram practices. During a fruitless examination of her under oath, one of the commissioners devised an anagram of his own:
703:, in March of 1609. She was one of the most prolific women writing in early seventeenth-century England, author of almost seventy pamphlets and prophecies, and one of the first women in England to see her works through to print.
675:, a model that served the English crown as it extended its colonial reach in North America and elsewhere. In literary terms, he was a fine poet who lay quite neglected from the mid-17th century, until his cause was championed by
555:. In the first sitting, he was proposed as speaker with the Crown's approval, but he met fierce opposition from the Catholic members, who formed a very large minority and nominated a former High Court judge, Sir
622:. He had always been corpulent, and on 7 December 1626 he died in his bed of apoplexy brought on after a supper party, and thus never enjoyed the appointment he had been angling for throughout his career.
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In 1610, he defended proceedings brought by the Irish against the plans for the plantation of Cavan, but in the following year, he begged for recall from Ireland. At about this time he wrote the
744:. She was sent to prison, and afterwards remarried, but was deserted by her new husband and buried next to Davies on her death in 1652. She had continued to make prophesies until her death.
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to London as the new monarch. The Scots king was also an admirer of Davies's poetry, and rewarded him with a knighthood and appointments (at Mountjoy's recommendation) as
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Davies spent some time at New Inn after his departure from Oxford, and it was at this point that he decided to pursue a career in law. In 1588 he enrolled in the
289:, where he did well academically, although suffering constant reprimands for his behaviour. Following several suspensions, his behaviour cost him his enrolment.
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towards major political office in England but he knew that his chances were hurt by the death of Cecil, his patron, and his own absence from the court.
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for four years, a period in which he showed much interest in literature. He studied there until the age of sixteen and went to further his education at
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Davies's works are very well represented in Elizabethan anthologies. The last complete edition of his poems appeared in 1876 and is long out of print.
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319:. She wished him to continue his study of law at the Middle Temple and had him sworn in as a servant-in-ordinary. In the following year, his poem,
610:, and Newcastle-under-Lyme, choosing to sit for the latter constituency. He occasionally spoke in parliament on Irish matters. Davies retired to
660:, reveals a typical Elizabethan pleasure: contemplating and trying to understand the relationship between the natural order and human activity.
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In 1615, Davies's reports of Irish cases were published; he had appeared as counsel in many of these, including the case of the
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This article is about the English poet born in Wiltshire in 1569. For the Anglo-Welsh poet born in Hereford about 1560, see
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Davies had three children by his marriage. His only son to survive infancy, John (Jack), was deaf and dumb; his daughter
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144:(16 April 1569 (baptised) – 8 December 1626) was an English poet, lawyer, and politician who sat in the
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Davies became heavily involved in government efforts to establish a plantation in the lately rebellious province of
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638:. Queen Elizabeth became an admirer of Davies's work, and these poems contain acrostics that spell out the phrase
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and consequently resigned as Attorney-General in Ireland, having ensured that he would be replaced by his nephew
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Watt, Diane (2004). "Davies , Lady Eleanor (1590–1652), prophetess | Oxford Dictionary of National Biography".
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Davies wrote poetry in numerous forms, but is best known for his epigrammes and sonnets. In 1599 he published
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In political terms, Davies was significant in his work on constitutional law and in framing the terms of the
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circuit through seven counties in April 1604. In 1605 he travelled to England with the commendation of Sir
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926:. London: Printed by E. Flesher, J. Streater, and H. Twyford, assigns of Richard Atkyns and Edward Atkyns
586:, which set precedents in Irish constitutional law, with wider implications for British colonial policy.
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wondered as much to see the king's deputy as the ghosts in Vurgil wondered to see AEneas alive in hell
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Les reports des cases & matters en ley, resolves & adjudges en les courts del roy en Ireland
539:(pub. 1612), a well-written – albeit polemical – account of the constitutional standing of Ireland.
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Davies arrived in Dublin in November 1603, where Mountjoy had accepted the submission of the rebel
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In August 1608, he went with Chichester to view the escheated lands, reporting that the people, "
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679:. Davies's poem "I know my soul hath power to know all things" was set to music by the composer
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A History of the County of Wiltshire: South-west Wiltshire: Chalke and Dunworth hundreds
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Members of the Parliament of Ireland (pre-1801) for County Fermanagh constituencies
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345:("Know Thyself"), was published in 1599 and found favour with the queen and with
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868:"DAVIES, John (1569–1626), of the Middle Temple, London and Englefield, Berks"
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Davies travelled to the Netherlands in 1592 with others of the Middle Temple (
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Johnson, Francis R. (September 1942). "The Poems of Sir John Davies (Book)".
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482:, who succeeded Mountjoy in government, and had returned to Ireland by July.
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1363:. Vol. 7 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 864–865.
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Rowse, A. L. (September 1976). "Sir John Davies in Literature and History".
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Sir John Davies and the Conquest of Ireland: A Study in Legal Imperialism
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retired to Oxford, where he chose to write poetry. Another of his works,
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1017:. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 156.
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In May 1606, he submitted his report of his circuit of the province of
194: in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
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Davies became a favourite of the queen, to whom he addressed his work
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O'Donoghue, Fergus (January 1990). "Book Reviews: Modern European".
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Discoverie of the True Causes why Ireland was never entirely subdued
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and formulated many of the legal principles that underpinned the
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325:, was published in July, prior to his call to the bar from the
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In England, Davies spent much time preparing the way for the
513:. In September 1607, he delivered to Cecil his report of the
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On 28 July 1625, Eleanor was working on a commentary of the
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An account of the legal proceedings is given in Ballard's
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In 1603, he was part of the deputation sent to bring King
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Coates, Ben (April 2005). "Sir John Davies (1569–1626)".
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In 1594, Davies's poetry brought him into contact with
308:, to whom the group had a letter of introduction from
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The Complete Poems of Sir John Davies. Volume 1 of 2
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regular quarter-sessions of the courts, went on the
656:as "brilliant and graceful". This poem, written in
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524:". In October, he was in England, pushing for the
148:at various times between 1597 and 1621. He became
2358:Speakers of the Parliament of Ireland (pre-1801)
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27:English poet, lawyer, and politician (1569–1626)
1271:1599: A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare
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833:. Cambridge University Press. pp. 16–17.
274:, to John and Mary Davies. He was educated at
1612:
594:In 1617 Davies failed to win the position of
466:some six months earlier, at the close of the
1193:(online ed.). Oxford University Press.
1132:Occultism & Parapsychology Encyclopedia
800:Freeman, Jane; Stevenson, Janet H. (1987).
430:. Unsourced material may be challenged and
1619:
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1221:Memoirs of Several Ladies of Great Britain
1159:"Eleanor Touchet, Lady Davies (1590–1652)"
741:Dame Eleanor Davys – never so mad a ladye
450:Learn how and when to remove this message
254:Learn how and when to remove this message
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950:"Biography: Sir John Davies (1569–1626)"
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1190:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
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596:Solicitor General for England and Wales
360:in 1599. Later that year, however, his
42:. For the Welsh poet born in 1944, see
38:. For the Welsh poet born in 1846, see
34:. For the Welsh poet born in 1841, see
14:
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551:of 1613, to which he was returned for
2298:People educated at Winchester College
2278:Alumni of the Queen's College, Oxford
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1579:Speaker of the Irish House of Commons
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767:Jokinen, Anniina (1 November 2009) .
765:A list of his works can be found at:
543:Speaker of the Irish House of Commons
501:, the king's secretary, and was made
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428:adding citations to reliable sources
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192:adding citations to reliable sources
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270:, possibly at Chicksgrove Manor at
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203:"John Davies" poet, born 1569
25:
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2348:17th-century English male writers
2303:People from Englefield, Berkshire
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1244:Making Ireland British, 1580–1650
1128:"Lady Eleanor Davies (1603–1652)"
1028:Jokinen, Anniina (25 July 2006).
827:Hans S. Pawlisch (18 July 2002).
606:. In 1621, he was elected MP for
2242:
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2004:Sir Edward Sullivan, 1st Baronet
1263:Dictionary of National Biography
1099:. Oxford University Press, USA.
808:. Vol. 13. pp. 195–248
734:, on the morning of 8 December.
400:
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36:John Davies (Taliesin Hiraethog)
2313:17th-century Anglo-Irish people
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654:Orchestra, or a Poem of Dancing
652:Bullen also described Davies's
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179:needs additional citations for
2318:Solicitors-general for Ireland
2308:People from Tisbury, Wiltshire
1628:Solicitors-general for Ireland
995:
913:
820:
793:
769:"The Works of Sir John Davies"
759:
13:
1:
1384:Works by or about John Davies
1265:22 vols. (London, 1921–1922).
1233:
159:
44:John Davies (poet, born 1944)
2368:16th-century English lawyers
2353:17th-century English writers
2288:Members of the Middle Temple
2009:Michael Morris, Baron Morris
1547:Attorney-General for Ireland
1207:UK public library membership
872:History of Parliament Online
787:
747:
150:Attorney General for Ireland
48:John Davies (disambiguation)
7:
1273:. London: Faber and Faber.
1248:. Oxford University Press.
1240:Canny, Nicholas P. (2001).
280:the Queen's College, Oxford
10:
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2343:17th-century English poets
2338:16th-century English poets
1290:Catholic Historical Review
905:. p. 125 – via
897:Grosart, Alexander Balloch
526:plantation of the province
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1329:Modern Language Quarterly
1157:Ford, David Nash (2010).
1032:. Luminarium Encyclopedia
975:Ford, David Nash (2001).
948:Ford, David Nash (2010).
895:. "Hymnes to Astrœa". In
804:. In Crowley, D.A (ed.).
771:. Luminarium Encyclopedia
701:first Earl of Castlehaven
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625:
618:, but was then appointed
578:fishery and the cases of
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94:8 December 1626 (aged 57)
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1919:Joseph Devonsher Jackson
1375:Works by Sir John Davies
1354:"Davies, Sir John"
1341:10.1215/00267929-3-3-479
752:
2129:Dodgson Hamilton Madden
1360:Encyclopædia Britannica
1269:Shapiro, James (2005).
1163:Royal Berkshire History
1093:Shrock, Dennis (2009).
1014:Encyclopædia Britannica
981:Royal Berkshire History
954:Royal Berkshire History
488:Court of Castle Chamber
32:John Davies of Hereford
2014:Hedges Eyre Chatterton
1165:. Nash Ford Publishing
1059:. University of Oregon
983:. Nash Ford Publishing
956:. Nash Ford Publishing
720:Countess of Huntingdon
645:His most famous poem,
604:Society of Antiquaries
567:. Everard was an open
351:Lord Deputy of Ireland
2333:English MPs 1621–1622
2323:English MPs 1597–1598
2144:Charles Hare Hemphill
2079:William Moore Johnson
1929:Richard Wilson Greene
1869:Philip Cecil Crampton
1397:Parliament of England
1199:10.1093/ref:odnb/7233
920:Davies, John (1674).
2229:Thomas Watters Brown
2224:Daniel Martin Wilson
2039:Charles Robert Barry
1999:James Anthony Lawson
1854:Charles Kendal Bushe
1839:William Cusack-Smith
1500:Member of Parliament
1454:Member of Parliament
1417:Member of Parliament
683:in his choral work,
673:Plantation of Ulster
424:improve this section
374:James VI of Scotland
331:Member of Parliament
304:, he met the jurist
188:improve this article
2293:Irish MPs 1613–1615
1974:Henry George Hughes
1949:Henry George Hughes
1939:James Henry Monahan
1924:Thomas Cusack-Smith
1904:David Richard Pigot
1779:St George Caulfeild
802:"Parishes: Tisbury"
716:Ferdinando Hastings
634:(Know thyself) and
561:knight of the shire
515:Flight of the Earls
266:Davies was born in
2363:English male poets
2119:John George Gibson
2109:John George Gibson
2049:Christopher Palles
1969:Jonathan Christian
1914:Edward Pennefather
1879:Edward Pennefather
1564:Political offices
1493:(Sir) Henry Mervyn
1051:Sir John, Davies.
977:"Englefield House"
699:, daughter of the
620:Lord Chief Justice
276:Winchester College
46:. For others, see
40:John Cadvan Davies
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2214:John Blake Powell
2069:Gerald Fitzgibbon
1884:Michael O'Loghlen
1874:Michael O'Loghlen
1649:Patrick Barnewall
1595:
1594:
1589:Nathaniel Catelyn
1586:Succeeded by
1554:Succeeded by
1540:Charles Calthorpe
1518:Succeeded by
1513:Sir Edmund Ludlow
1508:1621–1622
1489:Sir Edmund Ludlow
1472:Succeeded by
1449:Preceded by
1435:Succeeded by
1379:Project Gutenberg
1205:(Subscription or
1096:Choral Repertoire
907:Project Gutenberg
840:978-0-521-52657-9
685:Songs of Farewell
640:Elisabetha Regina
636:Hymnes of Astraea
480:Arthur Chichester
460:
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378:solicitor-general
329:. He was elected
294:William Fleetwood
272:Lower Chicksgrove
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16:(Redirected from
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2328:English MPs 1601
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2179:Ignatius O'Brien
2174:Charles O'Connor
2029:John Thomas Ball
2024:Michael Harrison
1934:Abraham Brewster
1849:William Plunkett
1844:James McClelland
1749:William Whitshed
1669:Richard Bellings
1621:
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1569:Preceded by
1537:Preceded by
1486:Preceded by
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1403:Preceded by
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1388:Internet Archive
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565:County Tipperary
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549:Irish Parliament
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382:attorney-general
358:Hymns to Astraea
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1964:John Fitzgerald
1954:James Whiteside
1799:Marcus Paterson
1754:Francis Bernard
1739:Richard Levinge
1729:Richard Levinge
1724:Theobald Butler
1714:Robert Shapcote
1704:William Sambach
1684:Sir John Davies
1679:Roger Wilbraham
1664:Nicholas Nugent
1644:Thomas Luttrell
1639:Thomas Rochfort
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1369:External links
1367:
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1351:, ed. (1911).
1349:Chisholm, Hugh
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2019:Robert Warren
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1316:History Today
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440:December 2022
433:
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409:This section
407:
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347:Lord Mountjoy
344:
343:Nosce Teipsum
338:
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327:Middle Temple
324:
323:
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300:). There, in
299:
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287:Middle Temple
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244:December 2022
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205: –
204:
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199:Find sources:
193:
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177:This section
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2194:Jonathan Pim
2059:Henry Ormsby
2034:Henry Ormsby
1979:Edmund Hayes
1864:John Doherty
1834:John Stewart
1824:Arthur Wolfe
1804:Godfrey Lill
1784:Warden Flood
1744:John Forster
1683:
1577:
1545:
1511:
1498:
1467:John Durning
1465:
1462:1601
1458:Corfe Castle
1452:
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1425:1597
1415:
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1188:
1167:. Retrieved
1162:
1135:. Retrieved
1131:
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1110:. Retrieved
1095:
1088:
1061:. Retrieved
1056:
1046:
1034:. Retrieved
1023:
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997:
985:. Retrieved
980:
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958:. Retrieved
953:
928:. Retrieved
922:
915:
901:
893:Davies, John
892:
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875:. Retrieved
871:
844:. Retrieved
829:
822:
810:. Retrieved
805:
795:
773:. Retrieved
761:
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709:
705:
694:
681:Hubert Parry
670:
662:
653:
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631:
629:
593:
590:Later career
573:
557:John Everard
546:
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534:
530:
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519:
508:
499:Robert Cecil
492:
484:
472:
464:Hugh O'Neill
461:
446:
437:
422:Please help
410:
371:
367:Corfe Castle
361:
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186:Please help
181:verification
178:
141:
140:
52:
2273:1626 deaths
2268:1569 births
2219:Denis Henry
2104:John Monroe
2074:Hugh Holmes
1984:John George
1719:John Temple
1442:John Budden
1430:John Budden
1421:Shaftesbury
1410:Arthur Atye
1169:28 December
1137:24 November
1053:"Orchestra"
1036:24 November
987:28 December
960:28 December
877:14 December
775:24 November
718:and became
687:(1916–18).
677:T. S. Eliot
658:rhyme royal
380:and, later
335:Shaftesbury
306:Paul Merula
120:Occupations
110:Nationality
64:John Davies
2262:Categories
2089:John Naish
1829:John Toler
1809:John Scott
1774:John Bowes
1654:John Bathe
1583:1613–1615
1551:1606-1619
1234:References
1223:(1752) at
1209:required.)
1057:Luminarium
846:6 November
214:newspapers
160:Early life
132:politician
1859:Henry Joy
1794:John Gore
1112:26 August
866:W. J. J.
788:Citations
748:Footnotes
616:Berkshire
584:gavelkind
411:does not
337:in 1597.
322:Orchestra
268:Wiltshire
104:, England
102:Berkshire
77:, England
75:Wiltshire
2247:Category
2054:Hugh Law
1063:29 March
732:apoplexy
714:married
580:tanistry
569:recusant
476:Leinster
362:Epigrams
349:, later
83:Baptised
1386:at the
1225:p.277ff
930:10 July
899:(ed.).
497:to Sir
495:Munster
432:removed
417:sources
392:Ireland
386:Ireland
228:scholar
114:English
1510:With:
1504:Hindon
1464:With:
1427:With:
1277:
1252:
1203:
1103:
837:
812:6 July
667:Legacy
626:Poetry
608:Hindon
559:, the
511:Ulster
302:Leiden
230:
223:
216:
209:
201:
129:lawyer
1335:(3).
753:Notes
384:, in
235:JSTOR
221:books
1502:for
1456:for
1419:for
1322:(9).
1309:(4).
1296:(I).
1275:ISBN
1250:ISBN
1171:2010
1139:2010
1114:2018
1101:ISBN
1065:2016
1038:2010
989:2010
962:2010
932:2020
879:2022
848:2012
835:ISBN
814:2010
777:2010
712:Lucy
582:and
576:Bann
563:for
415:any
413:cite
333:for
207:news
126:Poet
91:Died
70:Born
1377:at
1337:doi
1195:doi
614:in
426:by
190:by
60:Sir
2264::
1357:.
1331:.
1320:26
1318:.
1307:55
1305:.
1294:76
1292:.
1179:^
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1130:.
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1011:.
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870:.
856:^
722:.
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257:)
251:(
246:)
242:(
232:·
225:·
218:·
211:·
184:.
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20:)
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