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Topic: Edmund Whitelocke


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In the News (Sat 26 Dec 09)

  
  James Whitelocke - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sir James Whitelocke (November 28, 1570 – June 22, 1632), English judge, was the son of Richard Whitelocke, a London merchant.
In 1620, Whitelocke was made chief justice of the court of session of the county palatine of Chester, and was knighted; in 1624 he was appointed justice of the court of king's bench.
His elder brother Edmund was implicated in the Gunpowder Plot.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/James_Whitelocke   (288 words)

  
 [No title]
WHITELOCKE, SIR JAMES (1570-1632), English judge, son of Richard Whitelocke, a London merchant, was born on the 28th of November 1570.
In 162o Whitelocke was made chief justice of the court of session of the county palatine of Chester, and was knighted; in 1624 he was appointed justice of the court of king's bench.
Whitelocke's elder brother, EDMUND WHITELOCKE (1565-1608), was a soldier in France and later a courtier in England.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /correction/edit?content_id=70212&locale=en   (409 words)

  
 Edmund, St - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Edmund, St   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
From left to right, these are St Edmund and St Edward the Confessor (earlier English kings who came to be venerated as saints), and St John the Baptist.
In 870 he was defeated and captured by the Danes at Hoxne, Suffolk, and martyred on refusing to renounce Christianity.
He was canonized and his shrine at Bury St Edmunds became a place of pilgrimage.
encyclopedia.farlex.com /Edmund,+St   (208 words)

  
 1608 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rory O'Donnell, 1st Earl of Tyrconnell (born 1575)
Edmund Whitelocke, English soldier and courtier (born 1565)
This page was last modified 21:14, 28 August 2006.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/1608   (465 words)

  
 The Digital Mirror - Archives - Witchcraft in Flintshire   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
In the next century Edmund Jones, 'the old Prophet', of Pontypool, gave numerous examples of such appearances, of which one must suffice:
These Corpse-Candles are sometimes seen elsewhere, for I myself saw one in the Town of Wrexham in Denbighshire before the death of a lad in the adjoining house where I lodged.
B. Whitelocke, Memorials of the English Affairs IV (1853), 337.
www.llgc.org.uk /drych/drych_s030.htm   (8010 words)

  
 WHITELOCKE, SIR JAMES ... - Online Information article about WHITELOCKE, SIR JAMES ...
Liber famelicus, was edited by John See also:
EDMUND WHITELOCKE (1565-1608), was a soldier in See also:
city was stubbornly resisted, and then Whitelocke concluded an arrangement with the opposing general by which he abandoned the undertaking.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /WAT_WIL/WHITELOCKE_SIR_JAMES_1570_1632_.html   (537 words)

  
 May 14 oddd.org   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
Eleanor had previously been married to William Marshal, 2nd Earl of Pembroke, and she had sworn a vow of chastity on his death, which she broke by marrying Montfort.
The archbishop of Canterbury, Edmund Rich, condemned the marriage for this reason, though perhaps Eleanor can be forgiven, as she had been widowed at sixteen.
The English nobles protested the marriage of the king's sister to a foreigner of modest rank; most notably, Eleanor's brother Richard, 1st Earl of Cornwall rose up in revolt when he learned of the marriage.
oddd.org /en/May+14   (9978 words)

  
 WILLOUGHBY of Parham
To Henry Haughton, for his faithful services, and to attend to the payment of legacies and look after the plantations at Antigua and Surinam, his expenses and 100l.
Appoints his brother, William Willoughby, Sir Bulstrode Whitelock, and Sir Charles Pim, overseers in trust of this will, with £20 apiece for a ring.
Testators rents, issues, and profits in England or elsewhere to be paid to John Champante of London, merchant - who for his pains is allowed £100 per annum - to such uses as his said daughters or their children shall direct.
www.tudorplace.com.ar /WILLOUGHBY2.htm   (749 words)

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