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chirographer
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chirographer
chirographer (kaɪˈrɒgrəfə(r)) Also 6 cyro-, 6–7 ciro-, chyro-. [partly ad. F. chirographaire, ad. late L. chīrographārius; partly Eng. formation like geograph-er and the like.] 1. Law. The officer appointed to ‘engross fines’ (chirographs), in the Court of Common Pleas. (Abolished in 1833.)[1285 Act...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Chirographer
A chirographer can refer to
Someone who studies chirography
a machine patented in 1842 by Charles Thurber which was an early form of typewriter. ("chirographer, n.", Oxford English Dictionary)
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John Pakington
John Pakington may refer to:
Sir John Pakington (died 1551), Chirographer of the Court of Common Pleas
Sir John Pakington (died 1625), English courtier
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John Giffard (judge)
He also held the office of chirographer (the official who had responsibility for engrossing fines) in the same Court, which he also surrendered to Gower
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chirograph
chirograph (ˈkaɪərəʊgrɑːf, -æ-) Also 5 cirographe, 7 chyro-. [a. F. chirographe, ad. L. chīrographum, -us, a. Gr. χειρόγραϕον, -ος (that which is) written with the hand, f. χειρο- hand- + -γραϕος writing, written. It became a technical word in later L. (cf. Gaius iii. 134); its complete naturalizati...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Charles Thurber (inventor)
Aside from firearms, he developed multiple patents, the first in 1843 for an aid to the blind and in 1845 he patented his Chirographer
References
19th-century
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-grapher
-grapher (grəfə(r)) an ending of many Eng. words of Greek derivation. First found in the earlier half of the 16th c. The analogy of astronom-er (really f. astronomy, but having the appearance of being f. L. astronom-us + -er1) naturally suggested the use of the suffix -er as a means of anglicizing L...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Nicholas Merbury
He also held a number of other lifetime public appointments such as Usher of the King's chamber (1415), Chief Butler of England (1418), Chirographer of
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George Colebrooke
Though offered compensation or new contracts on the formation of the Rockingham government, he preferred instead to accept a well-paid post as chirographer
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Hagin ben Moses
He appears to have been the chirographer of the Jews of London, and obtained great wealth, but he lost it under Edward I.
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John Scott (died 1485)
accession of Edward IV, Scott was rewarded with annuities, a knighthood, the office of tronage and pesage in the port of London, and appointments as joint Chirographer
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Sir William Drake, 1st Baronet
He was later (1652) a chirographer (the officer responsible for noting final concords and filing records of fines) to the court.
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John Pakington (MP and Sheriff)
Sir John Pakington (c.1477 – 21 August 1551), was Chirographer of the Court of Common Pleas, a Member of Parliament for Gloucester, and Sheriff of Herefordshire He may have secured patronage at court, which could account for his appointment in 1508 as Chirographer of the Court of Common Pleas, an office in the
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Bertram de Criol
include de Criol's letter to Jeremiah de Caxton and William Hardel, as Justices of the Jews, concerning remittances to Mosses the son of Josce Crespin the chirographer
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