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exchequer-chamber
exchequer-chamber Also chequer-chamber. 1. The chamber devoted to the business of the royal exchequer.[1494–1611: see chequer-chamber 1.] 1819 Pantologia s.v. Exchequer, The court of equity is held in the exchequer chamber before the treasurer, chancellor, and barons. 2. ‘A tribunal of error and app...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Court of Exchequer Chamber
The Court of Exchequer Chamber was an English appellate court for common law civil actions before the reforms of the Judicature Acts of 1873–1875. As a rule, a judgment of the Exchequer Chamber was considered the definitive statement of the law.
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William Killigrew (Chamberlain of the Exchequer)
He served as a member of parliament at various times between 1571 and 1614 and was Chamberlain of the Exchequer between 1605 and 1608. From 1605 to 1608 he was Chamberlain of the Exchequer. In 1614 he was elected MP for Penryn again.
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chequer-chamber
† chequer-chamber Obs. 1. The chamber devoted to the business of the royal exchequer; transf. treasury-room.1494 Fabyan vii. 342 The Kyng..yode into the Chekyr Chaumbre, and there satte hym downe. 1611 Coryat Crudities 449 A place where their Checker-chamber was for the safe keeping of the Roman tre...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Court of Exchequer
Court of Exchequer may refer to:
Exchequer of Pleas, an ancient English court that ceased to exist independently in the late nineteenth century
Court of Exchequer Chamber, an ancient English appellate court that ceased to exist independently in the late nineteenth century
Court of Exchequer (Ireland)
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Exchequer
Appeals were to the Court of Exchequer Chamber. of the Exchequer.
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Richard Tomlins (judge)
Richard Tomlins (d. after 1660) was an English judge who served as Baron of the Exchequer during the Interregnum. Tomlins was assigned to assist John Bastwick and Henry Burton in their complaint against their cruel punishment by the star chamber and in 1641 they were
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Stop of the Exchequer
The Great Stop of the Exchequer or Stop of the Exchequer was a repudiation of state debt that occurred in England in 1672 under the reign of Charles II The Court of Exchequer gave judgment in 1692 in favour of the bankers, but the government immediately appealed to the Court of Exchequer Chamber, where
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Exchequer of the Jews
the "Exchequer of the Jews". It was suggested by William Blackstone in 1769 that the notorious Star Chamber received its name from being the depository for the latter class of deeds
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Starr (law)
By an ordinance of Richard I, no English starr was valid unless deposited in one of certain repositories, the best-known of which was the King's exchequer See also
Exchequer of the Jews
Star Chamber
References
English contract law
Jewish English history
Medieval English law
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Treasurer of the Chamber
As part of the evolutionary changes that saw the Treasurer of the Exchequer become an office of state outside the King's Household, one of the Chamber In the 1350s moves were made which saw the Chamber lands and their incomes transferred to the Exchequer.
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Patrick Segrave
He was charged in 1602 with "diverse causes (cases)" of bribery and corruption, and stood trial before the Court of Castle Chamber, the Irish equivalent of Star Chamber.
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William Methold
He was knighted and sent to Ireland as Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer in 1612, an office he held until his death. , the Irish equivalent of Star Chamber.
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Henry Hildyard (MP)
In 1660 he was also given the position of Chamberlain of the Exchequer for life and in 1670 made a Gentleman of the Privy Chamber, also for life. References
1610 births
1674 deaths
Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge
Members of the Inner Temple
English MPs 1660
Gentlemen of the Privy Chamber
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R v Woodrow
. & W. 404 (Exch. 1846) was a case decided by the English Court of Exchequer Chamber that first adopted a strict liability standard for the criminal offence References
W
1846 in case law
1846 in England
Court of Exchequer Chamber cases
Food safety scandals
Tobacco in the United Kingdom
Food safety in the United
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