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sequestrator
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sequestrator
sequestrator (ˈsiːkwɛstreɪtə(r)) [a. late L. sequestrātor, agent-n. f. L. sequestrāre: see sequestrate v.] One who sequestrates; a trustee or bailiff having control of property upon which there are claims by creditors. Also, a person named in a writ of sequestration as authorized to collect and admi...
Oxford English Dictionary
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James Baker (Roundhead)
During the Civil War he became prominent as a sequestrator of Royalist estates as solicitor and sequestrator for Dorset from 1646 to 1649.
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sequestratrix
† sequeˈstratrix Obs. rare—1. [a. L. *sequestrātrix, fem. of sequestrātor sequestrator.] A female sequestrator.1657 H. Pinnell tr. Paracelsus' Three Bks. Philos. 9 Separation..is the sequestratrix that gives to every thing its form and essence.
Oxford English Dictionary
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John Cutts (died 1646)
collector of the Privy Seal loan; receiver of the Fen Drainage tax; commander of the poll tax for Cambridgeshire; collector of Irish aid for Cambridgeshire; sequestrator
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sequestree
† sequeˈstree Obs. [f. sequester v. + -ee.] = sequestrator.1611 Cotgr., Gardien de biens, a Sequestree, or keeper of the goods of an indebted, or condemned person, seised by order of Law. 1765–8 Erskine Inst. Law Scot. iii. i. §30 In which case a salary to the sequestree for his trouble is either ex...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Wolfgang Burandt
From 1992 to 1997 he foremost worked as liquidator, sequestrator, consultant and assignee in bankruptcy.
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aproneer
† aproˈneer Obs. [f. as prec. + -eer1.] One who wears an apron; a shopman or mechanic. (Used contemptuously of the Parliamentary party during the Civil Wars: cf. apron n. 2 b.)1659 Gauden Tears of Ch. 238 (D.) Some prating Sequestrator, or some surly Aproneer. 1690 D'Urfey Collin's Walk iii. (D.) Ev...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Thomas Fell
In the following year (1642), he was appointed a parliamentary sequestrator for Lancashire.
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Robert Hunt (Parliamentarian)
He was disabled from sitting in 1644 when the local sequestrator claimed that he had attended the King's Parliament.
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sequestration
sequestration (siːkwɛˈstreɪʃən) Forms: 4–5 sequestracoun, 5 sequestracyo(u)n, 5–6 sequestracion, 6 sequestratioun, 6– sequestration. [ad. late L. sequestrātiōn-em, f. L. sequestrāre: see sequester v. Cf. OF. sequestration, Sp. secuestracion, Pg. sequestra{cced}ão, It. sequestrazione.] 1. a. An act o...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Walter Blith
During the English Civil War he became a captain in the parliamentary army and also solicitor and sequestrator of royalist land in Warwickshire and Coventry
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John Oxenbridge (priest)
He was appointed:
Prebendary of Hampstead in Chichester Cathedral 1499
Commissary and Sequestrator-General for the Bishop of Chichester in the Archdeaconry
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John Williams (Wales MP)
same John Williams as one of the County Committee for Radnorshire in August 1649, and as Captain John Williams of Bromyard who was appointed Agent and Sequestrator
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Shaffer v. Heitner
It is accomplished by the appointment of a sequestrator by this Court to seize and hold property of the nonresident located in this State subject to further
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Naesmyth baronets
The name "Naesmyth of Posso" was taken as a surname by an Anglican clergyman, George Cresswell Naesmyth Webb (1895-fl.1977), who served as Sequestrator
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