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was employed on a witness
Banister, one of the duke's agents. When the duke, after the confession of the witness had been read, remarked that 'Banister was shrewdly cramped when he told that tale,’ Barham, who had been present at the examination, replied 'No more than you were.' The trial of the duke
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during the prosecution of a malcontent bookbinder, Rowland Jencks, a Roman
Catholic. Jencks had spoken badly of dignities and kept away from church; the university authorities had him arrested and sent to London to undergo examination, and he was returned to Oxford to stand trial. This took place on
153:, he purchased about the same time. Both estates were sold by his son Arthur. The Sussex branch of the family was largely concerned in the business of ironfounding, of which during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries the county was a centre, before it declined there.
133:, baron of the exchequer, the high sheriff and his deputy, Sir William Babington, four justices of the peace, three gentlemen, and most of the jury died; and in the course of the next five weeks more than five hundred others.
194:, devolved upon his flight into Ireland after the murder". None of this is borne out by the 1972 Burke's Landed Gentry pedigree, reflecting much more recent and accurate scholarship/ elimination of "family legend".
145:, and one son, Arthur. He was the owner of two estates, one of which, known as Bigons or Digons, he had acquired by grant from the crown in 1554, the former proprietor having been implicated in the insurrection of
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Note- the article previously included, taken from the
Dictionary of National Biography 1885-1900 vol. 3, details of his family "being a branch of the Barhams of
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in 1542, became an 'ancient' of that society 24 May 1552, Lent reader in 1558, and was made serjeant-at-law in 1567, having previously (1562–3) been returned to
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does not place Barham in the list of queen's serjeants until 1573. He is, however, so designated in papers relating to the trial of
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Burke's Landed Gentry, 18th edition, vol. 3, ed. Hugh
Montgomery-Massingberd, Burke's Peerage Ltd, 1972, pp. 42-43
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In the following
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4 July, when he was sentenced to lose his ears. There was a sudden outbreak of
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Barham was survived by his wife, Mary, daughter of John Holt, of
29:(died 1577) was an English lawyer and Member of Parliament.
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245:. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
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