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John Scudamore, 1st Viscount Scudamore

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style. He also did work on other churches, and endowed some with impropriate tithes. Scudamore succeeded his grandfather in the family estate in 1623. He was one of the Council of the Marches on 25 August 1623. In 1624, he was re-elected MP for Herefordshire. He was created
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was limited. He was one of the "Nine Worthies" – nine justices who formed the royalist leadership in Herefordshire in the summer of 1642. The other "worthies" were Sir William Croft, Wallop Brabazon, Thomas Wigmore of Shobden, Thomas Price of Wisterdon,
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Notitia parliamentaria, or, An history of the counties, cities, and boroughs in England and Wales: ... The whole extracted from mss. and printed evidences
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who was staunchly Protestant was appointed as extraordinary ambassador over his head, with the result that they two could not agree on policy.
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in 1617. From November 1618, he travelled in France, and returned the following year after the death of his father. His grandfather
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force in 1643. Scudamore was sent to London as a delinquent and remained there under house arrest until 1647. After the
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Scudamore was not particularly active on his return to England and his early participation in the
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and sat until 1629, when King Charles decided to rule without parliament for eleven years.
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In 1615, Scudamore married Elizabeth Porter, daughter of Sir Arthur Porter of
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in the peerage of Ireland on 1 July 1628. Also in 1628, he was elected MP for
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Ian Atherton, 'Scudamore, John, first Viscount Scudamore (1601–1671)’,
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for him on 1 June 1620, giving him precedence locally three years.
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Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press
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at various times between 1621 and 1629. In 1628 he was created
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In 1621, Scudamore was elected Member of Parliament for
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Ian Atherton Ambition and failure in Stuart England
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Index


House of Commons
Viscount Scudamore
Irish peerage
Sir James Scudamore
Holme Lacy
Magdalen College, Oxford
Middle Temple
Sir John Scudamore
baronetcy
Barnabas Scudamore
Civil War
successful defence of Hereford
Herefordshire
Justice of the Peace
William Laud
the church
Abbey Dore
Cistercian
abbey
dissolution
Laudian
Hereford
ambassador to France
Earl of Leicester
English Civil War
William Smallman
Henry Lingen
Fitzwilliam Coningsby
Hereford

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