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7 - Administrative performance: the representation of political authority in early modern England

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 March 2010

Michael J. Braddick
Affiliation:
University of Sheffield
John Walter
Affiliation:
University of Essex
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Summary

At the Easter quarter sessions in Shropshire in 1635 two justices of the peace exchanged words over a grand jury presentment. Timothy Tourneur rebuked the jurymen for being ‘Busie’, that is of using their office to intrude into areas that were not their proper concern. Sir John Corbet came to their defence, calling for the reading of the Petition of Right and accusing Tourneur of being ‘teachie’ or ‘touchie’ when he objected. There was some tartness in the exchange, but the ramifications seem to have been out of all proportion to what was said. Corbet and one other justice were imprisoned prior to an appearance before the Privy Council. On appearance they, and the jurymen, were required to make public apologies. Corbet's refusal to do so resulted in his imprisonment in London throughout the summer, during a plague outbreak. He was subsequently dismissed from the Commission of the Peace, and his release from imprisonment was conditional upon entering a bond to answer a suit in Star Chamber. Some time later, however, Corbet had an opportunity for revenge when he was elected to parliament in 1640. He petitioned the Commons citing a number of grievances relating to the episode and met with a sympathetic reaction which led to the impeachment of the lord lieutenant and all the privy councillors who had signed warrants for his arrest. At that point, Corbet's public disagreement with Tourneur had become a matter of national political importance, and Bridgewater, the lord lieutenant in question, had to take considerable pains to present his defence.

Type
Chapter
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Negotiating Power in Early Modern Society
Order, Hierarchy and Subordination in Britain and Ireland
, pp. 166 - 187
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2001

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