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MARSHALSEA

  • Marshalsea
  • Former prison in Southwark, London

    The Marshalsea (1373–1842) was a notorious prison in Southwark, just south of the River Thames. Although it housed a variety of prisoners—including men

    Marshalsea

    Marshalsea

    Marshalsea

  • The Marshalsea, Dublin
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    The Marshalsea, Dublin may refer to the following defunct prisons in Dublin, Ireland: City Marshalsea, Dublin Four Courts Marshalsea Marshalsea of Manor

    The Marshalsea, Dublin

    The_Marshalsea,_Dublin

  • Marshalsea Court
  • English court

    The Marshalsea Court (or Court of the Marshalsea, also known as the Court of the Verge or the Court of the Marshal and Steward) was a court associated

    Marshalsea Court

    Marshalsea Court

    Marshalsea_Court

  • Marshalsea Road
  • Street in the London Borough of Southwark

    Marshalsea Road (classified A3201) is a major street in Southwark, south London, England. At the northwest end is the Southwark Bridge Road. At the southeast

    Marshalsea Road

    Marshalsea Road

    Marshalsea_Road

  • Little Dorrit
  • 1855–1857 novel by Charles Dickens

    features Amy Dorrit, youngest child of her family, born and raised in the Marshalsea prison for debtors in London. Arthur Clennam encounters her after returning

    Little Dorrit

    Little Dorrit

    Little_Dorrit

  • Little Dorrit (TV series)
  • 2008 British miniseries

    Outstanding Miniseries. Since her birth in 1805, Amy Dorrit has lived in the Marshalsea Prison for Debt for twenty-one years, caring for her father, William,

    Little Dorrit (TV series)

    Little_Dorrit_(TV_series)

  • Four Courts Marshalsea
  • Former prison in Dublin, Ireland

    The Four Courts Marshalsea was a prison in Dublin, Ireland until 1874. The keeper of the prison was the Marshal of the Four Courts, a role filled after

    Four Courts Marshalsea

    Four Courts Marshalsea

    Four_Courts_Marshalsea

  • Antonia Hodgson
  • British writer and publisher

    novel, A Devil in the Marshalsea, was set in the time of the early Georgians, William Hogarth and the Southwark prison the Marshalsea. Hodgson believes that

    Antonia Hodgson

    Antonia Hodgson

    Antonia_Hodgson

  • William Brandon (died 1491)
  • English soldier and courtier

    of the Royal Household, in 1479 he was appointed Knight Marshal of the Marshalsea Court, an office for life which passed to his son Thomas in 1491. In July

    William Brandon (died 1491)

    William Brandon (died 1491)

    William_Brandon_(died_1491)

  • Calendar (New Style) Act 1750
  • British statute adopting the Gregorian calendar

    clause to an otherwise irrelevant act, the Cattle Distemper, Vagrancy, Marshalsea Prison, etc. Act 1753 (26 Geo. 2. c. 34), to move its statutory date forward

    Calendar (New Style) Act 1750

    Calendar (New Style) Act 1750

    Calendar_(New_Style)_Act_1750

  • City Marshalsea, Dublin
  • Former debtor's prison, Dublin, Ireland

    The City Marshalsea was a debtor's prison in Dublin, Ireland. Debtors were imprisoned there by order of the Court of Conscience and Lord Mayor's Court

    City Marshalsea, Dublin

    City_Marshalsea,_Dublin

  • Lant Street
  • Street in Southwark, London

    Lant Street is a street south of Marshalsea Road in Southwark, south London, England. At the northwest end is the Southwark Bridge Road and at the southeast

    Lant Street

    Lant Street

    Lant_Street

  • Nicholas Owen (Jesuit)
  • English Catholic martyr

    for hiding priests all through England". After being committed to the Marshalsea, a prison on the southern bank of the Thames, Owen was then removed to

    Nicholas Owen (Jesuit)

    Nicholas Owen (Jesuit)

    Nicholas_Owen_(Jesuit)

  • Yeoman
  • Social class in late medieval/early modern England

    discharged ... of the Court of Marshalsea, and all his clerks and yeomen." The writer was referring to the transfer of the Marshalsea Court from the royal household

    Yeoman

    Yeoman

    Yeoman

  • Elizabeth Dickens
  • Mother of Charles Dickens

    were 6s a week. On 20 February 1824 John Dickens was imprisoned in the Marshalsea Prison for debt, with Elizabeth Dickens and their four youngest children

    Elizabeth Dickens

    Elizabeth Dickens

    Elizabeth_Dickens

  • Mayview State Hospital
  • Hospital in Pennsylvania, United States

    Mayview State Hospital was a psychiatric hospital, originally known as Marshalsea Poor Farm, located in South Fayette Township near Bridgeville, Pennsylvania

    Mayview State Hospital

    Mayview State Hospital

    Mayview_State_Hospital

  • Lord Steward
  • Official of the British Royal Household

    Steward of the Marshalsea; by the 19th century the latter had come to be, in practice, the only sitting judge of the court. The Marshalsea and Palace Courts

    Lord Steward

    Lord Steward

    Lord_Steward

  • Coroner of the Queen's Household
  • Former office in Royal Household of the UK

    own coroner, called the coroner of the king's household, coroner of the Marshalsea, or coroner of the verge ..." There was a mention of the role in Law French

    Coroner of the Queen's Household

    Coroner_of_the_Queen's_Household

  • John Howard (prison reformer)
  • English prison reformer and philanthropist (1726–1790)

    Marshalsea South view of the north range of the Marshalsea in 1773: the original prison ('now called the common side') is on the far left, the Marshalsea

    John Howard (prison reformer)

    John Howard (prison reformer)

    John_Howard_(prison_reformer)

  • Little Dorrit's Playground
  • Playground in London, England

    Dickens character, is a public playground and small park just north of Marshalsea Road in Southwark, south London, England. The site was previously called

    Little Dorrit's Playground

    Little Dorrit's Playground

    Little_Dorrit's_Playground

  • St George the Martyr, Southwark
  • Church in London Borough of Southwark, England

    of Southwark, on Borough High Street at the junction with Long Lane, Marshalsea Road, and Tabard Street. St George the Martyr is named after Saint George

    St George the Martyr, Southwark

    St George the Martyr, Southwark

    St_George_the_Martyr,_Southwark

  • Debt relief
  • Partial or total forgiveness of debt

    The sick men's ward at Marshalsea debtors' prison

    Debt relief

    Debt_relief

  • John Gerard (Jesuit)
  • English Jesuit priest

    having still not attended Anglican services, he was remanded to the Marshalsea prison. He spent a little over a year there in company with William Hartley

    John Gerard (Jesuit)

    John_Gerard_(Jesuit)

  • John Dickens
  • Father of Charles Dickens, clerk in the Royal Navy Pay Office

    his creditors, on 20 February 1824 John Dickens was imprisoned in the Marshalsea Debtors' Prison under the Insolvent Debtors (England) Act 1813 (53 Geo

    John Dickens

    John Dickens

    John_Dickens

  • Borough tube station
  • London Underground station

    entrance is in Borough High Street (part of the A3), on the corner of Marshalsea Road. The A2 terminates opposite it. The station was opened on 18 December

    Borough tube station

    Borough tube station

    Borough_tube_station

  • Knight Marshal
  • Office in the British Royal Household, 1236–1846

    were responsible for maintaining order within the King's Court (Court of Marshalsea or Palace Court) which was abolished in 1849. According to The Present

    Knight Marshal

    Knight Marshal

    Knight_Marshal

  • Charles Dickens
  • English writer and journalist (1812–1870)

    living beyond his means, John Dickens was forced by his creditors into the Marshalsea debtors' prison in Southwark, London in 1824. His wife and youngest children

    Charles Dickens

    Charles Dickens

    Charles_Dickens

  • Richard Cox (bishop)
  • Bishop of Ely

    Mary's accession, and was for a fortnight in August 1553 confined to the Marshalsea. He remained in obscurity until after the failure of Wyatt's rebellion

    Richard Cox (bishop)

    Richard Cox (bishop)

    Richard_Cox_(bishop)

  • Thomas Malory
  • 15th-century English writer

    others; there were numerous charges. Malory was convicted and sent to the Marshalsea Prison in London, where he remained for a year. He demanded a retrial

    Thomas Malory

    Thomas_Malory

  • John Price (executioner)
  • prison, but eventually his financial problems led to his imprisonment in Marshalsea, in Southwark, London. After a few months of incarceration, Price and

    John Price (executioner)

    John_Price_(executioner)

  • Edmund Bonner
  • English Catholic bishop (1500–1569)

    ecclesiastical court over which Cranmer presided, and sent as a prisoner to the Marshalsea. The fall of Somerset in the following month raised Bonner's hopes, and

    Edmund Bonner

    Edmund Bonner

    Edmund_Bonner

  • Great Scotland Yard
  • Street in the St. James's district of Westminster, London

    originally named the Marshalsea Court House. There were also numerous private residences until 1910. On the right-hand side of the Marshalsea Court House were

    Great Scotland Yard

    Great Scotland Yard

    Great_Scotland_Yard

  • Nathaniel Vincent
  • English nonconformist minister (c. 1639–1697)

    Covert from the Storm was published in 1671 after his confinement in the Marshalsea and the Gatehouse, Westminster. Vincent was probably born in Cornwall

    Nathaniel Vincent

    Nathaniel Vincent

    Nathaniel_Vincent

  • Peasants' Revolt
  • 1381 uprising in England

    legal system in the capital, in particular the increased role of the Marshalsea Court in Southwark, which had begun to compete with the city authorities

    Peasants' Revolt

    Peasants' Revolt

    Peasants'_Revolt

  • Debtors' prison
  • Prison for people unable to repay a debt

    English author Charles Dickens was sent to one of these prisons (the Marshalsea), which were often described in Dickens's novels. He became an advocate

    Debtors' prison

    Debtors' prison

    Debtors'_prison

  • George Cusack
  • 17th-century Irish pirate

    and sailor on several ships but his attempts at mutiny landed him in Marshalsea prison for a time. On his release in 1668 he traveled to Cádiz and signed

    George Cusack

    George_Cusack

  • Regency era
  • Era of British history, c. 1795 to 1837

    London London Docks London Institution London Post Office Lyme Regis Marshalsea, closed in 1811, new site opened in 1811 where White Lion Prison had been

    Regency era

    Regency era

    Regency_era

  • Jack Ketch
  • English executioner (died 1686)

    Destiny's Hard Fortune, that the hangman was confined for a time in the Marshalsea prison, "whereby his hopeful harvest was like to have been blasted." A

    Jack Ketch

    Jack Ketch

    Jack_Ketch

  • Herbert Parsons Patterson
  • American banker (1925–1985)

    and left the bank. After Chase, he served as a financial consultant to Marshalsea Associates and then as president of the Stonover Company, a financial

    Herbert Parsons Patterson

    Herbert_Parsons_Patterson

  • Richard Woodman (martyr)
  • English Protestant martyr

    bishop's "coalhouse" where he was again examined before being sent to the Marshalsea prison. John Christopherson who was to be the next Bishop of Chichester

    Richard Woodman (martyr)

    Richard Woodman (martyr)

    Richard_Woodman_(martyr)

  • Liberty of the Mint
  • Area where coins were produced in London, England

    London, England, on the west side of Borough High Street, around where Marshalsea Road is now located. It was so named because a mint authorised by King

    Liberty of the Mint

    Liberty of the Mint

    Liberty_of_the_Mint

  • St Scholastica Day riot
  • 1355 riot in Oxford, England

    town was fined 500 marks and its mayor and bailiffs were sent to the Marshalsea prison in London. John Gynwell, the Bishop of Lincoln, imposed an interdict

    St Scholastica Day riot

    St Scholastica Day riot

    St_Scholastica_Day_riot

  • Execution Dock
  • Site of executions in Wapping, London

    Those sentenced to death were usually brought to Execution Dock from Marshalsea Prison (although some were also transported from Newgate Prison). The

    Execution Dock

    Execution Dock

    Execution_Dock

  • List of prisons in the United Kingdom
  • until 1878, now open to the public as a historical visitor attraction Marshalsea Southwark London Historic Millbank Westminster London Historic Newgate

    List of prisons in the United Kingdom

    List_of_prisons_in_the_United_Kingdom

  • Minerva F.C.
  • Football club

    E. L. (1907). Amateur Football Association Annual. Borough, London: Marshalsea Press. p. 104. "Football". Lloyd's Weekly: 20. 29 March 1896. "Association

    Minerva F.C.

    Minerva F.C.

    Minerva_F.C.

  • Charlotte Hayes
  • British brothel keeper

    several occasions. Fergus Linnane writes that Hayes was committed to the Marshalsea prison in 1776 for refusing to pay £50 to a bankrupt lacemaker. During

    Charlotte Hayes

    Charlotte_Hayes

  • Police impersonation
  • Impersonation of a law enforcement officer

    In 17th and 18th-century London, impostors presented to be constables, Marshalsea, or sheriffs' officers to extort bribes or commit sex crimes. Between

    Police impersonation

    Police_impersonation

  • Francis Marbury
  • Anglican minister and school teacher in the 16c

    Aylmer called Marbury an ass, an idiot and a fool, and sentenced him to Marshalsea prison for his impudence. After two years in prison Marbury was considered

    Francis Marbury

    Francis_Marbury

  • List of acts of the Parliament of Great Britain from 1754
  • re-vesting in the Crown the Power of appointing the Marshal of Marshal of The Marshalsea of the Court of King's Bench, and for the better Regulation of that Office

    List of acts of the Parliament of Great Britain from 1754

    List_of_acts_of_the_Parliament_of_Great_Britain_from_1754

  • Oaten Hill Martyrs
  • English Roman Catholic martyrs

    near to where he entered the country. As a captive, he was sent to the Marshalsea prison where he was examined on 15 August 1588. Here he admitted he was

    Oaten Hill Martyrs

    Oaten Hill Martyrs

    Oaten_Hill_Martyrs

  • John Selden
  • English jurist (1584–1654)

    materials. He was then removed, under less rigorous conditions, to the Marshalsea, until Archbishop Laud arranged for him to be freed. Some years before

    John Selden

    John Selden

    John_Selden

  • Spanish ship Salvador del Mundo
  • First rate ship of the line

    sailor was convicted and sentenced to 500 lashes and a two-year term in Marshalsea prison. At the conclusion of the wars, Salvador del Mundo was decommissioned

    Spanish ship Salvador del Mundo

    Spanish ship Salvador del Mundo

    Spanish_ship_Salvador_del_Mundo

  • Medieval household
  • vital responsibility for the stables and horses of the household (the "marshalsea"), and was also in charge of discipline. The marshal, and other higher-ranking

    Medieval household

    Medieval household

    Medieval_household

  • Dickens's London
  • Locations in works by Charles Dickens

    Charles Dickens's father was incarcerated in the debtors' prison of Marshalsea in Southwark, along with his wife and all their children except for Dickens

    Dickens's London

    Dickens's London

    Dickens's_London

  • John Adams (Catholic martyr)
  • English Catholic priest and martyr, born 1543

    " Captured at Winchester, he was brought to London and arrived at the Marshalsea prison on 7 March 1584. His sentence this time was banishment and he was

    John Adams (Catholic martyr)

    John_Adams_(Catholic_martyr)

  • William Exmew
  • English Roman Catholic priest and martyr

    the community, Sebastian Newdigate, were arrested and thrown into the Marshalsea, where they were made to stand in chains, bound to posts, and were left

    William Exmew

    William Exmew

    William_Exmew

  • Dominic Serres
  • French-born British painter (1722–1793)

    was taken prisoner to England, in 1752. During his imprisonment in the Marshalsea prison he took up painting, and after his release he lived for a time

    Dominic Serres

    Dominic Serres

    Dominic_Serres

  • Little Dorrit (1987 film)
  • 1987 British film

    the problems of his mother's seamstress and those of her father in the Marshalsea debtors' prison. This was the first screen adaptation of one of Dickens's

    Little Dorrit (1987 film)

    Little_Dorrit_(1987_film)

  • Edmund Campion
  • 16th-century English Jesuit priest, martyr and saint

    London's prisons. Among the latter was Thomas Pounde in the Marshalsea. A meeting was held in Marshalsea to discuss possible means of counteracting rumours circulated

    Edmund Campion

    Edmund Campion

    Edmund_Campion

  • St Mary's Church, Ilkeston
  • Church in Ilkeston, England

    Wylchar being pardoned in October 1402, after handing himself in at the Marshalsea Prison. The manor of Ilkeston was granted Henry VII to John Savage (soldier)

    St Mary's Church, Ilkeston

    St Mary's Church, Ilkeston

    St_Mary's_Church,_Ilkeston

  • James Bosgrave
  • English Jesuit

    taken before the privy council, and was subsequently committed to the Marshalsea prison and cruelly tortured there. Afterwards he was removed to the Tower

    James Bosgrave

    James_Bosgrave

  • Fleet Prison
  • 12th-century prison in London

    It usually contained about 300 prisoners and their families. Like the Marshalsea prison, it was divided into a restrictive and arduous common side and

    Fleet Prison

    Fleet Prison

    Fleet_Prison

  • Wood Street Compter
  • Prison within the City of London in England

    the compters, debtors were held in prisons in Southwark, including the Marshalsea and King's Bench Prisons, Borough Compter and Horsemonger Lane Gaol. Some

    Wood Street Compter

    Wood Street Compter

    Wood_Street_Compter

  • Adam Damlip
  • English Protestant martyr

    began to preach in Calais, but attracted enemies and was committed to Marshalsea Prison, London, where he met the Protestant John Marbeck. He was later

    Adam Damlip

    Adam_Damlip

  • John Eliot (statesman)
  • English statesman (1592–1632)

    Vice-Admiral, upon charges which could not be substantiated, was flung into the Marshalsea prison, and detained there nearly four months. A few weeks after his release

    John Eliot (statesman)

    John Eliot (statesman)

    John_Eliot_(statesman)

  • Ealing Association F.C.
  • Football club

    1909–10 Holland, E.A. (1907). Amateur Football Association Annual. London: Marshalsea Press. p. 42. "Not wanted by the league they formed". Middlesex County

    Ealing Association F.C.

    Ealing_Association_F.C.

  • Nicholas Udall
  • English playwright, cleric and schoolmaster (1504–1556)

    commuted to imprisonment for just under a year, which he served in the Marshalsea. The boys in question were not prosecuted. A former pupil, the poet Thomas

    Nicholas Udall

    Nicholas_Udall

  • Murrain
  • Umbrella term for deadly disease, especially of livestock

    Act 1754 Distemper Amongst Cattle Act 1755 Cattle Distemper, Vagrancy, Marshalsea Prison, etc. Act 1753 Distemper Amongst Cattle Act 1757 Repealed by Statute

    Murrain

    Murrain

  • Brian O'Connor Faly
  • Irish noble

    O'Connor Faly and O'More were brought to England and imprisoned in the Marshalsea, a London prison. O'More died during imprisonment in late 1548. O'Connor

    Brian O'Connor Faly

    Brian_O'Connor_Faly

  • List of songs about London
  • Buck Owens "A Holloway Person" by The Cleaners from Venus "A Limpet In Marshalsea" by Tim Hodgkinson "A London, Allons Donc" by Petula Clark "A Maiden Came

    List of songs about London

    List_of_songs_about_London

  • Timeline of London
  • Taylors' Company and the Skinners' Company are incorporated. c. 1329 – Marshalsea prison is in operation in Southwark. 1331 – The Butchers' Guild is granted

    Timeline of London

    Timeline_of_London

  • HM Prison Service
  • Government service managing most of the prisons within England and Wales

    publicise the dire state of prisons as did Charles Dickens about the Marshalsea in his novels David Copperfield and Little Dorrit. Samuel Romilly managed

    HM Prison Service

    HM Prison Service

    HM_Prison_Service

  • Thomas Charles Morgan
  • Lowndes Square, London. In England, he was appointed physician to the Marshalsea prison. He married a Miss Hammond but she died in childbirth in 1810.

    Thomas Charles Morgan

    Thomas Charles Morgan

    Thomas_Charles_Morgan

  • Robert Poley
  • English spy of the 16th century

    the only result of which seems to have been his imprisonment in the Marshalsea on Walsingham's orders until May the next year. During this imprisonment

    Robert Poley

    Robert_Poley

  • Green Street Courthouse
  • Courthouse in Dublin, Ireland

    (completed 1781), the Sheriff's Prison (completed 1794), and the City Marshalsea (completed 1804) — and the Governor of Newgate's residence. The Newgate

    Green Street Courthouse

    Green Street Courthouse

    Green_Street_Courthouse

  • St Veep
  • Civil parish in Cornwall, England

    Peran and St Columb. Kranich was arrested for his debts and held in the Marshalsea in London. He is credited with curing Queen Elizabeth I of smallpox. There

    St Veep

    St Veep

    St_Veep

  • John Jones (martyr)
  • Welsh Franciscan friar and Catholic martyr (c. 1530 – 1598)

    Reformation. He was ordained a diocesan priest and was imprisoned in the Marshalsea under the name Robert Buckley from 1582 to about 1585 for administering

    John Jones (martyr)

    John Jones (martyr)

    John_Jones_(martyr)

  • William Brandon (standard-bearer)
  • English knight (1456–1485)

    of Wangford, Suffolk, and of Soham, Cambridgeshire, Knight Marshal of Marshalsea (1425 – 4 March 1491) and wife (married 1462) Elizabeth Wingfield (died

    William Brandon (standard-bearer)

    William Brandon (standard-bearer)

    William_Brandon_(standard-bearer)

  • Jurisdiction in Liberties Act 1535
  • Act of the Parliament of England

    27 Vict. c. 125) 10 12 When the king is in a liberty, only his Verge (Marshalsea Court) and his Clerk of the Market shall act... Statute Law Revision Act

    Jurisdiction in Liberties Act 1535

    Jurisdiction in Liberties Act 1535

    Jurisdiction_in_Liberties_Act_1535

  • Statute Law Revision Act 1878
  • Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom

    Courts Marshalsea (Ireland) Act 1842 An Act for consolidating the Four Courts Marshalsea, Dublin Marshalsea, Sheriffs Prison, Dublin, and City Marshalsea, Dublin

    Statute Law Revision Act 1878

    Statute Law Revision Act 1878

    Statute_Law_Revision_Act_1878

  • Anthony Browne, 1st Viscount Montagu
  • English peer

    recording that one of Southampton's servants had been committed to the Marshalsea on 23 February 1580 'for certain misdemeanours by him used against Mr

    Anthony Browne, 1st Viscount Montagu

    Anthony Browne, 1st Viscount Montagu

    Anthony_Browne,_1st_Viscount_Montagu

  • John Baptist Grano
  • British composer

    best known for having been imprisoned for a debt of £99 in the notorious Marshalsea prison in Southwark from May 1728 until September 1729. He kept a diary

    John Baptist Grano

    John_Baptist_Grano

  • Giolla Pádraig O'More (died 1548)
  • Irish noble (died 1548)

    Caoch O'More. He was later captured by English forces and died in the Marshalsea, a London prison. Giolla Pádraig O'More was born in Ireland to father

    Giolla Pádraig O'More (died 1548)

    Giolla_Pádraig_O'More_(died_1548)

  • George Godsalf
  • English Catholic convert (died 1592)

    but spent several years in prison, after which he was released from the Marshalsea in September 1585 and banished, dying in Paris in 1592.  One or more of

    George Godsalf

    George_Godsalf

  • Edward Powell (martyr)
  • Welsh Roman Catholic monk and martyr (c.1478 – 1540)

    benefices, and imprisoned in the Tower of London. His keeper was sent to the Marshalsea Prison for allowing Powell and Thomas Abel out on bail. The sentence was

    Edward Powell (martyr)

    Edward_Powell_(martyr)

  • Nicholas Grimald
  • 16th-century English poet and dramatist (1519–1562)

    of London, brought him under suspicion, and he was imprisoned in the Marshalsea. It is said that he escaped the penalties of heresy by recanting his errors

    Nicholas Grimald

    Nicholas_Grimald

  • A Christmas Carol
  • 1843 novella by Charles Dickens

    spendthrift nature of his father John. In 1824 John was committed to the Marshalsea, a debtors' prison in Southwark, London. Dickens, aged 12, was forced

    A Christmas Carol

    A Christmas Carol

    A_Christmas_Carol

  • Roger Tocotes
  • 15th-century English retainer

    the danger of his arrest by the Duke—Tocotes surrendered himself to the Marshalsea Prison; he was later acquitted of complicity in the death of the Duchess

    Roger Tocotes

    Roger_Tocotes

  • Verge
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    a secure and anonymous cryptocurrency Verge, the jurisdiction of the Marshalsea Court Verge or virge, a ceremonial rod Road verge, a strip of grass or

    Verge

    Verge

  • William Acton
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    (1570–1651), English merchant and Royalist William Acton, warden of the Marshalsea prison, London, in the 1720s William Acton (ice hockey) (born 1987), Canadian

    William Acton

    William_Acton

  • Archibald Campbell, 7th Earl of Argyll
  • Scottish politician and military leader

    a pocket pistol in April 1617. The Earl of Argyll bailed her from the Marshalsea Prison. In 1618 Archibald Campbell converted to Roman Catholicism, the

    Archibald Campbell, 7th Earl of Argyll

    Archibald Campbell, 7th Earl of Argyll

    Archibald_Campbell,_7th_Earl_of_Argyll

  • Board of Green Cloth
  • English court

    dealt with by other courts connected with the Lord Steward such as the Marshalsea Court). In the early modern period the Board routinely met twice a week

    Board of Green Cloth

    Board_of_Green_Cloth

  • The Tholsel, Dublin
  • Historic public building in Dublin, Ireland

    1805 was proposed for further upriver alongside a new marshalsea to replace the City Marshalsea. The building was later used as a courthouse. At that

    The Tholsel, Dublin

    The Tholsel, Dublin

    The_Tholsel,_Dublin

  • George Wither
  • English poet, pamphleteer, satirist and writer

    he was arrested for libel "on or about 20 March 1614" and held in the Marshalsea prison for four months before being released. In A Satyre: Dedicated to

    George Wither

    George Wither

    George_Wither

  • Elizabeth Bathurst
  • 17th-century English Quaker writer

    undertook several preaching tours, and was imprisoned at least once in the Marshalsea prison. Bathurst was recognised during her lifetime by the Quaker community

    Elizabeth Bathurst

    Elizabeth_Bathurst

  • Robert Wingfield (politician, died 1454)
  • English politician

    December 1447 he was named as a rioter in Suffolk and was imprisoned in the Marshalsea, but was pardoned in February 1448. In September of that year he complained

    Robert Wingfield (politician, died 1454)

    Robert Wingfield (politician, died 1454)

    Robert_Wingfield_(politician,_died_1454)

  • 1842
  • Calendar year

    hurricane. November 10 & 19 – London debtor's prisons the Fleet Prison and Marshalsea are closed and inmates transferred to Queen's Bench Prison. Pentonville

    1842

    1842

    1842

  • Hannah Glasse
  • English cookery writer (1708–1770)

    her financial troubles continued and she was imprisoned as a debtor at Marshalsea gaol in June that year before being transferred to Fleet Prison a month

    Hannah Glasse

    Hannah Glasse

    Hannah_Glasse

  • James Barry (surgeon)
  • 19th-century military surgeon in the British Army

    the financial support of either Jeremiah (whose debts left him in the Marshalsea debtors' prison in Dublin) or the Bulkleys' first son John. In 1803, a

    James Barry (surgeon)

    James Barry (surgeon)

    James_Barry_(surgeon)

  • Florence MacCarthy
  • Irish prince

    with English or rival Irish forces. In 1604 he was transferred to the Marshalsea for his health, but sent back to the Tower, with the privilege of access

    Florence MacCarthy

    Florence_MacCarthy

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Online names & meanings

  • Al-Hayy
  • Boy/Male

    Indian

    Al-Hayy

    The ever-living

  • Shivanchal
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu, Indian

    Shivanchal

    Shelter of Lord Shiva

  • Hoc
  • Boy/Male

    Australian, British, English, Vietnamese

    Hoc

    To Study

  • Ritty
  • Girl/Female

    British, English, Indian

    Ritty

    Most Loving One

  • Larena
  • Girl/Female

    American, Australian, British, English, Latin, Scottish

    Larena

    From Lorraine; The Queen; Serves Lawrence

  • Sachjog
  • Boy/Male

    Sikh

    Sachjog

    Absorbed in the true one

  • Gabriele
  • Girl/Female

    Australian, Danish, French, German, Hebrew, Swiss

    Gabriele

    God's Able-bodied One; Female Version of Gabriel

  • Premlata
  • Girl/Female

    Hindu, Indian, Marathi, Sanskrit

    Premlata

    Garland of Love; Type of Plant

  • Hashim
  • Boy/Male

    Afghan, African, Arabic, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Muslim, Sindhi, Swahili

    Hashim

    Magnificent; Destroys Evil; Force for Good; Generous; Great Grandfather of the Prophet; Honour

  • Mah-Rukh
  • Girl/Female

    Arabic, Muslim

    Mah-Rukh

    Face as Bright as the Moon

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Other words and meanings similar to

MARSHALSEA

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MARSHALSEA

  • Verge
  • n.

    The compass of the court of Marshalsea and the Palace court, within which the lord steward and the marshal of the king's household had special jurisdiction; -- so called from the verge, or staff, which the marshal bore.

  • Marshalsea
  • n.

    The court or seat of a marshal; hence, the prison in Southwark, belonging to the marshal of the king's household.