Volume II : page 330

J. 243
Calthrop. 12 mo. ...............................................7.Jac.1.--15.Jac.1.
1815 Catalogue, page 80. no. 138, as above.
CALTHROP, Sir Henry.
Reports of speciall cases touching severall customs and liberties of the City of London. Collected by Sir H. Calthrop Knight, sometimes recorder of London, after Attorney-General of the Court of Wards, and Liveries. Whereunto is annexed divers ancient customes and usages of the said City of London. Never before in print. London: Printed for Abel Roper, 1655.
Law 179
First Edition. Sm. 8vo. 94 leaves, the second title on K 1.
STC C310.
Sweet & Maxwell I, 275, 12.
Old half binding, many headlines cut into. Initialled by Jefferson at sig. I.
Sir Henry Calthrop, 1586-1637, English lawyer. He became recorder of London in December 1635, and resigned the appointment in January 1636 on being made attorney of the courts of wards and liveries. According to the Dictionary of National Biography the name was spelled Calthorpe.
[2036]
J. 244
Jenkins...........................................................4.H.3.--21.Jac.1.
1815 Catalogue, page 80. no. 235, [ should be “265” as per Trist catalog-- Ed.] as above, fol.
JENKINS, David.
Eight Centuries of Reports: or, eight hundred cases solemnly adjudged in the Exchequer-Chamber, or, upon writs of error. Publish’d originally in French and Latin by Judge Jenkins. Now carefully translated, with the addition of many thousand references: particularly to such Statutes as have altered or amended the Law to this Time. The second edition corrected; to which is added a new table of the principal matters. By a Gentleman of the Middle-Temple. [ London] In the Savoy: Printed by E. and R. Nutt , and R. Gosling , (Assigns of E. Sayer, Esq;) for John Worrall ; and Thomas Worrall, mdccxxxiv . [1734]
Law 89
Folio. 188 leaves collating in twos.
Sweet & Maxwell I, 212, 2.
Clarke, page 362, no. 123.
Middle Temple Library Catalogue, page 470.
Rebound in cowhide. Initialled by Jefferson at sig. I and T.
David Jenkins, 1582-1633, Welsh judge and royalist. His reports, in Latin and French, were written during a term of imprisonment incurred owing to his Royalist sympathies, and originally published in 1661.
The “Gentleman of the Middle-Temple” was Theodore Barlow, whose name appears in the third edition, 1771.
[2037]
J. 245
[Winch. [with Noy. ]........................................19.Jac.1.--22.Jac.1.
1815 Catalogue, page 80. unnumbered, as above.
WINCH, Sir Humphrey.
Reports of that reverend and learned Judge, Sir Humphry Winch Knight; sometimes one of the Judges of the Court of Common Pleas. Containing many choice cases, and excellent matters touching declarations, pleadings, demurrers, judgements, and resolutions in points of law, in the foure last years of the Raign of King James, faithfully translated out of an exact french copie, with two alphabetical,

Volume II : page 330

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