. The Inner Temple: its early history, as illustrated by its records, 1505-1603. scharged of his reading at this nextvacation, and the said Mr. Barker, being puisne of the said Serjeants,shall read for the vacation following. Attendants on the reader :—Hugh Hare and John Helc. Whereas at the petition of Mr. Henry Duport, of the bar, it wasordered on 27 June, 1585, that no person thereafter should, duringhis life, be admitted to the chambers built by Mr. Robert Wodlef inthe Great Garden, wherein he then stood admitted, without his con- 454 A CALENDAR OF THE INNER TEMPLE RECORDS. [1602-3 sent, a


. The Inner Temple: its early history, as illustrated by its records, 1505-1603. scharged of his reading at this nextvacation, and the said Mr. Barker, being puisne of the said Serjeants,shall read for the vacation following. Attendants on the reader :—Hugh Hare and John Helc. Whereas at the petition of Mr. Henry Duport, of the bar, it wasordered on 27 June, 1585, that no person thereafter should, duringhis life, be admitted to the chambers built by Mr. Robert Wodlef inthe Great Garden, wherein he then stood admitted, without his con- 454 A CALENDAR OF THE INNER TEMPLE RECORDS. [1602-3 sent, and on 26 November, 1587, it was further ordered that thesaid chambers should be benchers chambers ; after which, ThomasDuport, gent., then a fellow, son of the said Henry, by consent of thesaid Henry, was admitted to the same chambers. Now, upon petitionof the said Henry, it is ordered that the admittance of the saidThomas shall stand good during his life, and after the deaths ofthe aforesaid Henry and Thomas, the said chambers shall remainto the House as benchers TC^J- f^.l8^6 APPENDIX No. I


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidinnertemplei, bookyear1896