Online Encyclopedia

ZOUCHE, or ZOUCH

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 1045 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ZOUCHE, or ZOUCH  , the name of an
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English
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family descended from Alan la Zouche, a Breton, who is sometimes called Alan de Porrhoet . Having settled in England during the reign of Henry II., Alan obtained by
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marriage Ashby in Leicestershire (called after him Ashby de la Zouch) and other lands . His grandson, another Alan la Zouche, was justice of Chester and justice of Ireland under Henry III.; he was loyal to the king during the struggle with the barons, fought at Lewes and helped to arrange the peace of
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Kenilworth . As the result of a
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quarrel over some lands with John,
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Earl Warenne, he was seriously injured in Westminster Hall by the earl and his retainers, and died on the loth of August 1270 . Alan's elder son Roger (d . 1285) had a son Alan la Zouche, who was summoned to parliament as a baron about 1298 . He died without sons, and this
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barony fell into abeyance between his daughters and has never been revived . The elder Alan's younger son, Eades or Ivo, had a son William (c . 1276—1352), who was summoned to parliament as a baron in 1308, and this barony, which is still in existence, is known as that of Zouche of Haryngworth . John, 7th baron Zouche of Haryngworth (c . 1460-1526), was attainted in 1485 as a supporter of Richard III., but was restored to his honours in 1495 . His descendant,
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Edward, the lath baron (c .

1556—1625), was one of the peers who tried

Mary, queen of Scots, and was sent by Elizabeth as ambassador to Scotland and to Denmark . He was president of Wales from 16os to 1615 and lord
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warden of the Cinque Ports from 1615 to 1624 . He was a member of the council of the Virginia
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Company and of the New England council . He had many
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literary friends, among them being Ben
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Jonson and
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Sir Henry Wotton . Zouche
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left no soles, and ?he barony remained in abeyance among the descendants of his two daughters until 1815, when the abeyance was terminated in favour of Sir
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Cecil Bisshopp, Bart . (1753—1828), who became the 12th baron . He died without sons, a second abeyance being terminated in 1829 in favour of his daughter Harriet Anne (1787—1870), wife of the Hon . Robert Curzon (1771—1863) . In 1873 her grandson, Robert Nathaniel Curzon (b . 1851), became the 15th baron . Two antiquaries, Henry Zouch (c . 1725–17955) and his
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brother .

Thomas Zouch (1737–1815), claimed descent from the family of Zouche . Both were voluminous writers, Thomas's
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works including a
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Life of Izaak Walton (1823) and
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Memoirs of Sir Philip Sidney (18o8) .

End of Article: ZOUCHE, or ZOUCH
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Additional information and Comments

I was interested in looking up the place name on a whimsical Fall day here in North Carolina. A few weeks ago, for some strange reason, the name of a song that was popular during WW2 kept running through my mind. It was doing so because I had seen the name of Ashby del la Zouche in a newspaper article; until I read it, I had no idea just what the phrase meant. The song had a line in it that went, as far as I can remember: "Ashby del la Zouche Castel Abbey" and had remained in a hidden recess of my mind for over 60 years until the recent trigger was pulled. At any rate, at this point I am far ahead of where I was in recognition of what the phrase meant. I have no clue what the song was about. William H. Glaze Summerfield, North Carolina, USA
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