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Furnival's Inn : ウィキペディア英語版
Furnival's Inn

Furnival's Inn was an Inn of Chancery which formerly stood on the site of the present Holborn Bars building (the former Prudential Assurance Company building) in Holborn, London, England.
==History==

Furnival's Inn was founded about 1383 when William de Furnival, 4th Lord Furnival leased a boarding facility to Clerks of Chancery, who prepared writs for the king’s courts, assisted by apprentices who, as such, received a preliminary legal training.
By the 15th century the Inns of Chancery had become preparatory schools for students wishing to be called to the bar by the Inns of Court.〔("Ground plan of Furnivals Inn", British Library )〕 In 1548 it was affiliated to Lincoln's Inn through a long term lease. Sir Thomas More was Reader at the Inn from 1504 to 1507.〔(History of Parliament: Sir Thomas More )〕
By the seventeenth century, the Inns of Chancery began to turn into societies for attorneys and solicitors; they became residences, offices and dining clubs.〔(Parker, David. "Dickens, the Inns of Court, and the Inns of Chancery", ''The Literary London Journal'', March 2010 )〕 The greater part of the old Inn was taken down in Charles I.'s time, and a new building erected in its stead.〔(Cunningham, Peter. ''Hand-Book of London'', 1850 )〕 Although it survived the Great Fire of London, the Inn, together with the other Inns of Chancery, ceased to exist in the 19th century. According to the ''Gentleman's Magazine'' of June 1818, "'Furnival's Inn Cellar' was a place well known to the professional gentlemen, where a good dinner may be had at a reasonable price."〔 ("Elegy written at Furnival's Inn", ''Gentleman's Magazine'', 88, June 1818, 544 )〕 The Inn was dissolved as a society in 1817 when Lincoln's Inn did not renew its lease and the medieval building was demolished in 1818.〔("Charles Dickens, Homes and other associated places", ''Victorian Web'', (George P. Landow, ed.) )〕 The building was rebuilt as apartments by a new owner who retained the old name.
Charles Dickens rented rooms here between December 1834 and throughout the first year of his marriage, until 1837. He began the ''Pickwick Papers'' while a tenant there.〔(Cox, Helen. ''Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dickens Entertain at Home'', Elsevier, 2014, ISBN 9781483160450 )〕 The character "John Westlock" in ''Martin Chuzzlewit'' lives in Furnival’s Inn, and describes it as,
"...a shady, quiet place, echoing to the footsteps of the stragglers who have business there; and rather monotonous and gloomy on summer evenings. ... there are snug chambers in those Inns where the bachelors live, and, for the desolate fellows they pretend to be, it is quite surprising how well they get on".〔

J.M. Barrie lived in a set of chambers at No. 7 Furnival's Inn from 1888 to 1889.〔Denis Mackail, ''The Story of J.M.B.'' (Peter Davies, 1941)〕 The site was redeveloped again, in 1879, as the headquarters of the Prudential Assurance. A plaque marks the site where Furnival's Inn stood.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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