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・ John Bouchier-Hayes
・ John Boudebza
・ John Boughey
・ John Bouland
・ John Boulger
・ John Boulicault
・ John Boulos
・ John Boultbee
・ John Boultbee (artist)
・ John Boultbee (explorer)
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・ John Bourchier
・ John Bourchier (bishop-designate)
・ John Bourchier (politician)
John Bourchier (regicide)
・ John Bourchier, 1st Baron Berners
・ John Bourchier, 1st Earl of Bath
・ John Bourchier, 2nd Baron Berners
・ John Bourchier, 2nd Baron Bourchier
・ John Bourchier, 2nd Earl of Bath
・ John Bourchier, 6th Baron Ferrers of Groby
・ John Bourgeois
・ John Bourinot
・ John Bourke
・ John Bourke (Australian politician)
・ John Bourke (footballer)
・ John Bourke, 4th Earl of Mayo
・ John Bourn
・ John Bourne


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John Bourchier (regicide) : ウィキペディア英語版
John Bourchier (regicide)

Sir John Bourchier or Bourcher (c. 1595 – August 1660) was an English parliamentarian, Puritan and one of the regicides of King Charles I.
==Life==
John Bourchier was the son of William Bourchier of Beningbrough and grandson of Sir Ralph Bourchier. He was probably educated at Christ's College, Cambridge, and was admitted to Gray's Inn in 1609/10. He was knighted in 1609.
In 1625, Bourchier was appointed as a Justice of the Peace for the three Yorkshire Ridings. When Charles dissolved Parliament and sought to raise money through the forced loans in 1627, Sir John was one of those who refused. At the outbreak of the English Civil War, he was arrested and imprisoned in York until 1643. He was elected Member of Parliament for Ripon in 1647; at Pride's Purge, he was one of the MPs permitted to keep his seat in Commons.
As a judge at the trial of King Charles, he was one of the signatories of the King's death warrant. After the Restoration, May 1660, Bourchier was too ill to be tried as a regicide, and died, unrepentant, a few months later.
"During these contests between the two Houses, touching the exceptions to be made, Sir John Bourchier, who had been one of the King's judges, and had rendered himself within the time limit by the proclamation, being of a great age and very infirm, was permitted to lodge at a private house belonging to one of his daughters. In this place he was seized with so dangerous a fit of illness, that those about him who were his nearest relations, despairing of his recovery, and presuming that an acknowledgment from him of his sorrow, for the part he had in the condemnation of the King, might tend to procure some favour to them from those in power, they earnestly pressed him to give them that satisfaction. But he being highly displeased with their request, rose suddenly from his chair, which for some days he had not been able to do without assistance; and receiving fresh vigour from the memory of that action, said, 'I tell you, it was a just act; God and all good men will own it.' And having thus expressed himself, he sat down again, and soon after quietly ended his life."〔The Memoirs of Edmund Ludlow, Lieutenant-General of the Horse in the Army of the Commonwealth of England, 1625-1672, Edited with Appendices of Letters and Illustrative Documents by C.H. Firth, M.A., in two volumes, Oxford, at the Clarendon Press, 1894, Vol. 2, p.293〕
Bourchier was a great-grandson of Margaret Pole, 8th Countess of Salisbury who had been beheaded by order of King Henry VIII; Charles I was a great-great-grandson of Margaret Tudor-a sister of King Henry VIII. He was the great-great-great-grandson of Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick, who was known as the "Kingmaker" for helping to place both Edward IV and Henry VI upon the throne during the War of the Roses.

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