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・ Philip Dalton
・ Philip Daly
・ Philip Danforth Armour
・ Philip Daniel Bolden
・ Philip Dansken Ross
・ Philip Darnall
・ Philip Daubenspeck
・ Philip Davey
・ Philip Davey (cricketer)
・ Philip Carteret
・ Philip Carteret (colonial governor)
・ Philip Carteret (disambiguation)
・ Philip Carteret FRS
・ Philip Carteret Hill
・ Philip Carteret Silvester
Philip Carteret Webb
・ Philip Cartwright
・ Philip Cary
・ Philip Cary (died 1437)
・ Philip Cary (disambiguation)
・ Philip Cary (Officer of arms)
・ Philip Cashian
・ Philip Casnoff
・ Philip Cassidy
・ Philip Castle
・ Philip Catherine
・ Philip Caveney
・ Philip Cecil
・ Philip Cecil Crampton
・ Philip Cezar


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Philip Carteret Webb : ウィキペディア英語版
Philip Carteret Webb
Philip Carteret Webb (14 August 1702 – 22 June 1770) was an English barrister, involved with the 18th-century antiquarian movement.
He became a member of the London Society of Antiquaries in 1747, and as its lawyer, was responsible for securing the incorporation of the Society in 1751. This act was important in putting the society on level terms, in terms of finance and national prestige, with the Royal Society, which some antiquaries saw as a rival.〔R. Sweet, ''Antiquaries: The Discovery of the Past in Eighteenth-Century Britain,''(Great Britain: Cambridge University Press, 2004), pp.89-91〕
Webb is remembered also as an agent of the crown in the ''North Briton'' scandal (1763), assisting Robert Wood to seize the papers of radical journalist John Wilkes, whose inflammatory writings had offended the king.
==Early life==
He was born at Devizes in Wiltshire, and was admitted attorney-at-law on 20 June 1724. He practised at first in Old Jewry, then moved to Budge Row, and afterwards settled in Great Queen Street, Lincoln's Inn Fields. On 18 December 1727 he was admitted at the Middle Temple, and on 8 April 1741 was admitted at Lincoln's Inn.
Early in his career he acquired a reputation for knowledge of records and of precedents on constitutional law. After the suppression of the Jacobite rebellion of 1745 he acted for the state as solicitor in trials of the prisoners. Lord Hardwicke made him secretary of bankrupts in the court of chancery, and he retained the post until 1766, when Lord Northington ceased to be lord chancellor.〔

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