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William Sambach : ウィキペディア英語版
William Sambach
Sir William Sambach (died 1653) was an English-born lawyer and politician of the seventeenth century who spent much of his career in Ireland, but was driven back to England by the political turmoil of the 1640s, and died there.
His surname is probably a variant on Sandbach. Since that family preserved a collection of his papers〔Now held by Powys County Council Ref M/D/Sand〕 it is likely that he belonged to the Sandbachs of Tarporley, Cheshire, later famous as the owners of Hafodunos Hall.
Little is known of his early career, but he may have arrived in Ireland in 1633 with Thomas Wentworth, 1st Earl of Strafford, the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, to whom he seems to have been close. He became Recorder of Carrickfergus and then Second Serjeant in 1637. Unusually he was allowed to hold both offices at once, probably because his salary as Serjeant was inadequate.〔Hart, A.R. ''The History of the King's Serjeants-at-law in Ireland'' Four Courts Press Dublin 2000 pp.55-6〕
In 1640 he was elected to the Irish House of Commons as member for Carrickfergus and in the same year became Solicitor General for Ireland.〔Smyth, Constantine Joseph ''Chronicle of the Law Officers of Ireland'' London Butterworths 1839 p.177〕 After the downfall of Strafford, Sambach continued to defend his policies; during the comprehensive attack on Strafford's rule known as "the Queries", Sambach was one of the few MPs to speak in Strafford's defence, and to denounce the Queries. Precisely when he stepped down as Solicitor General is unclear: in the confusion of the times the office simply seems to have lapsed, and he was not replaced until 1657.
During the Irish Rebellion of 1641 he remained a committed Royalist, and by his own account suffered much damage to his property as a result.〔Smyth p.177〕 He lived at Balyna, near Moyvalley, County Kildare: in 1642 he petitioned the Crown for redress for the great loss and damage he had suffered.,〔''Deposition of Richard Butler ex parte Sir William Sambach''〕 which he estimated at £3800.
He had returned to England by 1649, when he purchased an estate at Bretforton in Worcestershire.〔''Victoria County History of Worcester'' (1906)Vol.2 p.323〕 He is heard of acting as a justice of the peace in that county in 1651, which suggests that like many former Royalists, he had made his peace with the Cromwellian regime. He died in 1653.〔''History of Worcester'' p.323〕
He was married, although nothing seems to be known about his wife; he had at least one daughter, who married John Moore of Croghan and had five children, including Thomas, grandfather of the 1st Earl of Charleville.〔Lodge, John and Archdall, Mervyn ''Peerage of Ireland'' Dublin 1789 Vol. 2 p. 89〕
==References==



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