Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
In 1546 the members of Lincoln's Inn beheld a most peculiar sight in their communal hall. The traditional midsummer light of St John had been replaced with the ridiculous head of a horse. Three young members were charged by the benchers. Two who refused to confess were expelled from the house and imprisoned in the Fleet by the lord chancellor, Thomas Wriothesley, and Sir Roger Cholmley, the chief baron of the Exchequer and a former bencher. The other culprit, who confessed and made humble suit to the bench, was merely excluded from commons. After the inevitable petitions, all were forgiven ‘their said lewd and nowghtie mysdemeanours’ and shortly remitted into the house.
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58 E.g. Dickens, , English Reformation (rev. edn London, 1967), p. 137Google Scholar, and Prest, , Inns of Court, p. 218.Google Scholar
59 In my thesis, pp. 157–99.
60 L.I.B.B. IV, 121V (Baildon 1, 255).