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  1. Edward Coke, Viscount Coke (2 February 1719 – 31 August 1753), styled The Hon. Edward Coke from 1728 to 1744, was a British Member of Parliament. He represented Norfolk in Parliament from 1741 to 1747 and Harwich from 1747 to his death.

  2. Edward Douglas Coke, 7th Earl of Leicester, CBE DL (6 May 1936 – 25 April 2015), styled Viscount Coke between 1976 and 1994, was an English nobleman. The Earl of Leicester was one of Norfolk 's leading figures and played a key role in preserving and modernising the Holkham Estate over 40 years.

  3. Thomas Edward Coke, 8th Earl of Leicester (born 6 July 1965), is the son of Edward Coke, 7th Earl of Leicester, and Valeria Phyllis Potter. He is the current Earl of Leicester. From 1994 to 2015, when he succeeded into the earldom, he was styled Viscount Coke.

  4. 10 de jun. de 2020 · The founder of the family fortunes was Sir Edward Coke, a Norfolk-born gentleman who became the foremost legal mind of the Elizabethan and early Jacobean era. He coined the phrase “an Englishman’s home is his castle,” and as attorney general he prosecuted Robert Devereux, Walter Raleigh and the Gunpowder Plotters.

  5. 12 de jun. de 2012 · Sir Edward Coke, hombre de leyes (abogado, fiscal y juez de la época), vivió los agitados años de la era Isabelina y sus sucesores estuardos y percibió con claridad que en aquel momento convulso de creación de los grandes estados nacionales, las viejas libertades políticas procedente de los parlamentos medievales se hallaban comprometidas ante l...

  6. Sir Edward Coke (/kʊk/ "cook", anteriormente /kuːk/; 1 de febrero de 1552 - 3 de septiembre de 1634) [1] fue un abogado, juez y político inglés. A menudo se le considera el mayor jurista de las eras isabelina y jacobina .

  7. One of the great, unrecognized ironies in Anglo-American constitutional history is that Sir Edward Coke, the seventeenth-century mythologist of the “ancient constitution” and the English jurist most celebrated in early America, did not believe that subjects enjoyed the common law and many related rights of Englishmen while overseas.