Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 49.djvu/227

 and Newton in the parishes of St. Cleer and St. Germans. His mother, Elizabeth, was daughter and heiress of Richard Trevenor. Nicholas probably studied at Exeter College, Oxford (Oxford Reg. ii. 33). He supplicated B.A. on 3 May 1568, and was admitted a student of the Inner Temple in November 1572 (, Alumni Oxon.; Notes and Queries, 5th ser. iv. 102). In the same year he contributed a series of ninety-four verses to Tottell's edition of John Bossewell's ‘Workes of Armorie,’ the verses bearing the title ‘Celenus censure of the Aucthor in his high Court of Herehaultry.’ The verses signed ‘N. R.’ prefixed to Gascoigne's ‘Steele Glas’ (1576) are also probably by Roscarrock. Besides being noted ‘for his industrious delight in matters of history and antiquity’ (, Survey of Cornwall, p. 299), he was an ardent catholic. On 16 Sept. 1577 he was accused at Launceston assizes of not going to church (, Troubles of our Catholic Forefathers, p. 95), and in April 1580 he was watched by Cecil as a suspected person (Cal. State Papers, Dom. Eliz. cxxxvii. 7, 3 April 1580). He was then a member of a young men's club in London to help priests, and George Gilbert, ‘a great patron of the catholics,’ often stayed with him. On 1 Sept. 1580 he landed at Douay with one Creswell, possibly Joseph Cresswell [q. v.] (‘Duo nobiles … ex Anglia,’ Douay Diaries, p. 169), and on the 12th set out for Rome (ib.) Towards the end of 1580 he was again in England. Spies were employed to catch him, and on 5 Dec. 1580 he was lodged in the Tower (Rishton's ‘Diary’ in De Origine Schimatis Anglicani; Douay Diaries, p. 178). On the following 14 Jan. he was racked (, ed. Tierney, iii. 151, 152). He continued in prison in the Tower for several years (being ‘in the Martin Tower,’ with Crichton the Scottish jesuit, in 1586). On 6 March 1586 Sir Owen Hopton, lieutenant-governor of the Tower, petitioned for his release, apparently with success (Hatfield MSS. iv. 432). In 1594 he was again in the Fleet. In June 1599 a true bill was found against him at the Middlesex sessions for not going to church. He was then described as of St. Clement Danes, esquire (Middlesex County Records, i. 254).

Roscarrock wrote a letter—Cotton MS. Julius c. v. f. 77—to Camden on 7 Aug. 1607 on the publication of Camden's ‘Britannia’ (Camdeni Epistolæ, pp. 90–2). From 1607 onwards Roscarrock lived at Naworth Castle, possibly as tutor to Lord William Howard's sons (Household Book of Lord Howard, Surtees Soc. pp. 6, 303, 451, 505). In later life his sight seems to have failed. He died at Naworth Castle in 1633 or 1634.

[Harl. Soc. Publ. ix. 190; Polwhele's Hist. of Cornwall, ii. 42; Sir J. Maclean's History of Trigg Minor, i. 556–63; Jesuits in Conflict, p. 206; Wood's Athenæ Oxon. i. 478; Challoner's Memoirs of Missionary Priests, p. 32; Bridgewater's Concertatio Ecclesiæ Catholicæ; Cal. State Papers, Dom. passim; Vivian's Visitations of Cornwall, p. 399; Boase and Courtney's Bibl. Cornub.; Boase's Collectanea Cornub.; Surtees Soc. Publ. vol. lxviii. (household book of William, Lord Howard); Gilbert's Historical Survey of Cornwall, ii. 251.] 

ROSCOE, HENRY (1800–1836), legal writer, youngest son of William Roscoe [q. v.], born at Allerton Hall, near Liverpool, on 17 April 1800, was educated by private tutors, and in 1817 was articled to Messrs. Stanistreet & Eden, solicitors, Liverpool. In January 1819 he removed to London and began studying for the bar, almost supporting himself by literary work. He was called to the bar at the Inner Temple in February 1826, and afterwards practised in the northern circuit and at the Liverpool and Chester sessions. He was also assessor to the mayor's court, Liverpool, and a member of the municipal corporations commission. He died at Gateacre, near Liverpool, on 25 March 1836. By his marriage, on 29 Oct. 1831, to Maria, second daughter of Thomas Fletcher and granddaughter of Dr. William Enfield [q. v.], he had a son (Sir Henry Enfield Roscoe, F.R.S.), and a daughter Harriet, who married Edward Enfield [q. v.] Roscoe's widow, who died in April 1885, aged 86, published in 1868 ‘Vittoria Colonna: her Life and Times.’

Roscoe wrote ‘Lives of Eminent British Lawyers’ (1830), as one of the volumes of ‘Lardner's Cabinet Cyclopædia,’ and ‘The Life of William Roscoe’ (2 vols. 1833), besides the following legal treatises: 1. ‘A Treatise on the Law of Actions relating to Real Property,’ 1825, 2 vols. 2. ‘Digest of the Law of Evidence on the Trials of Actions at Nisi Prius,’ 1827. 3. ‘Digest of the Law relating to Bills of Exchange,’ &c., 1829. 4. ‘Digest relating to Offences against the Coin,’ 1832. 5. ‘General Digest of Decisions in the Courts for 1834, 1835, and 1836,’ 3 vols. 6. ‘Digest of the Law of Evidence in Criminal Cases,’ 1835. Several of the above have been frequently reprinted in England and America. He also brought out an edition of Roger North's ‘Lives’ (1826, 3 vols.), and was joint editor of ‘Price's Exchequer Reports’ for 1834–5.

[Information kindly supplied by James Thornely, esq.; Gent. Mag. May 1836, p. 553; Allibone's Dictionary, which notes the American editions of Roscoe's Works; British Museum Catalogue.] 