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 causam respiciunt referuntur,’ with Nos. 2, 8 and 9, Oxford, 1640, 4to, and Leyden and Amsterdam, 1652, 12mo. 8. ‘Descriptio Juris et Judicii militaris, ad quam leges quæ rem militarem et ordinem personarum respiciunt referuntur,’ with Nos. 2, 8, and 9, Oxford, 1640, 4to, and Leyden and Amsterdam, 1652, 12mo. (Part ii. of this work is on nobility.) 9. ‘Descriptio Juris et Judicii maritimi, ad quam quæ navigationem et negotiationem maritimam respiciunt referuntur,’ with Nos. 2, 8, and 9, Oxford, 1640, 4to, and Leyden and Amsterdam, 1652, 12mo. 10. ‘Juris et Judicii fecialis, sive Juris inter gentes, et quæstionum de eodem explicatio,’ Oxford, 1650, 4to; Leyden, 1651; The Hague, 1659, 12mo; Mayence, 1661; translated by Gottfried Vogel as Allgemeines Völkerrecht, wie auch allgemeines Urtheil und Ansprüche aller Völker, Frankf. 1666, 12mo. 11. ‘Cases and Questions resolved in the Civil Law,’ Oxford, 1652, 12mo (intended later ‘to be published in the proper language of the civil law for the use of students in their profession.’ Part i. relates to rights, part ii. to procedure). 12. ‘Specimen quæstionum Juris Civilis,’ Oxford, 1653, anon., but certainly by Zouche; see No. 15. 13. ‘Solutio quæstionis veteris et novæ, sive de Legati delinquentis judice competente dissertatio,’ Oxford, 1657, 12mo; Cologne, 1662, 12mo; cum notis Hennelii, Berlin, 1669, 12mo; translated by J. J. Lehmann as ‘Eines vornehmen englischen Jureconsulti Gedanken von dem Traktement eines Ministers,’ Jena, 1717, 8vo; also by D. J., gent., as ‘A dissertation concerning the punishment of ambassadors, with the addition of a preface concerning the occasion of writing this treatise,’ London, 1717, 8vo (published with reference to the affair of the Swedish ambassador, Gyllenburg). 14. ‘Eruditionis ingenuæ specimen, scilicet Artium Logicæ, Dialecticæ et Rhetoricæ, necnon moralis Philosophiæ, M. T. Ciceronis definitionibus, præceptis et sententiis illustratæ,’ Oxford, 1657, 12mo, anon., but dated from St. Alban's Hall, and attributed to Zouche by an old manuscript note on the Bodleian copy. 15. ‘Quæstionum Juris Civilis centuria, in decem classes distributa,’ Oxford, 1660; London, 1682, 12mo. In the preface, dated 1659, Zouche alludes to his publication of the ‘Specimen’ six years previously. He dedicates these ‘senectutis molimina’ to the ‘jurisprudentiæ studiosis, præsertim B. Wicchami alumnis,’ having himself been ‘humanioribus literis et juris studio institutus’ in the two Wiccamical colleges. 16. ‘The Jurisdiction of the Admiralty of England asserted against Sir Edward Coke's “Articuli Admiralitatis” in chap. xxii. of his “Jurisdiction of Courts,”’ London, 1663, 8vo. (In a preface, dated from Doctors' Commons, Dr. Baldwyn attests that this treatise was delivered into his hands by the author himself to be printed); reprinted in the edition of the ‘Consuetudo vel lex mercatoria’ of Gerard Malynes [q. v.], published in London, 1686, fol.

With a view to his candidature for the keepership of the archives Zouche compiled in manuscript ‘Privileges of the University of Oxford, collected into a body.’ A transcript of this manuscript is preserved at St. John's College.

[Banks's Dormant and Extinct Baronage; Nichols's Hist. of Leicestershire; Hoare's Hist. of Wiltshire; Kirby's Winchester Scholars; Gardiner's Wadham College; Wood's Athenæ, his Colleges and Halls and his Life, by Clark; [Coote's] English Civilians; Le Neve's Monumenta; Burrows's Visitation of 1648; the Royalist Composition Papers in the Record Office; the Registers of New College, of the Diocese of Oxford, and of the High Court of Admiralty; and private information.]  ZOUCHE or ZOUCH, WILLIAM or  (d. 1352), archbishop of York, seems from his close connections with Northamptonshire to have belonged to the Harringworth branch of the Zouche family, and he is generally said to have been a younger son of William la Zouche, first Baron Zouche (1276?–1352) of Harringworth (, Fasti Eboracenses, p. 437); he alludes to his parents as alive in 1349. He graduated M.A. and B.C.L. at some university (Cal. Papal Letters, ii. 520). At the beginning of Edward III's reign he appears as one of the king's clerks or chaplains (Fœdera, iii. 210). Perhaps he was the William la Zouche who, with other clerks, was accused before January 1328 of breaking into the house and stealing the sheep of the prior of Charley, Leicestershire (Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1327–30, p. 275). On 14 May 1329 he received protection on going abroad with the king (ib. p. 390). On 16 Sept. 1330 he was appointed clerk and purveyor of the great wardrobe (ib. 1330–4, p. 5). A little later he is called keeper of the wardrobe (ib. p. 53). His successor in that office was appointed on 15 July 1334 (ib. p. 569). In 1335 he was keeper of the privy seal (Cal. Papal Letters, ii. 524). On 24 March 1337 he was appointed treasurer of the exchequer during pleasure (ib. 1334–1338, p. 409), and on 21 Aug. of the same year was joined with William la Zouche of Harringworth, possibly his father, to lay before the shires of Northampton and 