Henry Coker (c.1528-95), of Mappowder, Dorset, was an English Member of Parliament.
He was a Member (MP) of the Parliament of England for Shaftesbury in 1559. [1]
Baron Digby is a title that has been created twice, once in the Peerage of Ireland and once in the Peerage of Great Britain, for members of the same family.
Mappowder is a village and civil parish in the county of Dorset in southern England. The parish lies approximately 9 miles southeast of the town of Sherborne and covers about 1,900 acres at an elevation of 75 to 160 metres. It is sited on Corallian limestone soil at the southern edge of the Blackmore Vale, close to the northern scarp face of the Dorset Downs. In the 2011 census the parish had 71 dwellings, 69 households and a population of 166.
Essex was a constituency represented in the House of Commons of the Parliament of England from 1290 to 1707, then of the Parliament of Great Britain from 1707 to 1800 and of the Parliament of the United Kingdom from 1801 to 1832. It elected two MPs, traditionally referred to as Knights of the Shire, to the House of Commons. Under the Great Reform Act 1832, it was divided into two two-member constituencies.
The High Sheriff of Dorset is an ancient high sheriff title which has been in existence for over one thousand years. Until 1567 the Sheriff of Somerset was also the Sheriff of Dorset.
Henry Compton, 1st Baron Compton, was an English peer and Member of Parliament.
Sir Anthony Browne, KG of Battle Abbey and Cowdray Park, both in Sussex, England, was a Member of Parliament and a courtier who served as Master of the Horse to King Henry VIII.
William Stourton, 2nd Baron Stourton was an English nobleman, politician and administrator.
George Coke or Cooke was successively the Bishop of Bristol and Hereford. After the battle of Naseby in 1645, Hereford was taken and Coke was arrested and taken to London. He avoided charges of High Treason in January 1646 and died in Gloucestershire that year.
Melbury House is an English country house in the parish of Melbury Sampford near Evershot, Dorset. The Grade I listed mansion is the home of the Honourable Charlotte Townshend, a major landowner in east Dorset, through her mother, Theresa Fox-Strangways.
Robert Coker was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1656 and 1660.
Sir Edmund Ludlow was an English landowner and politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1571 and 1622.
Henry Ludlow was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons between 1601 and 1611.
Sir Henry Ashley was an English politician.
Henry Whitaker was an English lawyer and politician who sat in the House of Commons between 1659 and 1679.
Sir Giles Strangways, of Melbury House, Melbury Sampford, and of Abbotsbury, both in Dorset, was an English politician.
Sir Giles Strangways, of Melbury Sampford, Dorset, was five times MP for Dorset in 1553, 1554, 1555, 1558 and 1559.
Sir George Speke (c.1530-1584) of Whitelackington in Somerset was Sheriff of Somerset in 1562–63 and was Member of Parliament for Somerset 1572–83.
Robert Veel, of Shepton Beauchamp, Somerset and Mappowder and Frome Whitfield, Dorset, was an English politician.
John Coker was an English Anglican cleric and the once-reputed author of A Survey of Dorsetshire, a county history published in 1732.