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Other people, like the judge Sir Edward Coke from 1572 to 1615, then created their own series of reports.
Lyon's Inn was a small Inn, with eighty students at its peak during the time of Elizabeth I, and educated people as noted as Sir Edward Coke and John Selden.
However, Cooke's view recalled a similar opinion expressed by the famous 17th century English jurist, Sir Edward Coke.
In the contemporary debates between Sir Edward Coke and Lord Chancellor Ellesmere, Turner's notebooks reveal him to have felt a strong reaction against Ellesmere's claims for the royal prerogative as "transcendent to the common law".