Francis Aungier
Born in Cambridge in 1558, Francis Aungier received his early education at Westminster School before going on to study at Trinity College.
A citizen of the Kingdom of England, Aungier pursued a career as a politician. The available record places his formative years in Cambridge and traces his education through two notable institutions, Westminster School and Trinity College, before his professional life took shape. The arc of his career unfolded during a period that spanned the latter half of the sixteenth century and the opening decades of the seventeenth, years that saw considerable political activity across the English-administered territories of the British Isles.
Aungier died in Dublin in 1632, marking the end of a life that had carried him from his birthplace in Cambridge to the Irish capital. His passage through Westminster School and Trinity College formed the educational foundation from which his political work proceeded, and the geographical distance between his birth in England and his death in Ireland reflects the broader mobility that characterized the careers of English political figures active in this era.
Quotes by Francis Aungier

The male sex still constitute in many ways the most obstinate vested interest one can find.

With a group of bankers I always had the feeling that success was measured by the extent one gave nothing away.