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Lawyers and the law in later seventeenth-century Ireland
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2016
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In seventeenth-century Ireland the law increasingly defined and regulated relationships: between government and governed; between landlord and tenant; between master and servant; among the propertied; and even, by the end of the century, between Catholics and Protestants. This situation, similar to that throughout western Europe, signalled — at least superficially — England’s success in assimilating Ireland. The system of courts, centred on Dublin, and, through regular assizes and quarter sessions, borough, sheriffs’, church and manorial courts, reaching deep into the localities, was celebrated as a prime benefit, as well as the principal means, of anglicisation. The English policies which had progressively dismantled indigenous institutions, including the brehon law of Gaelic and gaelicised society, and replaced older Catholic with new Protestant élites, rested on statute, proclamation and judicial decree or process. Sincethe law was essential to England’s rule in Ireland, its opponents countered through the courts and legal argument: as a result, the functioning of the law, especially the quasi-judicial commissions which redistributed land, was politicised. Not only did the law accomplish, it also reflected these changes; for, bit by bit, Catholics were edged from the judicial bench and then disqualified from practising as barristers and attorneys. By the early eighteenth century the courts — publicly at least — were manned by and run for the burgeoning Protestant interest in Ireland.
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28 The Catholic Sir Richard Nagle, appointed attorney general in 1686, had been practising in the previous decade (N.A.I., SR 1/1/1; SR 2/4/6). William Cooper to Sir John Perceval, 11, 21, 30 Nov. 1682 (B.L., Egmont papers, Add. MS 46959B, ff 134, 145, 156); same to same, 12 Feb. 1683[4] (ibid., Add. MS 46960B, f. 145); Edward Lloyd to Sir John Perceval, 27 May 1684 (ibid., f. 233); Keane et al. (eds), King’s Inns admission papers, p. 360.
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46 Accounts with Sir Donough O’Brien, 1684–9 (N.L.I., Inchiquin papers, MS 14836); presentment of grand jury of Co. Cork, 27 July 1676 (B.L., Add. MS 46953, f. 145); account of Robert Holmes with Robert Southwell, 1675 (ibid., f. 217); Thomas Meade to Robert Southwell, 13 Mar. 1676[7] (ibid., Add. MS 46954A, f. 58); account for 1676–7 (ibid., f. 74); Sir John Perceval to Sir Robert Southwell, 18 Nov. 1684 (ibid., Add. MS 46961, ff 143–3v).
47 Transcripts of orders of equity division of Exchequer, 22 June 1662, Sept. 1670 (N.A.I., Ferguson MSS, xiii, pp 154, 215).
48 Bp Francis Hutchinson’s account book, 1721–9 (P.R.O.N.I., DIO 1/22/1); Black Book of King’s Inns, f. 123 (King’s Inns, Dublin); papers concerning Castleisland, Co. Kerry, by Humphrey Owen, 1686 (N.L.I., MS 7861, ff 156, 164v–5); memorandum on Neylan as seneschal of Charleville (Petworth, Orrery papers, general series, 14); Bennett, George, The history ofBandon (2nd ed., Cork, 1869), pp 549-52Google Scholar; Keane et al. (eds), King’s Inns admission papers, p. 385; Orrery papers, p. 308; Mulcahy (ed.), Cal. Kinsale documents, i, 10; O’Byrne, Eileen (ed.), The convert rolls (Dublin, 1981), p. 226 Google Scholar; Ó Dálaigh (ed.), Corporation book of Ennis, pp 349–65; Townshend, ‘Notes on the council book of Clonakilty’, p. 454.
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50 Smith, W. J. (ed.), Herbert correspondence (Dublin & Cardiff, 1963), pp 236, 244, 248Google Scholar; report on Ballynakill, 8 Oct. 1696 (Abbeyleix, De Vesci MSS, H/18); Bp Francis Hutchinson’s account book, entry for Jan. 1729[30], and at p. 274 (P.R.O.N.I., DIO 1/22/1); Bp Hutchinson’s account book from 20 Jan. 1729, entry for 23 Aug. 1729 (ibid., DIO 1/22/2).
51 Bail books, Dublin Tholsell court, 1651–2, 1693–4, 1699–1700 (Dublin Muncipal Archives, City Hall, Dublin, MSS Cl/J/4/1–3); records of Belturbet borough court, c. 1660–1800 (N.A.I., M. 3573). In the eighteenth century fees charged by practitioners in the Dublin Tholsell court remained appreciably lower than those in the central courts: see Tholsell precedent book (Dublin Muncipal Archives, Cl/J/7, p. 51).
52 Chancery bill books, 1633–48, 1740–51 (N.A.I., SR 2/3/22-23; SR 1/1/11-15).
53 O’Flanagan, Lives of the lord chancellors, i, 357, 487–8, 494–5; Rules and orders appointed to be used in the High Court of Chancery in Ireland (Dublin, 1685); ‘Rules and orders to be observed … in the High Court of Chancery in Ireland, 1659’, ed. Hand, G. J. in Ir. Jurist, n.s., ix (1974), pp 179–212.Google Scholar
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55 Chancery pleadings book, 1627–30 (N.A.I., SR 2/3/20); Chancery bill books, 1633–48, 1655–9 (ibid., SR 2/3/21-3, 25); entry books of Chancery pleadings, 1655–8 (Representative Church Body Library, Dublin (henceforth R.C.B.), Christ Church MSS C. 6. 1. 27/2–3).
56 They were, in order of frequency of pleading: Thomas Richardson, Gabriel Briscoe, John Exham, Roger Brereton, John Temple and John Lewis.
57 Chancery bill book, 1660–67 (N.A.I., SR 2/4/1). In order of frequency of pleading they were: Henry Whitfield, Thomas Richardson, Thomas Browne, Richard Reynell, Francis Dynne, Patrick Kirwan, George Barnewall, Charles Ireton, John Temple and Standish Hartstonge.
58 An example of a Chancery lawyer whose practice was largely provincial is Henry Bathurst: see survey of Kinsale, 21 Feb. 1658[9] (Cork University Library, Southwell papers, U. 55); Bathurst and others to Orrery, 26 June 1667 (Bodl., Carte MS 35, f. 498); Chancery pleadings, 1655–8 (R.C.B., Christ Church MS C. 6. 1. 27/2, 13 June 1656); Caulfield, Richard (ed.), The council hook of the corporation of Kinsale (Guildford, 1879), pp 419, 434Google Scholar; Keane et al. (eds), King’s Inns admission papers, p. 26.
59 For the Temple family see Haley, K. H. D., An English diplomat in the Low Countries (Oxford, 1986)Google Scholar; Gifford, Lady, ‘The life of Sir William Temple’ in The early essays of Sir William Temple, ed. Moore Smith, G. C. (Oxford, 1930).Google Scholar
60 Account book of Sir John Temple (Southampton University Library, Broadlands MSS, BR7A/l, f. 129).
61 Sir Charles Porter to Lord Coningsby, 14 Aug. 1693, 2 Jan. 1693[4], 7 Feb. 1694(5], 28 Sept. 1696 (P.R.O.N.I., De Ros papers, D638/18/7, 13, 19, 81); legal opinions from Temple (Bowood, Petty papers, D/28, 38, 55, 58, 103); accounts with Sir Donough O’Brien, 1681–7 (N.L.I., Inchiquin papers, MS 14836); Temple to Robert Southwell, 24 May, 14 June 1670 (B.L., Egmont papers, Add. MS 46947A, ff 103, 161); John Meade to Southwell, 28 May, 4, 11, 21 June 1670 (ibid., ff 111, 126, 154, 175); Temple to Southwell 28 Mar. 1676 (ibid., Add. MS 46953, f. 38); account of Robert Holmes with Southwell, 1675 (ibid., f. 217); Temple to Lady Katherine Perceval, 5 June 1677 (ibid., Add. MS 46954A, f. 220); Temple to John Perceval, 2, 27 Aug. 1681 (ibid., Add. MS 46958A, ff 144, 176); William Cooper to Perceval, 7, 11, 20 Nov., 2 Dec. 1682 (ibid., Add. MS 46959B, ff 120, 134, 154, 159); Temple to Perceval, 31 Oct. 1682 (ibid., f. 106); Perceval to Cooper, 10 Nov. 1682 (ibid., f. 132); Perceval to Southwell, 25 Sept. 1683 (ibid., Add. MS 46960B, f. 30); Cooper to Perceval, 6, 10, 18 Nov. 1683, 2 Feb. 1683[4], 27 May 1684 (ibid., ff 75, 77, 92, 145, 232); Temple to Perceval, 13 Nov. 1683 (ibid., f. 86); Cooper to Perceval, 10 June, 27 Dec. 1684 (ibid., Add. MS 46961, ff 23, 175); Temple to Perceval, 5 July 1684, 17 Mar. 1684[5] (ibid., ff 59, 238); Philip Savage to Perceval, 19 July 1684 (ibid., f. 75); Lord Sydney to Lord Portland, 28 June 1695 (Nottingham University Library, Portland papers, Pw A 1358); Temple account book (Southampton University Library, BR 7A/1, passim); Barnard, T. C., ‘Gardening, diet and “improvement” in later seventeenth-century Ireland’ in Journal of Garden History, x (1990), pp 80–81 Google Scholar; Cal. S.P. dom., 1672–3, p. 494; ibid., 1682–3, p. 236; ibid., 1691–2, pp 474, 494–5; ibid., 1693, p. 152; ibid., 1694–5, p. 472; ibid., Ire. 1663–5, p. 96; ibid., 1666–9, pp 30, 105; Buccleuch MSS, ii, 160; Manuscripts of the earl of Egmont: diary of Viscount Percival, afterwards first earl of Egmont (3 vols, H.M.C., London, 1920–23), iii, 365, 366; Ormonde MSS, n.s., vii, 91, 112–13, 159, 166, 411–12, 489; Orrery papers, pp 164–5, 218, 233, 264, 267, 299, 326, 360.
62 ‘Persons who have in 1686 over £2,000 p.a.’ (Bowood, Petty papers, B/20).
63 Holmes, Augustan England, pp 121, 125; Lemmings, Gentlemen & barristers, pp 154–6.
64 James Morley to Thomas Lemon, 21 Jan. 1672[3]; Morley to John Morris and Robert Clayton, 8 Feb. 1674[5]; Morley to Clayton, 18 Feb. 1674[5]; Morley to Morris, 16 Dec. 1674 (N.L.I., Morley correspondence, MS 8538/9); Alan Brodrick to St John Brodrick, 11 Nov. 1684 (Guildford Muniment Room, Midleton papers, MS 1248/1, f. 202v); Chancery bill book, 1682–7 (N.A.I., SR 2/4/6, ff 123, 294v, 295); Lord Capell to Lord Portland, 6 Nov. 1695 (Nottingham University Library, Portland papers, Pw A 252); Barnard, ‘An Anglo-Irish industrial enterprise’, p. 133 n. 127; idem, ‘The political, material & mental culture of the Cork settlers’; Cal. S.P. dom., 1695, p. 119; Keane et al. (eds), King’s inns admission papers, p. 351. For earnings later, in the eighteenth century, see Malcomson, A. P. W., John Foster (Oxford, 1978), p. 14 n. 3.Google Scholar
65 List of Protestant refugees from Ireland, 1689 (T.C.D., MS 847); list of property-owners, Co. Wexford, 1686 (Bodl., Clarendon state papers, 88, ff 260–65); Gahan, ‘The estate system of County Wexford’, pp 206–14.
66 Barnard, ‘Gardening, diet & “improvement”’; idem, ‘The political, material & mental culture of the Cork settlers’; Earle, Peter, The making of the English middle class (London, 1988)Google Scholar; Grassby, Richard, ‘The personal wealth of the business community in seventeenth-century England’ in Econ. Hist. Rev., 2nd ser., xxiii (1970), pp 225-34Google Scholar; R. G. Lang, ‘Social origins and social aspirations of the Jacobean London merchants’, ibid., xxvii (1974), pp 28–47. But evidence of the rapid growth of consumerism in eighteenth-century Ireland is offered in The Knight of Glin, , ‘Early Irish trade cards’ in Eighteenth-Century Ireland, ii (1987), pp 115-32.Google Scholar
67 Dickson, ‘An economic history of the Cork region’, pp 64–5; Hayton, ‘Ireland & the English ministers’, pp 5–6.
68 Temple, for example, let his mansion at Palmerston to the judge and quondam lord chancellor Sir Richard Cox (will of Sir John Temple (B.L., Egerton MS 1708, f. 132)). Another instance of personal and social ties is in Rogers, ‘Sir Jerome Alexander’, pp 105–6.
69 James Bonnell to John Strype, 26 May 1697 (Cambridge University Library, Baumgartner MSS, Add. MS 1, f. 84); Edward Southwell to Lord Nottingham, 6 Aug. 1703 (P.R.O., SP 63/363/335); Lord Sydney to Lord Portland, 28 Nov. 1690 (Nottingham University Library, Portland papers, Pw A 1332); E.S. to Queen Mary, 25 July 1695 (ibid., Pw A 2691a); John Evelyn jun. to John Evelyn sen., 18 June 1695 (Christ Church, Oxford, Evelyn papers, bound letters, f. 674); Cal. S.P. dom., 1694–5, p. 172; Buccleuch MSS, ii, 184.
70 Denny Muschamp to Robert Maxwell, 1 Sept. 1685 (Abbeyleix, De Vesci papers, H/l); Muschamp to Thomas Fitzgerald, 17 May 1695 (ibid., H/2); John Fitzpatrick to Muschamp, 14 Oct. 1690 (ibid., H/14); John Hely to Lord Coningsby, 8 Jan. 1692[3], 7, 18 June 1698 (P.R.O.N.I., De Ros papers, D638/1/3, 22, 26); Lord Ranelagh to Lord Coningsby, 29 July 1690 (ibid., D638/6/5); Sir Charles Porter to Lord Coningsby, 30 Nov. 1695 (ibid., D638/18/60); Alan Brodrick to St John Brodrick, 11 Nov. 1684, 18 June 1686, 11 Nov. 1691, 6 May 1693 (Guildford Muniment Room, Midleton papers, MS 1248/1, ff 202, 204, 255v, 259–60); Sir Richard Cox to Edward Southwell, 9 May 1704 (B.L., Add. MS 38153, f. 52); Henry Osborne to Lord Essex, 9 July 1674 (ibid., Stowe MS 205, f. 317); Lord Sydney to Lord Nottingham, 9 Nov. 1692 (P.R.O., SP 63/354/197); Lord Essex to Henry Osborne, 31 Mar. 1674 (Bodl., Essex letter-book, Add. MS C. 34, f. 76v); Essex to Lord Arlington, 28 Apr. 1674 (ibid., f. 98); William Perceval to Arthur Charlet, 28 Nov. 1710, 16 Oct. 1714 (Bodl., Ballard MSS, 36, ff 65, 92); Lord Capell to Lord Shrewsbury, 11, 20 Jan. 1695[6] (Nottingham University Library, Portland papers, Pw A 261, 263); Lord Sydney to Lord Portland, 28 Nov. 1690 (ibid., Pw A 1332); Ormonde MSS, n.s., vi, 372, 494, 511,516; vii, 69–72, 83, 91, 303–4, 480–81.
71 Sir Charles Porter to Lord Coningsby, 8 Oct. 1695 (3 letters) (P.R.O.N.I., De Ros papers, D638/18/51-3); same to same, 1 Nov. 1695, 18 Aug., 1 Sept. 1696 (ibid., D638/18/56, 77, 79); ‘A paper promoted by Mr Bennet against my lord chancellor of Ireland in the parliament 1673’ (N.L.I., MS 17845); Sir Richard Cox to Edward Southwell, 23 Dec. 1714 (B.L., Add. MS 38157, f. 145); The conduct of the purse in Ireland (London, 1714), p. 25; The resolutions of the House of Commons in Ireland relating to the Lord-Chancellor Phips (London, 1714), pp 20–23.
72 Richard Barry to William Belke, 25 Dec. 1671, 27 Jan. 1671 [2] (N.L.I., MS 10786); ‘A copy of some discovery of a plot’, 5 Feb. 1678[9] (ibid., Flower papers, MS 13014); ‘A paper promoted by Mr Bennet against my lord chancellor of Ireland in the parliament 1673’ (ibid., MS 17845); Michael Boyle to Heneage Finch, 13 July 1680 (Leicester County Record Office, Finch papers, DG 7, box 4965, Ire. 13); Michael Boyle to Gilbert Sheldon, 1 July, 5 Aug. 1665, 20 Feb. 1665[6] (Bodl., Sheldon papers, Add. MS C. 306, ff 180, 186, 188); Lord Conway to Lord Conway, 8 Mar. 1672[3] (Darner House, Roscrea, De Vesci papers, H/15); William Molyneux to Edmund Borlase, 31 Jan. 1679[80] (B.L., Sloane MS 1008, f. 252); Breffny, Brian de, ‘The building of the mansion at Blessington, 1672’ in GPA Irish Arts Review (1988), pp 73-7Google Scholar; State letters of Clarendon, i, 101–2; Ormonde MSS, n.s., vii, 417; O’Flanagan, , Lives of the lord chancellors, i, ch. 27Google Scholar; Cal. S.P. dom, 1691, p. 68.
73 Sir Charles Porter to Lord Coningsby, 9, 13 Nov. 1695, 6 Oct. 1696 (P.R.O.N.I., De Ros papers, D638/18/57, 59, 84); Alan Brodrick to St John Brodrick, 6 May 1693 (Guildford Muniment Room, Midleton papers, 1248/1, ff 259–60); John Evelyn jun. to John Evelyn sen., 10 Oct., Nov. 1695 (Christ Church, Oxford, Evelyn papers, bound letters, ff 676v–7); Lord Capell to Lord Portland, 28 Sept. 1675 (Nottingham University Library, Portland papers, Pw A 246); Capell to William III, 26 Oct. 1695 (ibid., Pw A 251); The conduct of the purse in Ireland; Hayton, David, ‘The crisis in Ireland and the disintegration of Queen Anne’s last ministry’ in I.H.S., xxii, no. 87 (Mar. 1981), pp 195-8, 205-7Google Scholar; Buccleuch MSS, ii, 229, 233, 235; Collected poems of Thomas Parnell, ed. Rawson, Claude and Lock, F. P. (Newark, 1989), pp 335-6Google Scholar; Resolutions relating to Lord-Chancellor Phips, esp. pp 10–14, 19–30, 35–9, 44–5.
74 John Pocklington to Abp William Wake, 7 Apr. 1720 (Christ Church, Oxford, Wake papers, 13, f. 160); Victory, Isolde, ‘Colonial nationalism in Ireland, 1692-1725: from common law to natural right’ (unpublished Ph.D. thesis, Trinity College, Dublin, 1984), pp 145-6Google Scholar; idem, ‘The making of the declaratory act of 1720’ in Gerard O’Brien (ed.), Parliament, politics and people: essays in eighteenth-century Irish history (Dublin, 1989), pp 14–25.
75 Sir Charles Porter to Lord Coningsby, 8, 26 Oct., 1 Nov. 1695 (P.R.O.N.I., De Ros papers, D638/18/51-3, 55, 56); Michael Boyle to Heneage Finch, 13 July 1680 (Leicester County Record Office, Finch papers, DG 7, box 4965, Ire. 13); ‘Proceedings in the Four Courts … Trinity Term, 1688’ (Bodl, Clarendon state papers, 89, f. 153).
76 Barnard, , ‘The political, material & mental culture of the Cork settlers’; Journal of the Very Rev. Rowland Davies, ed. Caulfield, Richard (Camden Soc, London, 1857), pp 60–61 Google Scholar; Cox, Richard, Hibernia Anglicana (2 pts, London, 1689-90)Google Scholar; Kelly, Patrick, ‘Ireland and the Glorious Revolution’ in Beddard, Robert (ed.), The revolutions of 1688 (Oxford, 1991), p. 177 & n. 63.Google Scholar
77 Lord Capell to William III, 26 Oct. 1695 (Nottingham University Library, Portland papers, Pw A 251); McCracken, J. L., ‘Central and local administration in Ireland under George II’ (unpublished Ph.D. thesis, Queen’s University, Belfast, 1951), p. 110.Google Scholar
78 Barnard, T. C., ‘Planters and policies in Cromwellian Ireland’ in Past & Present, no. 61 (1973), p. 66 nn 156-7Google Scholar; Clarke, Old English, pp 97–101, 129–30, 141, 146–50, 217–18; Cregan, ‘Irish recusant lawyers’; O’Malley, ‘Patrick Darcy’; Simms, J. G., William Molyneux of Dublin (Dublin, 1982), pp 102-19Google Scholar. For Molyneux as a lawyer see Chancery bill book 1692–6 (N.A.I., SR 2/4/8); Simms, Molyneux, p. 19.
79 Sir Charles Porter to Lord Coningsby, 23 Nov. 1692, 21 Nov. 1695 (P.R.O.N.I., De Ros papers, D638/18/3, 59); McGuire, J. I., ‘The Irish parliament of 1692’ in Bartlett, Thomas and Hayton, D. W. (eds), Penal era and golden age (Belfast, 1979), pp 19–22 Google Scholar; Szechi, Daniel and Hayton, D. W., ‘John Bull’s other kingdoms: Scotland and Ireland’ in Jones, Clyve (ed.), Britain in the first age of party, 1680-1750 (London, 1987), pp 265-6.Google Scholar
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