Lord Justices (Ireland)
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The Lord Justice of Ireland is an ancient senior position in the governance of Ireland, held by a number of important personages, such as the Earl of Kildare.
In the later centuries of British rule the Lords Justices were three office-holders in the Kingdom of Ireland who in the absence of the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland fulfilled the social and political duties of the Viceroy as head of the Irish executive.
The office-holders were usually the
- Church of Ireland primate, the Archbishop of Armagh,
- the Lord Chancellor of Ireland, and
- the Speaker of the Irish House of Commons.
Among their duties was to welcome the incoming Lord Lieutenant when he arrived in state in the port of Dublin, having travelled from Great Britain to take up his post.
The decision in 1765 of the government of Great Britain to require the viceroy to be a full-time resident in Ireland, rather than just pay visits during sessions of parliament, removed the need for the Lords Justices, while the abolition of the Irish Parliament in 1800 meant that there was no longer a speaker of the House of Commons to serve as a Lord Justice.
[edit] Lord Justices
- Hamo de Valois (in office in 1197)
- Gerald FitzWilliam FitzGerald, Lord Offaly (d. 1205)
- Maurice FitzGerald FitzGerald, Lord Offaly (1229 - c.1248 )
- Stephen de Longuespee (d. 1260 in office)
- Sir James Audley (d. June 23, 1272 in office)
- Maurice FitzMaurice Fitzgerald (d. 1286) (July 1272 - )
- William de Vescy ( - 1291)
- Thomas FitzMaurice FitzGerald, Lord Offaly (d. 1296) (April to October 1295)
- John Logan (October 18, 1295 - )
- Roger de Mortimer, 1st Earl of March (1285 - 1330) Justiciar of Ireland
- Thomas FitzGerald, 2nd Earl of Kildare (d. 1328) (1320 - 1328)
- Sir John Darcy (1329 - still in office in 1335)
- Maurice FitzGerald, 1st Earl of Desmond (d. January 1356) (July 1355 - Jan 1356)
- Gerald Fitzerald, 4th Earl of Desmond (k. 1397) (1367 - )
- Sir Francis Bryan, Knight-Marshal, (d. February 2, 1549 in office)
- Arthur Forbes, 1st Earl of Granard (1623-1695) (in office 1671 and 1673)
[edit] See also
- Lord Deputy of Ireland
- Lord Lieutenant of Ireland
- Lord Chancellor of Ireland
- Lord Chief Justice of Ireland
[edit] References
Lodge, John, Archdall, Mervyn, A.M., The Peerage of Ireland, Dublin, 1789.
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