John Bathe (politician)
John Bathe (died c.1559) was an Irish barrister and judge. He was a member of a famous legal dynasty, and had a distinguished career under the Tudors, holding office as Solicitor General for Ireland and Chief Justice of the Irish Common Pleas.
He was a native of County Meath, a member of the long-established Anglo-Irish Bathe family of Athcarne Castle. The family produced several distinguished judges and lawyers; his cousin James Bathe served as Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer under four monarchs.[1] The family had claimed the title Baron Louth in the fifteenth century, but their right to it was not recognised by the Crown, which bestowed it on the Plunkett family.
He was at Lincoln's Inn in 1536, and was called to the Bar in 1539. He was in the service of the English Crown in Ireland by 1546, when he replaced Walter Cowley as Principal Solicitor for Ireland. In 1550, he became King's Serjeant and Solicitor General. In 1554 he became Chief Justice of the Irish Common Pleas, and held office until 1559;[2] it is unclear whether Queen Elizabeth I chose to replace the Chief Justice of her half-sister, predecessor, and rival Mary, or whether he died that year. We do know that he had been highly thought of by the English Crown, being praised for "knowledge of the laws of England, diligence, discretion and loyalty."[3]
He had at least two sons: his elder son was Sir William Bathe of Athcarne Castle (died 1597), who was also a judge of the Court of Common Pleas.[4] On William's death Athcarne passed to his younger brother James, whose descendant, also called James, was a leading member of Confederate Ireland. After the English Civil War Athcarne was forfeited, but in 1665 the younger James's son Sir Luke Bathe recovered it, as a reward for what were described as his family's sufferings in the cause of the English Crown, although they now held it as tenants of the Crown.