JAMES URIELL

JAMES URIELL

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José Antonio Villarreal thumbnail

José Antonio Villarreal

José Antonio Villarreal (30 July 1924 – 13 January 2010) was a Chicano novelist. Villarreal was born in 1924 in Los Angeles, California, to migrant Mexican farmworkers. Like Juan Manuel Rubio in Pocho, Villarreal's father fought with Pancho Villa in the Mexican Revolution. He spent four years in the Navy before attending the University of California, Berkeley in 1950. He cited his influences as Spanish literature, Latin American literature, primarily Mexican literature; English literature, specifically James Joyce, William Faulkner, and Thomas Wolfe.

In connection with: José Antonio Villarreal

José

Antonio

Villarreal

Title combos: José Antonio Antonio José Villarreal

Description combos: Chicano English Villa Latin the 1950 Joyce novelist in in and Navy was University literature and in in Revolution Like 30 Spanish spent 2010 Chicano Angeles California Villarreal Juan Chicano novelist in Angeles the 13 Revolution Chicano the born Antonio He years four California Mexican literature Thomas James as literature Juan He attending literature literature years his born Manuel the Revolution father primarily in Pocho Antonio and years in January 1950 Los Pocho four in four 1924 July as literature in

Serjeant-at-law (Ireland)

This is a list of lawyers who held the rank of serjeant-at-law at the Bar of Ireland.

In connection with: Serjeant-at-law (Ireland)

Serjeant

at

law

Ireland

Title combos: Serjeant at Serjeant at law Serjeant at law Ireland

Description combos: This is of This the held of held at This Bar the is serjeant Bar Bar This is at of This law held at of This of the who rank lawyers of of held of at This at This the serjeant is the serjeant This is of at This is of rank Ireland Bar lawyers at of who rank the serjeant at who This Bar law is of held the who This serjeant is Bar law list of of of lawyers

Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer thumbnail

Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer

The Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer was the Baron (judge) who presided over the Irish Court of Exchequer. This was a mirror of the equivalent court in England, and was one of the four courts which sat in the building in Dublin which is still called The Four Courts. The title Chief Baron was first used in 1309 by Walter de Islip. In the early centuries of its existence, it was a political as well as a judicial office, and as late as 1442 the Lord Treasurer of Ireland thought it necessary to recommend that the Chief Baron should always be a properly trained lawyer (which Michael Gryffin, the Chief Baron at the time, was not). There are two cryptic references in the Patent Rolls, for 1386 and 1390, to the Liberty of Ulster having its own Chief Baron. The last Chief Baron, The Rt Hon. Christopher Palles, continued to hold the title after the Court was merged into a new High Court of Justice in Ireland in 1878, until his retirement in 1916, when the office lapsed.

In connection with: Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer

Chief

Baron

of

the

Irish

Exchequer

Title combos: Chief Baron Irish Chief Exchequer the of Chief Baron

Description combos: Chief High last was is and over last for equivalent Michael to still the was The Hon thought as High was In sat was recommend his hold cryptic 1309 as mirror the in the was into its properly the which the office when judicial was Irish was Baron as Baron the the of Baron of Baron are Chief own its recommend to the of be Ireland the title to Baron should last when was continued which Gryffin Rolls having the the

Christopher Bernevall

Christopher Bernevall, or Barnewall (1370–1446) was an Irish politician and judge of the fifteenth century, who held the offices of Vice-Treasurer of Ireland and Lord Chief Justice of Ireland. He was deeply involved in the political controversies of his time, and was a leading opponent of the powerful Anglo-Irish magnate James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond. His elder son Nicholas also held office as Lord Chief Justice, and his younger son Robert was created the first Baron Trimleston.

In connection with: Christopher Bernevall

Christopher

Bernevall

Title combos: Bernevall Christopher

Description combos: powerful an the 1370 his and Irish leading was younger Butler an was Butler of the of was Chief Anglo and of Christopher judge an was Baron the Irish his powerful time judge Barnewall the of was judge deeply and time son Lord of elder fifteenth century held controversies son was his younger 4th Anglo 1446 Chief as or the Baron Trimleston Anglo also in an 1370 first judge of Christopher of Vice involved time the and He and politician Barnewall

James Uriell

James (or Jacob) Uriell (died c.1424) was an Irish landowner and judge who held office very briefly as Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer.

In connection with: James Uriell

James

Uriell

Title combos: James Uriell

Description combos: Uriell who Baron Uriell as an the landowner Baron who Exchequer 1424 was Chief briefly who an landowner held held Jacob Irish briefly Uriell landowner very Baron judge the office who briefly Jacob who and died Chief of Chief Exchequer who judge or very Baron James held was held Irish was 1424 office landowner James the Uriell 1424 landowner Jacob and an briefly Chief died Exchequer landowner office died as was Exchequer Irish or Baron James Uriell 1424 Irish as of

John Blakeney (Irish judge)

John Blakeney (died 1438) was an Irish judge of the fifteenth century, who served three times as Chief Justice of the Common Pleas. He was born in Dublin, to a long-established Dublin family. It is unclear if he was a relative of James Blakeney, another senior official of the same generation who held office as Chancellor of the Exchequer of Ireland and as Chief Escheator. He is first heard of as a Crown official in 1405, when he was ordered to convey lands at Navan to Sir Jenico d'Artois. In 1413 he was acting as judge of assize in Dublin and the counties of the Pale. He was appointed Chief Justice of the Irish Common Pleas in 1420 at Donore, the Crown authorities "trusting in his fealty and circumspection", stated that the appointment was "for his good services already done and to be done in the future". According to the letters patent appointing him, he was to hold office so long as he was of good behaviour. His salary was £28 per annum. He was removed from office in 1424 but reappointed in June 1425. He heard a complex case of novel disseisin in 1425. He was superseded again in 1428 by Sir James Alleyn, but finally confirmed in office in 1430, and remained in office until his death. He was summoned to Westminster on unspecified business in 1429. He was ex officio a member of the Privy Council of Ireland, and there is a record of at least one Council meeting which he attended in 1436, concerning a proposed journey to England on official business by Lord Stanley, the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. He died in 1438. He was one of a panel of senior judges who were regularly appointed to commissions of inquiry into allegations of treason, serious crime or civil disturbance. Other recurring members of the panel were James Cornwalsh, Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer, and Reginald de Snyterby, second Baron of the Court of Exchequer. In 1426 these three judges and Christopher Bernevall, the King's Serjeant, sat at Trim, County Meath to hear a charge of felony against Edward Dantsey, Bishop of Meath. The alleged felony was the theft of a chalice from the parish priest of "Taveragh" (probably Tara) in County Meath. The Bishop vigorously maintained his innocence, and in fact, he was innocent: a man called Penthony later confessed to being the thief. The case was removed to Parliament, where Bishop Dantsey was acquitted. Penthony later sought absolution for his sins and received a pardon for the crime. A judicial commission might deal with more mundane matters, as when Blakeney together with Sir Laurence Merbury, Lord Chancellor of Ireland and James Uriell, the former Chief Baron, inquired, in about 1421, into the proper line of inheritance to the lands of the Bathe family at Rathfeigh, County Meath. In 1432 he sat with his fellow Chief Justice Stephen de Bray and two other judges to hear a case of novel disseisin concerning lands in The Curragh, County Kildare. What seems to have been the last judicial commission appointing Blakeney as a member, dated November 1434, and which included most of the senior judges, was to inquire into all treasons committed in Dublin and the adjoining counties of the Pale.

In connection with: John Blakeney (Irish judge)

John

Blakeney

Irish

judge

Title combos: judge Irish Blakeney John Irish judge John Blakeney Irish

Description combos: official dated Pleas Penthony removed in ordered Meath Donore charge and he to counties the of novel of from to counties which Exchequer he the seems James of at born established Justice appointment and was Blakeney in times Serjeant appointment at he was in from He which in concerning an commission but he of meeting sins by Council Westminster in most senior felony office of or Bishop so three fifteenth of was of times family the about adjoining deal and Meath

Roger Hawkenshaw

Roger Hawkenshaw or Hakenshawe (died 1434) was an Irish judge and Privy Councillor. He was Irish by birth. He was possibly the son, but more likely the grandson, of an earlier Roger Hawkenshaw, or Hackenshawe, a senior Crown official who was Escheator of Ireland in the 1370s. The elder Roger Hawkenshaw died in 1375. The younger Roger is first heard of in 1409, when Richard Petir, who was mentioned in the Patent Roll in 1400 as a clerk in the royal service, appointed him as one of his attorneys to manage his Irish affairs during his absence abroad. In the same year, as a mark of the Crown's favour, he was granted jointly with Henry Stanyhurst the lands of Robert Bernevall, a minor, so long as they were in royal hands. In 1415 he was appointed a temporary judge on a panel of five (which included James Uriell) to hear an action for novel disseisin against Alice Brown of Brownstown, County Kildare. He was appointed second justice of the Court of King's Bench (Ireland) in 1416, on the death of John Bermyngham, at a salary of £20 a year. In the same year he acted as Deputy to the Lord Chancellor of Ireland, Thomas Cranley, who was an old man even by modern standards and was frequently too infirm to carry out his duties (he died the following year). Roger also acted from time to time as Deputy to Cranley's successor, Sir Laurence Merbury. Soon after his appointment as Deputy he and Richard Ashwell, a senior clerk in Chancery and future Master of the Rolls in Ireland, were ordered to prepare and enrol all the Chancery writs, as the Chancellor's frequent absences on royal business meant that he could not perform such tasks in person. They were also commissioned to administer justice in several parts of the kingdom to such of the King's liege subjects as could not repair to the Court of Chancery to prosecute their just causes "by reason of the distance and danger of the way". In 1418, he was one of those given permission by the Crown to found a new Chapel, called St. John's Chapel, near Dublin, as was his future colleague Reginald de Snyterby. Whether the chapel was ever built is uncertain. In the same year he was granted property in Ardee, formerly owned by Richard Burgess. In 1420, the Crown, having received numerous complaints from the citizens of County Meath of illegal seizure of foodstuffs and other property by the troops and purveyors of the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, appointed Roger and his colleague Richard Sydgrave to inquire into the matter. Roger was reappointed to the King's Bench in 1422, at the start of the reign of Henry VI. He received the same salary of £20, plus a small daily payment called "wages". In 1425 the Council ordered that the arrears of his salary be paid. In 1427 he complained again that his fees were in arrears. The Crown ordered the Treasury to investigate, and it was found that the fees were indeed in arrears to the sum of £127. The Crown duly ordered that he be paid the arrears. In the same year he was appointed one of the justices and Keepers of the Peace for County Meath. He was ex-officio a member of the Privy Council of Ireland. He attended an important meeting of the Council in December 1428, which debated the question of whether the Lord Treasurer of Ireland could act through a Deputy while he was absent in England. Roger is thought to have died in 1434.

In connection with: Roger Hawkenshaw

Roger

Hawkenshaw

Title combos: Hawkenshaw Roger

Description combos: he Council is or out whether 1420 frequent an in absence Cranley royal of an official the of Ardee Sir one time in they as arrears who Burgess The he Chapel could the Bench by by called property those the colleague is the and as Roger year younger parts be the clerk person senior reappointed Laurence Ireland Alice was his such important Dublin Ardee Richard not same as The year earlier Hakenshawe Alice senior or to second clerk absences He who

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