for the ChiefBaron of the Exchequer in Ireland ChiefBaron of the Exchequer Ireland The ChiefBaron of the Exchequer was the first baron i.e. , judge of the England English Exchequer of pleas . In the absence of both the Treasurer of the Exchequer or First Lord of the Treasury , and the Chancellor of the Exchequer , it was he who presided in the equity court and answered the bar i.e. spoke for the court. ref Bryson, W., The equity side of the Exchequer Its jurisdiction, administration, procedures ... of the Exchequer of pleas. The chiefbaron along with the three puisne barons, sat as a court of common law , heard suits in the court of equity, and settled revenue disputes. A puisne baron was styled Mr Baron X and the chiefbaron as LordChiefBaron X . From 1550 1579, there was a major distinction between the chiefbaron and the second, third and fourth puisne barons. The difference was in social status and education . All of the chief barons had been trained as lawyer s in the inns of court ... M., The Oxford Companion to Law, Appendix I, list of Chief Barons 1660 1880 DEFAULTSORT ChiefBaron Of The Exchequer Category Exchequer offices Category English judges fr ChiefBaron of the Exchequer ... s at law, all of the chief barons who served Queen Elizabeth I , had attained the highest and most prestigious rank of a lawyer, serjeant at law . In 1875, the Court of Exchequer became the Exchequer Division of the High Court of Justice High Court . Following the death of the last chiefbaron, the division ... date September 2009 Chief Barons of the Exchequer 1423 John Juyn Sir John Juyn 1483 Humfrey Starky ... William Alexander 1831 John Copley, 1st Baron Lyndhurst The Lord Lyndhurst 1834 James Scarlett, 1st Baron Abinger Sir James Scarlett 1844 Sir Frederick Pollock, 1st Baronet Sir Frederick Pollock 1866 Fitzroy Kelly Sir Fitzroy Kelly See also Court of Exchequer Scotland ChiefBaron of the Court of Exchequer ... Wilde jurist John Wilde 1655 William Steele Lord Chancellor of Ireland William Steele 1658 Thomas ... more details
The ChiefBaron of the Irish Exchequer ref cite book title The manual of dates author George Henry Townsend year 1877 publisher Frederick Warne page 369 url http books.google.com books?id ld0MAAAAYAAJ&dq Chief 20Baron 20of 20the 20Exchequer 20 22henry 20joy 22&pg PA369 v onepage&q Chief 20Baron 20of 20the 20Exchequer 20 22henry 20joy 22&f false accessdate 2010 12 31 ref ref cite book title Haydn s dictionary of dates and universal information relating to all ages and nations author Joseph Haydn coauthors Benjamin Vincent year 1904 publisher G. P. Putnam s Sons page url http books.google.com books?id Ab0OAAAAYAAJ&lpg PA448&dq 22john 20 20hely 22 20doyne 201690 20 22chief 20baron 22&pg PA448 v onepage&q 22john 20 20hely 22 20doyne 201690 20 22chief 20baron 22&f false accessdate 2010 12 31 ref was a senior judge who oversaw the Court of Exchequer Ireland . It was a mirror of the equivalent Exchequer of Pleas court in England and one of the four courts which sat in the building still called The Four Courts . The title ChiefBaron was first used in 1309 for Walter de Islip. The last and probably greatest ChiefBaron, The Right Honourable The Rt. Hon. Christopher Palles , continued to hold the title after the Court was merged into a new High Court of Justice for Ireland in 1878. Chief Barons of the Irish Exchequer Walter de Islip 1309 William de Meynes 1311 Nicholas de Balscote 1313 Richard le Brun 1319 Adam de Herwynton 1324 Thomas de Montpellier 1327 Roger de Berthorp 1327 John de Braidstone 1329 William de Tickhill 1331 Robert le Poer 1331 Thomas Crosse 1335 Hubert de Burgh 1337 Robert le Poer again 1339 Hubert de Burgh again 1344 Robert de Emeldon 1351 John de Burnham 1355 Robert de Holywood 1363 John Keppock 1364 Robert de Holywood, again 1367 Stephen Bray 1376 Robert Michel ... Thomas Dalton 2 September 1725 Thomas Marlay 29 September 1730 John Bowes, 1st Baron Bowes John ... James Dennis, 1st Baron Tracton James Dennis afterwards Baron Tracton 3 July 1777 Walter Hussey Burgh ... more details
Winch , knt, chiefbaron from the exchequer made a justice of the common pleas of England 1612 Sir John Denham judge John Denham , knt chiefbaron, from the Exchequer 1617 William Jones judge Sir William ..., for a brief period between 1922 and 1924, the LordChief Justice of Ireland Irish language Irish ... the judges sitting at common law. After 1877, the LordChief Justice assumed the presidency of the Queen ... in Dublin. Thomas Lefroy , later LordChief Justice of Ireland LCJ 1852 1866 , was used by Jane Austen ... in their youths. Other prominent LordChief Justices of Ireland include Lord Whiteside LCJ 1866 1876 ... and Thomas Marlay , James Ley and Peter O Brien LordChief Justice Peter O Bryan . James Campbell, 1st ... LordChief Justice, Lord Kilwarden, was killed by a crowd during Robert Emmet s 1803 rebellion . Abolition of the Position The abolition of the position of LordChief Justice of Ireland was originally ... originally proposed that the LordChief Justice of Ireland would become the LordChief Justice of Southern ..., provided that while he would in effect be the first LordChief Justice of Southern Ireland , his title remained that of LordChief Justice of Ireland , although this was a transitional provision ... statute. ref This left the office of the LordChief Justice of Ireland as the most senior judge in the Irish ... of the position of the LordChief Justice of Ireland. ref Article 75, Constitution of the Irish ... superseded the position of LordChief Justice of Ireland as the highest judicial office in the Irish ..., 1st Baron Barry of Santry Sir James Barry , knt afterwards Lord Santry 1673 Sir John Povey, knt ... Killanin Michael Morris , Chief Justice of Ireland, became Lord of Appeal in Ordinary in 1889 1889 ... Hogan, R.R. Cherry, LordChief Justice of Ireland, 1914 16 External links http www.searcs web.com fitzgerald.html Gearoid Iarla Fitzgerald, Third Earl of Desmond, LordChief Justice of Ireland in 1367 http www.clarelibrary.ie eolas coclare history protection.htm LordChief Justice O Bryan anecdotes ... more details
of Ireland LordChiefBaron of the Exchequer Chancellor of the ExchequerExchequer of Chester ... model with a LordChiefBaron and 4 Barons. The court adopted English forms of procedure and had ... source excheq1.html Dialogue concerning the Exchequer ref See also Fisc Lord Chancellor of Scotland ...The Exchequer is a government department of the United Kingdom responsible for the management and collection of taxation and other government revenue s. The historical Exchequer developed judicial roles ... calculations. History of the Exchequer in England and Wales At an early stage in England certainly ... concerning the Exchequer ref name Dialogue concerning the Exchequer http avalon.law.yale.edu medieval excheq.asp Dialogue concerning the Exchequer ref , the Exchequer was split into two components the purely administrative Exchequer of Receipt , which collected revenue, and the judicial Exchequer of Pleas , a court concerned with the King s revenue. According to the Dialogue concerning the Exchequer , ref name Dialogue concerning the Exchequer an early medieval work describing the practice of the Exchequer, the Exchequer itself referred to the cloth laid over a large table, 10 feet by 5 feet .... The name referred to the resemblance of the table to a chess board French echec . The term Exchequer ... Farm revenue commutation farm . The Chancellor of the Exchequer would then question them concerning ... the 19th c. the records of the Exchequer were kept in the Pell Office , adjacent to Westminster ...&output text ref After the Union The Exchequer became unnecessary as a revenue collecting department ..., exchequer has come to mean the HM Treasury Treasury and, colloquially, pecuniary possessions in general as in the company s exchequer is low . History of the Exchequer in Scotland The Scottish Exchequer .... The Scottish exchequer was slower to develop a separate judicial role, and it was not until ... roles never became completely separated into two bodies, as with the English Exchequer ... more details
Lordchief justice may refer to LordChief Justice of England and Wales LordChief Justice of Ireland LordChief Justice of Northern Ireland LordChief Justice of the Common Pleas LordChief Justice of the King s Bench for Ireland See also Lord President of the Court of Session dab ... more details
chief justice. That of the Exchequer Court was styled as the LordChiefBaron of the Exchequer , and that of the Common ...Infobox Political post post LordChief Justice body England and Wales nativename insignia Royal Coat ... and Wales department image Lord Judge LCJ October 2010.JPG alt incumbent Igor Judge, Baron ... of England and Wales CourtsEnglandWales The LordChief Justice of England and Wales is the head of the judiciary ... functions from the office of Lord Chancellor. The LordChief Justice is also the presiding judge ... Chief Justice to act as head of the judiciary after the Lord Chancellor relinquished that role was Nicholas Phillips, Baron Phillips of Worth Matravers Lord Phillips of Worth Matravers . Under the Constitutional Reform Act 2005, the LordChief Justice is chosen by a specially appointed committee, convened by the Judicial Appointments Commission . The current LordChief Justice is Lord Judge , who ... or title. Until the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 came into force on 3 April 2006, the LordChief ... s or Queen s Bench to be known simply as the LordChief Justice . Although the King s Bench Court ..., creating a single LordChief Justice of England . The suffix and Wales , now found in statutes ... Chief Justice of Northern Ireland . The LordChief Justice s equivalent in Scotland is the Lord ... left Sir John Popham LordChief Justice John Popham 2 June 1592 25 June 1607 align right align left ... 1875 20 November 1880 died in office John Coleridge, 1st Baron Coleridge Lord Coleridge 29 November 1880 14 June 1894 died in office Charles Russell, Baron Russell of Killowen Lord Russell of Killowen ... 1913 8 March 1921 Alfred Lawrence, 1st Baron Trevethin Lord Trevethin 15 April 1921 2 March 1922 ... Goddard, Baron Goddard Lord Goddard 23 January 1946 29 September 1958 Hubert Parker, Baron Parker of Waddington The Lord Parker of Waddington 29 September 1958 20 April 1971 John Widgery, Baron Widgery Lord Widgery 20 April 1971 15 April 1980 Geoffrey Lane, Baron Lane Lord Lane 15 April 1980 27 ... more details
The LordChief Justice of Northern Ireland is the head of the judiciary in Northern Ireland , presiding over the Courts of Northern Ireland . The present LordChief Justice of Northern Ireland is Sir Declan Morgan . His counterparts in England and Wales and in Scotland are the LordChief Justice of England and Wales and the Lord President of the Court of Session . The position was established with the creation of Northern Ireland in 1922. Lords Chief Justice of Northern Ireland 1922 ref Titles and styles appear as they were when in office ref Denis Henry The Rt Hon. Sir Denis Henry, Bt , 1922 1925 Sir William Moore, 1st Baronet The Rt Hon. Sir William Moore, Bt 1925 1937 Sir James Andrews, 1st Baronet The Rt Hon. Sir James Andrews, Bt 1937 1951 John MacDermott, Baron MacDermott The Rt Hon. The Lord MacDermott 1951 1971 Robert Lynd Erskine Lowry Major The Rt Hon. The Lord Lowry 1971 1988 Brian Hutton, Baron Hutton The Rt Hon. Sir Brian Hutton 1988 1997 Robert Carswell, Baron Carswell The Rt Hon. Sir Robert Carswell 1997 2004 Brian Kerr Judge The Rt Hon. Sir Brian Kerr 2004 2009 Declan Morgan The Rt Hon. Sir Declan Morgan 2009 See also LordChief Justice of Ireland LordChief Justice of Southern Ireland references Sources The Longman Handbook of Modern Irish History since 1800, N. C. Fleming and Alan O Day, p.420, ISBN 0 582 08102 5 Category Lists of judges Northern Ireland Category Law in Northern Ireland Category Bar of Northern Ireland Category Lords Chief Justice of Northern Ireland Category Lists of people from Northern Ireland LordChief Justice Category Northern Ireland law related lists Category Judiciary of Northern Ireland ... more details
Wikify date June 2011 Sir Henry Fortescue fl. 1426 , was lordchief justice of the common pleas in Ireland. Fortescue was the eldest son of Sir John Fortescue, captain of Meaux , and brother to John Fortescue judge Sir John Fortescue , lordchief justice of England . It is probable that he was a student of Lincoln s Inn , and almost certain that he was elected member of parliament for Devon UK Parliament constituency Devon on 11 November 1421. His appointment as chief justice of the common pleas in Ireland is dated 25 June 1426, and for a short period his name occurs several times in the Calendar of the Irish Chancery Rolls . From these entries, which contain all that is known of his career, it appears that a salary was assigned to him of forty pounds per annum, which was soon afterwards altered to forty pence per diem, in addition to the custody of certain manors. Fortescue held his appointment only for seventeen months, and was relieved from it by the king s writ on 8 November 1427. Almost immediately afterwards he was commissioned by the Irish parliament to accompany Sir James Alleyn on a mission to England, to lay before the king Henry VI of England the grievances of his Irish subjects. Again, in 1428, he was sent with Sir Thomas Strange by the lords and commons assembled in Dublin, with the concurrence of John Sutton, 1st Baron Dudley Sir John Sutton , the lord lieutenant, with a number of articles of complaint to be laid again before the king. One of the grievances which he was instructed to represent related to the insults and assaults made upon himself and Sir James Alleyn during their former mission, from which it may be concluded that their first visit to the court had not met with much success. The other griefs for which the parliament prayed redress related to the frequent changes of governors and justices, to the debts left behind them by each successive lord lieutenant, to the exclusion of Irish law students from the English inns of court, and to the treatment ... more details
to the throne, and after his accession he was appointed LordChief Justice of the Court of King ... aloof from political intrigue. On the retirement of John Somers, 1st Baron Somers Somers from the Lord ..., Lives of Eminent English Judges of the 17th and 18th Centuries 1846 Campbell s Lives of the LordChief ... Holt, Knight, LordChief justice of the Court of King s Bench, J. R. A Gentleman of the Inner Temple ... LordChief Justice before Robert Wright judge Sir Robert Wright after John Parker, 1st Earl of Macclesfield .... 90, Lord Holt CJ held that An affirmation at the time of a sale is a warranty, provided it appears ... Category Alumni of Oriel College, Oxford Category English judges Category Lords Chief Justice of England ... more details
box title LordChief Justice before Christopher Wray Sir Christopher Wray after Thomas Fleming ... and Wales attorney general . In 1592 he was appointed Chief Justice of the King s Bench Chief Justice ... Lords Chief Justice of England and Wales Category Alumni of Balliol College, Oxford Category ... more details
of the Exchequer of Ireland , the Lord High Chancellor , the LordChiefBaron and the other ... court hearings. In court, he was assisted by the three Barons of the Exchequer of Ireland the LordChief, second and third Barons. ref Howard 1776 p.10 ref The LordChiefBaron was the most senior ... of the Exchequer of Ireland Chancellor and Lord High Treasurer Treasurer in practice, only the Barons ... in Ireland. The Lord High Treasurer was able to hear any case in the Exchequer of Pleas, and was also ... of the Inferior Exchequer included the Lord High Treasurer, who in practice rarely acted ...File Exchequer of Ireland.jpg thumb right The Exchequer of Ireland at work during the 15th century. The Exchequer ... revenue. Modelled on the Exchequer English Exchequer , it was created in 1210 after John of England applied English law and legal structure to the Kingdom of Ireland. The Exchequer was divided into two parts the Superior Exchequer, which acted as a court of equity law equity and revenue in a way similar to the Exchequer of Pleas , and the Inferior Exchequer, which directly collected revenue from those who owed The Crown money, principally rents for Crown lands. The Exchequer primarily worked in a way ... of Great Britain and Ireland United Kingdom , the Exchequer was merged with the English Exchequer in 1817 and ceased to function as an independent body. History The Exchequer of Ireland was formed in 1210, when John of England King John applied English law, which included the Exchequer , to Ireland. Like the English Exchequer, the Exchequer of Ireland was divided into two parts the judicial, or Superior Exchequer, which was a court, and the receipt, or Inferior Exchequer, which was tasked with receiving rents and other revenues for The Crown . The principal purpose of the Exchequer was to act ... p.2 ref As with the English Exchequer, the judicial part was a court of both law and equity law equity , and was occasionally known as the Irish Exchequer of Pleas, after the Exchequer of Pleas English ... more details
, 12th Baronet Alexander Cockburn , LordChiefBaron of the Exchequer and LordChief Justice of England ... of the Exchequer, judicial officials led by the ChiefBaron of the ExchequerChiefBaron ... ChiefBaron of the Exchequer alt A man in a dated photograph in a suit with a white court wig ..., when John Smith judge Baron Smith was called to Edinburgh to be a temporary Court of Exchequer Scotland ChiefBaron of the Scottish Exchequer . In 1830 a fifth Baron was permanently added to relieve .... ref Bryson 2008 p.46 ref The First Baron was the ChiefBaron of the Exchequer if the Chancellor ... by the ChiefBaron of the Exchequer from barristers of five years standing, holding offices ... William Paulet since the Lord High Treasurer was head of the Exchequer, with the Treasurer ... pace and because it was led by the John Finch, 1st Baron Finch Lord Chancellor , a political figure ... undertaken by the Lord High Treasurer . ref Thomas 1848 p.4 ref The Exchequer was unique ... replaced by a dedicated Treasurer of the Exchequer although earlier writs show that the Lord High Treasurer ... involved in the Exchequer of Pleas as a check on the Lord High Treasurer . ref Thomas 1848 p.5 ref He evolved out of the Lord Chancellor s clerk, or clericus cancellari , who sat in the Exchequer ... were the Baron of the Exchequer Barons of the Exchequer , or barones scaccari , who were originally ... In the early years of the Exchequer s existence, the Barons were the chief auditors of the accounts ... important where previously only the ChiefBaron had been appointed from the Serjeant at Law Serjeants ... . ref Bryson 2008 p.54 ref A Baron could leave the Exchequer in one of three situations resignation .... ref name Bryson 2008 p.58 Remembrancer The King s Remembrancer was the chief clerk of the Exchequer ... of the Exchequer came to an end. ref Bryson 2008 p.64 ref In addition to an examiner, each Baron had ... to take fees for their work. The ChiefBaron had two clerks, while the puisne Barons had one each. ref ... more details
of barons of the Exchequer, and were under the Lord High Treasurer treasurer and LordChiefBaron of the Exchequerchief justice . They were assisted by a clerk and escheator Jews might hold these offices ... court. It was before this court of the Jewish Exchequer that in 1257 the trial of Chief ...The Exchequer of the Jews Latin Scaccarium Judaeorum was a division of the Exchequer of Pleas Court of Exchequer ... that a separate Aaron s Exchequer was constituted. The History of the Jews in England Massacres at London ... E&artid 543 Exchequer, of the Jews , Jewish Encyclopedia . ref All the debts, pledges, mortgages ..., and this was attached to the Exchequer of Pleas Exchequer of Westminster and called the Exchequer ... were aided in their deliberations by the presbyter judaeorum chief rabbi , who doubtless assisted them in deciding questions of Jewish law which may have come before them. ref name JE Functions The Exchequer ... himself was sent to the Tower and his lands and chattels were distrain ed. ref name JE The Exchequer ... in the Jewish Exchequer were mainly the chirograph s recording and the Starr law starr s annulling ... The tax lists for the tallages were made out by the Jewish assistants of the Exchequer, who were acquainted ..., the alleged forgeries of Chirographs, and the like, and were recorded on the plea rolls of the Exchequer ... of the Exchequer of the Jews, A. D. 1220 1284 The latter society has subsequently undertaken publication ... Rolls of the Exchequer of the Jews http www.archive.org details calendarplearol00britgoog Vol. I ... Eyre reports, Exchequer of the Jews reports, pre 1290 assize reports, pre 1290 reports from unidentified ... Brand, Paul 2005 Introduction , in Plea Rolls of the Exchequer of the Jews , Vol. VI Edward I, 1279 81 Brown, Reva Berman & McCartney, Sean 2005 The Exchequer of the Jews Revisited , in The Medieval ... Cramer, A. 1941 The Origins and Functions of the Jewish Exchequer , in Speculum 16 226 ... 1711 1769 , http www.archive.org details historyantiquiti01mado History of the Exchequer , i. 221 ... more details
of the High Court , a senior judge, or the LordChiefBaron of the Exchequer , a defunct judicial office ..., Pancakes, 1969 ref The last LordChief Justice to serve in this way was Thomas Denman, 1st Baron ... serve as Chancellor of the Exchequer if he sat in the Commons the last Chancellor who was simultaneously Prime Minister & Chancellor of the Exchequer was Stanley Baldwin in 1923. Formerly, in cases when the Chancellorship was vacant, the LordChief Justice of the King s Bench would act as Chancellor ... Cottington , Lord Cottington from 1631 File Francis Cottington, 1st Baron Cottington from NPG.jpg 75px ... party meta color Robert Benson, 1st Baron Bingley Robert Benson File Robert Benson, Lord Bingley.jpg ... John Pratt br small interim LordChief Justice of the King s Bench File Sir John Pratt LCJ.jpg 75px ... interim LordChief Justice of the King s Bench File SirWilliamLee.jpg 75px 8 March 1754 6 April 1754 ... The Lord Mansfield br small interim LordChief Justice of the King s Bench File William Murray ... br small Ministry of All the Talents William Grenville, 1st Baron Grenville Lord Grenville style background ... Baron Bexley.jpg 75px 12 May 1812 12 July 1817 Tory Robert Jenkinson, 2nd Earl of Liverpool Lord Liverpool ... background color Tory British political party meta color Charles Abbott, 1st Baron Tenterden The Lord Tenterden br small interim LordChief Justice of the King s Bench File 1stLordTenterden.jpg 75px 8 ... political party meta color Thomas Denman, 1st Baron Denman The Lord Denman br small interim Lord ... List of Lord High Treasurers Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer Notes and references reflist External ... department HM Treasury Her Majesty s Treasury post Chancellor of the Exchequer image George ... of the Exchequer is the title held by the British Cabinet of the United Kingdom Cabinet minister ... Great Offices not to have been occupied by a woman. The Chancellor of the Exchequer is now always Second Lord of the Treasury as one of the Lords Commissioners for executing the office of Lord ... more details
Court of Exchequer may refer to Exchequer of Pleas , an ancient English court that ceased to exist independently in the late nineteenth century Court of Exchequer Chamber , an ancient English appellate court that ceased to exist independently in the late nineteenth century Court of Exchequer Ireland Court of Exchequer Scotland , an ancient Scottish Court disambig ... more details
The Exchequer of Chester was a fiscal court based in the County Palatine of Cheshire Chester . In 1071 the Earl of Chester Earldom of Chester was created, and due to the Earldom s size it ruled Chester almost entirely independently as a County Palatine. ref Stewart Brown 1942 p.289 ref This arrangement necessitated a large number of officials, including several barons who specialised in the financial administration of the County. These gradually became a fiscal court, made up of the Barons of the Exchequer , in a similar arrangement to Exchequer of Pleas that at Westminster . ref Stewart Brown 1942 p.290 ref The earliest records of this organisation come from 1121, when the Earl granted various charters to Chester Abbey . The Exchequer continued working after The Crown took over the County in 1237, mainly concerning itself with collecting the rent from local tenants. ref Stewart Brown 1942 p.292 ref The Exchequer s supreme jurisdiction over Chester was confirmed by the Court of Common Pleas England Court of Common Pleas in 1568, ref Stewart Brown 1942 p.296 ref and it continued operating until 1830, when it was abolished and its powers transferred to the Exchequer and Court of Chancery . ref Stewart Brown 1942 p.297 ref References Reflist Bibliography cite journal last Stewart Brown first R. date 1942 title The Exchequer of Chester journal The English Historical Review publisher Oxford University Press volume 57 issue 227 issn 0013 8266 Category Exchequer offices Category 1830 disestablishments Category 1830 in law ... more details
Image PalaisJustice Rouen d tail.jpg thumb 225px The Tribunal Palais de Justice de Rouen , former exchequer of Normandy Expand French date December 2008 Set up by Rollo , first duke of Normandy, at the start of the 10th century, the Exchequer of Normandy chiquier de Normandie or Exchequer of Rouen chiquier de Rouen was the sovereign court of Normandy , later superseded by the parliament of Normandy . L chiquier tait une assembl e de tous les notables de la province, une esp ce de parlement ambulatoire, qui se tenait deux fois par an pendant trois mois, au commencement du printemps et l entr e de l automne. Les pr lats et les nobles des sept bailliages de Rouen , Caudebec en Caux , vreux , Les Andelys , Caen , Coutances et Alen on qui y si geaient avaient voix d lib rative cause de leurs terres. Le nom d chiquier vient soit de ce que le premier chiquier se serait tenu dans une salle dont le pav tait fait de pierres carr es noires et blanches alternativement, comme les tabliers ou chiquiers servant jouer aux checs soit de ce qu il y avait sur le bureau un tapis chiquet de noir et de blanc. Les pr sidents et autres juges d put s par le roi, qui avaient seuls droit de juger, se tenaient sur les hauts si ges du lieu o se tenait l chiquier. Derri re eux, m me hauteur, taient les abb s, doyens et autres eccl siastiques et, gauche, les comtes, barons et autres nobles, qui avaient s ance mais non voix d lib rative l chiquier. Les baillis et les lieutenants g n raux civils et criminels, les avocats et procureurs du roi des bailliages, les vicomtes, le grand ma tre des eaux et for ts, les lieutenants de l amiraut , les verdiers, les baillis et s n chaux des hauts justiciers et les avocats et procureurs taient tenus d y assister afin de se souvenir de l usage et du style de la coutume de Normandie car elle n tait pas encore r dig e par crit ou, du moins ... de Rieux , de Gu men Penfao Gu m n , le baron d Erval Deslandelles, le vicomte de Pomers, baron ... more details
wiktionary chief chiefs Chief may refer to TOC right Title or rank Chiefs of the Name , the head of a family or clan Chief executive officer , the highest ranking corporate officer of an organization Chief Master Sergeant , in the United States Air Force Chief of police , the head of a police department Chief Petty Officer , a non commissioned officer or equivalent in many navies Chief of the Boat , the senior enlisted sailor on a submarine in the US Navy Chief engineer , the highest senior officer in the engine department on a merchant vessel Chief Officer , the highest senior officer in the deck department on a merchant vessel Editor in Chief , the highest ranking editor of a publication Fire chief , top rank in a fire department Paramount chief , the highest level traditional chief or political leader in a polity Scottish clan chief , the head of a Scottish clan Section Chief , E6 section leader in the United States Army field artillery Tribal chief , the head of a tribal form of self government Warrant Officer , in the United States Army Aircraft Aeronca 50 Chief , an American light plane of the late 1930s Aeronca 11 Chief , a two seat airplane entering production in 1945 Media Literature Chiefs novel Chiefs novel , a 1981 novel by Stuart Woods The Chief play The Chief play , a 2003 one man play about Art Rooney The Chief Leader or just The Chief , a newspaper aimed at civil service workers in New York City Music Chief Records , an independent record label 1957 1964 Chief band , a band signed to Domino Records Chief album Chief album , a 2011 album by Eric Church Television The Chief TV series The Chief TV series , a series on CablePulse 24 in Toronto, Ontario The Chief UK television series The Chief UK television series , a 1990s crime drama Chiefs TV miniseries Chiefs ... Chief comics , the leader of the Doom Patrol The Chief Carmen Sandiego , in the Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego? franchise Galen Tyrol or The Chief , in the 2004 TV series Battlestar Galactica ... more details
of Session was to be Lord Ordinary in Exchequer Causes, this was restated by the Court of Session Act 1988 . ref Section 3, Exchequer causes One of the judges of the Court who usually sits as a Lord Ordinary shall be appointed by the Court by act of sederunt to act as Lord Ordinary in exchequer ... Baron of the Court of Exchequer James Ogilvy, 4th Earl of Findlater 1707 1708 John Smith 1709 1726 Matthew ...CourtsScotland The Court of Exchequer was formerly a distinct part of the Scottish court system court ... are now carried out by the Court of Session . History The date of establishment of the Court of Exchequer ... King s Compositors , then Lords of Exchequer . Article 16 of the Act of Union 1707 provided And that there be a Court of Exchequer in Scotland after the Union, for deciding Questions concerning the Revenues ... of Exchequer has in England And that the said Court of Exchequer in Scotland have power of passing Signatures, Gifts Tutories, and in other things as the Court of Exchequer in Scotland hath And that the Court of Exchequer that now is in Scotland do remain, until a New Court of Exchequer be settled ... of Exchequer in Scotland after the Union, for deciding Questions concerning the Revenues of Customs and Excises there, having the same power and authority in such cases, as the Court of Exchequer has in England ws s Act of Union 1707 Act of Union 1707 at Wikisource ref The new Court of Exchequer was established by the Exchequer Court Scotland Act 1707 . It provided that the judges of the Court were to be the Lord High Treasurer of Kingdom of Great Britain Great Britain and such other persons who might be appointed by royal commission and who were known as the ChiefBaron of Exchequer and Barons of Exchequer. The number of Barons of Exchequer was limited to five. The Court s jurisdiction ... History of the Court cite web title Exchequer records url http www.nas.gov.uk guides exchequer.asp publisher National Archives of Scotland accessdate 2007 11 20 ref In 1856 the jurisdiction of the Exchequer ... more details
The Chancellor of the Exchequer of Ireland was a member of the government of the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland under the Kingdom of Ireland . He headed the Exchequer of Ireland and sat as an Member of Parliament pre Union Ireland MP in the Irish House of Commons . The office should not be confused with the separate office of Lord List of Chief Barons of the Irish ExchequerChiefBaron of the Exchequer of Ireland , comparable to the British LordChiefBaron of the Exchequer , who were judge s. The appointment was not immediately abolished following the Act of Union 1800 which abolished the Parliament of Ireland . The Irish and United Kingdom British Exchequers were only merged in 1816. List of Chancellors 1308 Walter de Thornbury William de Bromleye temp. Edward III of England Edward III 1346 Robert de Emeldon 1385 William FitzWilliam Robert de Herford temp. Richard II of England Richard II 1399 Hugh Banent 1423 Sampson Dartas 1431 James Blakeney 1461 Robert Norreys 1478 Robert St Lawrence, 3rd Baron Howth 1495 Edward Barnewall 1532 Richard Delahyde 1535 John Alan 1536 Thomas Cusack Irish judge 1561 Henry Draycott 1572 Robert Dillon judge 1577 John Bathe 1586 Sir Edward Waterhouse 1589 Sir George Clive 1590 Thomas Molyneux 1596 Sir Richard Cooke 1612 Sir Dudley Norton 1616 Henry Holcrofte 27 October 1617 Thomas Hibbotts Henry Holcrofte in reversion after Hibbotts 1634 Robert Meredyth ... FitzGerald, 2nd Baron FitzGerald and Vesey William Vesey FitzGerald 1816 Nicholas Vansittart, 1st Baron Bexley Nicholas Vansittart Irish Exchequer abolished 1817 References Haydn s Book of Dignities ... Hamilton 23 April 1784 John Foster, 1st Baron Oriel John Foster 17 September 1785 Sir John Parnell, 2nd Baronet 27 January 1799 Isaac Corry 9 July 1804 John Foster, 1st Baron Oriel John Foster 24 February 1806 Sir John Newport, 1st Baronet 30 April 1807 John Foster, 1st Baron Oriel John Foster ... office holders in pre partition Ireland Category Chancellors of the Exchequer of Ireland ... more details
&dsqDb Catalog&dsqPos 7&dsqSearch text Robert 20Arbuthnot title NAS ref and the Exchequer was reconstituted into a court on the English model with a Court of Exchequer Scotland ChiefBaron of the Court of ExchequerLordChiefBaron of the Exchequer and 4 ordinary Barons. The court adopted English forms ... , father of David Dalrymple, Lord Hailes , was appointed Principal Auditor of the Exchequer, with Philp ...The Scottish Exchequer had a similar role of auditing and deciding on Royal revenues as in England. It was not until ... into two bodies, as with the English Exchequer . The Auditor of the Exchequer played a pivotal ... charged with auditing government expenditure is a reference to the Auditor of the Exchequer ... Barbour , author of The Bruce , was, in 1373, one of the Auditors of the Exchequer of Scotland. ref ... , militi, was an Auditor of Exchequer and between 1425 and 1433 he was Governor of Edinburgh ... of Tullibardine d.c1451 was Auditor of the Exchequer in Scotland in 1448. ref http www.thepeerage.com ... Lauder of Blyth , Provost of Edinburgh , was Auditor of the Exchequer. ref Young, Margaret D., MA., editor ... history of this office of Auditor of Exchequer in Scotland commences in 1708 with an Act of Parliament under Anne of Great Britain Queen Anne . It was not expressly established by the Exchequer Court ... General of Bishop s Rents, Auditor of the Exchequer, Assistant Surveyor General of Taxes, Comptroller ... s and Lord Treasurer s Remembrancer , in terms of a Treasury Minute, dated November ... 1714 58, 235 2 . cite book title Auditors of the Foreign Accounts of the Exchequer 1310 27 ... 1923 pages 63 71 small Notes small Robert Arbuthnot who died in Lord Stair s house in Hanover Square ... Lord Stair s business affairs. After his death John Arbuthnot Dr John Arbuthnot was requested to be present ... title National Archives of Scotland cite web title Payments into the Exchequer, fees and duties of offices Auditors of the Exchequer url http www.bopcris.ac.uk bop1700 ref7120.html DEFAULTSORT Auditor ... more details
The Court of Exchequer Ireland was one of the senior courts of common law in Ireland. It was the mirror image of the equivalent Exchequer of Pleas court in England . It was one of the four courts which gave their name to the building still called the Four Courts in Dublin. History According to Elrington Ball ref name Ball Ball, F. Elrington. The Judges in Ireland 1221 1921 . London John Murray, 1926 ref the Irish Court of Exchequer was functioning by 1309, with a ChiefBaron and at least one associate baron. Later in the century it moved briefly to Carlow , which was then closer to the centre of the Pale , but local disturbances soon brought it back to Dublin. Although its workload was traditionally less heavy than that of the Court of King s Bench Ireland , it became notorious for slowness and inefficiency an eighteenth century lawyer spoke of disorganisation almost past remedy . ref name Ball By the mid nineteenth century it had overtaken King s Bench as the busiest common law court, and the death of the ChiefBaron, Stephen Woulfe , in 1840, was widely blamed on the workload. ref name Ball Abolition On the passing of the Supreme Court of Judicature Act Ireland 1877 , the Court of Exchequer was merged with the other three courts and became a division of the High Court of Justice for Ireland. In a further reorganisation in 1897 the Exchequer Division was abolished. The last ChiefBaron, Christopher Palles , retained his rank until he retired in 1916. ref Delaney, V.T.H. Christopher Palles . Alan Figgis and Co. 1960 ref See also ChiefBaron of the Irish Exchequer References reflist Category Courts Category Irish law Category History of Ireland ... more details
The Auditor of the Receipt of the Exchequer was an office in the English Exchequer . The office originated in early times as the clerk of the Lord High Treasurer at the Receipt of the Exchequer. He was responsible for filing and entering the Teller s Bills from the Teller of the Exchequer Tellers of the Exchequer , certifying monies received to the Lord Treasurer, and auditing the books of the Tellers. The title of Auditor was officially attached to the post, combined with that of Tally Writer, during the reign of Elizabeth I of England Elizabeth I . In 1826, the duties of the Chamberlain of the Exchequer Chamberlains of the Exchequer devolved upon the Auditor. The office was abolished, with several other offices of the ancient Exchequer, on 10 October 1834. ref cite book first Francis Sheppard last Thomas title The ancient Exchequer of England year pages 130 131 url http books.google.com books?id uHmQplSkXKgC accessdate 2007 10 10 ref Auditors of the Exchequer Early Richard Chesterfield c. 1356 Robert Derby c. 1363 1367 Thomas Orgrave 1367 1369 John Innocent 1369 1385 John Nottingham later Chancellor of the Exchequer 1385 1390 Robert Cotum 1390 1393 John Candlesby 1393 1399 Henry Somer 1399 1404 John Burgh 1405 1410 William Darell c. 1411 1415 John Iwardeby 1415 c. 1459 William Hextall ? 1460 John Poutrell 1 October 1460 c. 1461 John Iwardeby 4 May 1462 1463 John Poutrell 1463 1464 John Leynton later Chamberlain 20 October 1464 1465 John Croke c. 1467 1469 John Marshall 1469 1471 Thomas Bulkeley 19 October 1471 John Lewes 10 December 1490 Robert Watno 3 May 1514 Thomas Danyell ... William Grenville, 1st Baron Grenville 27 February 1794 George Eden, 1st Earl of Auckland George Eden, 1st Baron Auckland 14 January 1834 To 10 October 1834. References John Sainty civil servant J. C. Sainty comp. , Officers of the Exchequer List and Index Society, Special Series 18, 1983 , 135 39. Reflist Category Exchequer offices ... more details
The Teller of the Receipt of the Exchequer was an office in the English Exchequer . The Tellers of the Exchequer received any money to be paid into the Exchequer, noted the amount in a book, and sent a copy of the entry, called a Teller s Bill, to the Tally Court so that a tally could be made of it. At the end of each day, the money they had received, as determined by the Bills, was removed from their chests to be deposited in the Treasury. During the reign of Richard I of England Richard I , these officials numbered ten, but by the time of Henry III of England Henry III , they had been reduced to four, which number remained constant until the abolition of the office. ref cite book first Francis Sheppard last Thomas title The ancient Exchequer of England year pages 132, 134 url http books.google.com books?id uHmQplSkXKgC accessdate 2007 10 10 ref With several other offices of the ancient Exchequer, that of Teller of the Receipt was done away with on 10 October 1834. Tellers of the Exchequer ... Bertie 13 October 1710 rowspan 3 John Smith Chancellor of the Exchequer John Smith 31 October 1710 ... July 1712 rowspan 3 Thomas Mansel, 1st Baron Mansel December 1712 vacant 1713 rowspan 3 Basil Feilding, 4th Earl of Denbigh 6 November 1714 rowspan 6 John Smith Chancellor of the Exchequer John Smith rowspan 2 John West, 6th Baron De La Warr January 1715 rowspan 2 Sir Roger Mostyn, 3rd Baronet 7 November 1715 rowspan 2 Richard Onslow, 1st Baron Onslow rowspan 7 Lord William Powlett 1716 Richard Hampden 1674 1728 Richard Hampden 21 March 1718 Thomas Newport, 1st Baron Torrington rowspan 7 Thomas Onslow, 2nd Baron Onslow 1719 rowspan 9 George Parker, 2nd Earl of Macclesfield October 1723 vacant ... Yorke, 2nd Earl of Hardwicke 1741 Horatio Walpole, 1st Baron Walpole 1757 James Waldegrave, 2nd Earl ... July 1786 rowspan 3 Edward Thurlow, 1st Baron Thurlow August 1786 Henry Bathurst, 2nd Earl Bathurst ... Manningham References references Haydn s Book of Dignities 1894 Category Exchequer offices ... more details
title Teller of the Exchequer years 1710&ndash 1712 after Thomas Mansel, 1st Baron Mansel The Lord Mansel S bef before Thomas Mansel, 1st Baron Mansel The Lord Mansel S ttl title Teller of the Exchequer ... date December 2009 S start S off Succession box title Chancellor of the Exchequer Chancellor of the Exchequer of England before Charles Montagu, 1st Earl of Halifax after Henry Boyle, 1st Baron ..., 1st Baron Onslow Richard Onslow years 1707&ndash 1708 Succession box title Chancellor of the Exchequer Chancellor of the Exchequer of Great Britain before Henry Boyle, 1st Baron Carleton after Robert ... Neale small years 1679 before William Ashburnham royalist William Ashburnham br George Legge, 1st Baron ..., 1st Baron Walpole of Wolterton Horatio Walpole 1718&ndash 1722 br William Lowndes British politician ... Malpas br William Lowndes British politician William Lowndes S end Chancellor of the Exchequer Speaker ... Smith, John Category 1650s births Category 1723 deaths Category Chancellors of the Exchequer of England Category Chancellors of the Exchequer of Great Britain Category Speakers of the House ... more details