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The reminiscences of Ignatius O’Brien, Lord Chancellor of Ireland, 1913-18 A life in Cork, Dublin and Westminster Daire Hogan & Patrick Maume, editors Ignatius O\u2019Brien was the youngest son of a struggling Cork business family. After somewhat unhappy experiences at<\/p>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>
In October 1641, violence erupted in mid-Ulster that spread throughout the whole kingdom and lasted for more than a decade. The war was neither unpredictable nor was it out of step with the rest of the Stuart kingdoms, or indeed<\/p>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>
The extent and duration of interpreter provision for Irish speakers appearing in court in the long nineteenth century have long been a conundrum. In 1737 the Administration of Justice (Language) Act stipulated that all legal proceedings in Ireland should take<\/p>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>
Regarded as the most celebrated Irish political pamphlet published before 1801, William Molyneux\u2019s\u00a0Case of Ireland, stated\u00a0(1698) was written to demonstrate that English statutes did not becomeof force in Ireland until they had been re-enacted by the Irish parliament. For all<\/p>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>
In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries a wide range of legal issues were decided, not by professional judges, but by panels of laypersons. This book considers various categories of jury, including the trial jury, the coroner\u2019s jury, the grand jury,<\/p>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>
ISBN: 978-1-84682-622-1 Coming July 2017. 304pp; colour ills. Born in Rhode Island, Arthur Browne was a lawyer, a scholar, and a politician in the Ireland of the late eighteenth century and established a brilliant reputation in all three areas at<\/p>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>
Guardian of the Treaty: The Privy Council Appeal and Irish Sovereignty (Four Courts Press 2016)\u00a0ISBN: 978-1-84682-587-3 The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council was the final appellate court of the British Empire. In 1935 the Irish Free State was recognized<\/p>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>
By Colum Kenny Published by\u00a0 Four Courts Press (Dublin, 2002) ISBN-10: 1851826866\u00a0ISBN-13: 978-1851826865 Kenny recounts a major cultural controversy that marked the recognition of the King’s Inns Library as an important part of the heritage of modern Ireland. In 1972<\/p>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>
by WN Osborough published by the\u00a0Irish Academic Press in association with the Irish Legal History Society 1996. ISBN:\u00a00716525836 This book aims to reconstruct part of Dublin’s past from source material of an unconventional and unfamiliar sort: accounts Of lawsuits generated<\/p>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n<\/div>