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Attorney-General for Ireland
Senior legal officer in Ireland prior to 1921
Senior legal officer in Ireland prior to 1921
the pre-independence office


The Attorney-General for Ireland was an Irish and then, from 1801 under the Acts of Union 1800, United Kingdom government office-holder. He was senior in rank to the Solicitor-General for Ireland: both advised the Crown on Irish legal matters. With the establishment of the Irish Free State in 1922, the duties of the Attorney-General and Solicitor-General for Ireland were taken over by the Attorney General of Ireland. The office of Solicitor-General for Ireland was abolished at the same time for reasons of economy. This led to repeated complaints from the first Attorney General of Ireland, Hugh Kennedy, about the "immense volume of work" which he was now forced to deal with single-handedly.
History of the Office
The first record of the office of Attorney General for Ireland, some 50 years after the equivalent office was established in England, is in 1313, when Richard Manning or Mannyn was appointed King's Attorney, or "King's Serjeant who follows the pleas" (the title Attorney General was not used until the 1530s), at a salary of 5 marks a year. The Attorney General was initially junior to the serjeant-at-law, but since the titles King's Serjeant and King's Attorney were often used interchangeably, as in the case of Richard Manning, it can be difficult to establish who held which office at any given time. Casey states that the records cast very little light on the duties of the Attorney-General in the early years, possibly a reflection of his inferior status compared to the Serjeant-at-law.
There are at least two references to a Deputy Attorney-General. The first was in 1385, when Robert Hemynborough, or de Hemynborgh, was appointed Attorney-General "with power to appoint a Deputy". Two centuries later, Edward Butler, who became Attorney-General in 1582, had acted as Deputy from 1578 to 1580. Apart from these two examples, there is no evidence that the Deputy Attorney-General was a permanent position, nor do we know why it was considered necessary to appoint Butler to this office (pressure of work may be the explanation).
The early Attorneys-General might be licensed to appear in certain courts only. William Rouse (1342), Peter de Leycestre (1357), William Lynnoor (1359), Henry Mitchell (1372) and John Barry (1401) were all given a patent to plead in the Court of Common Pleas and the Court of Exchequer. Robert le Hore in 1379 was appointed King's Attorney to plead "before the justices of the Bench (this was not the Couurt of Bench but an early name for the Court of Common Pleas) and the Treasurer and chamberlains of the Exchequer". In 1499 Clement Fitzleones, less typically, was appointed "King's Attorney in all Courts". The Serjeant-at-law, by contrast, was generally licensed to appear in all the Royal Courts, although John Haire in 1392 was described as "Serjeant-at-law of our Lord the King in the Common Pleas".
Perhaps because the Attorney-General was in the earlier centuries junior to the Serjeant-at-law, some holders of the office were probably not as highly qualified as the Serjeant. Thomas Archbold (or Galmole), appointed Attorney-General in 1478, was a goldsmith by profession, and, perhaps more suitably, was also Master of the Royal Mint in Ireland.
The Attorney-General and the Serjeant-at-law
In 1537 there was a short-lived attempt, following the report of a royal commission, to expand the role of the Attorney General, and abolish the office of King's Serjeant. The proposal was defeated largely through the firm opposition of the Serjeant-at-law, Patrick Barnewall, who argued that pleading cases on behalf of the Crown was and always had been the proper task of the Serjeant-at-law: "the King's Serjeant has always used to maintain the Pleas.... for this two hundred years and more". Why the more junior office was favoured over the much longer-established office of Serjeant is not clear.
From the early 1660s, due largely to the personal prestige of Sir William Domville (AG 1660–1686), the Attorney General became the chief legal adviser to the Crown. In certain periods, notably during the reign of Elizabeth I, who thought poorly of most of her Irish-born law officers, the English Crown adopted a policy of choosing only English lawyers for this office, and also the Solicitor-General. Her successor King James I in 1620, on the appointment of Sir William Ryves, noted that the Attorney-General and Solicitor-General "have always been of the King's choice and special nomination", and that they were the Crown servants in whom the King places, above his other learned counsel and officers of the Court: "his more special trust regarding the preservation of his revenue and possessions". It is interesting that the King here seems to place the Attorney and the Solicitor above the Serjeant-at-law in importance.
Attorney-General in politics
The Attorney-General, in later centuries at least, was always a member of the Privy Council of Ireland (in earlier centuries as a rule only the Serjeant-at-law attended the Council, but Stephen Roche, Attorney General 1441–44, attended the Great Council of 1441).
A strong Attorney, like Philip Tisdall, William Saurin, or Francis Blackburne, could exercise great influence over the Dublin administration. Tisdall (AG 1760–1777), was for much of his tenure as Attorney General also the Government leader in the Irish House of Commons, and a crucial member of the administration. Saurin (AG 1807–1822) was regarded for many years as the effective head of the Dublin Government, until his career was ended by his opposition to Catholic emancipation.
The office of Attorney General was described as being "a great mixture of law and general political reasoning".
Attorneys-General for Ireland, 1313–1922
14th century
- Richard Manning: appears as a barrister in private practice in 1310; appointed "King's Attorney" or King's Serjeant for Ireland 1313. Still in office in 1327.
- William de Woodworth: c. 1327
- Thomas of Westham: 1334
- William Rouse: 17 April 1342
- William le Petit: 1343
- Nicholas Lumbard, or Lombard: 1345
- Robert de Emeldon: 1348
- Robert Preston, 1st Baron Gormanston: 1355
- John de Leycestre, or Lecestre: 1357
- William Lynnoor: 12 February 1359
- Henry Mitchell: 1372; promoted to Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer 1376
- Robert Hore, or le Hore: 1379, superseded 1381. He appears to have served a second term in 1383–84, as he was re-appointed on 21 October 1383 and the Close Rolls have an order to pay his arrears of salary for those two years. On 28 July 1385 he was ordered not to "interefere" with the Office of Attorney-General any further.
- Thomas Malalo: 15 January 1381
- Robert Hemynborgh or de Hemynborough: 18 July 1385 (first term). He had the power to appoint a Deputy, one of the very few references in the records to such an office. His patent of office was renewed in 1407 on the same terms. He was to receive the same salary as Henry Mitchell had i.e. 1 pound and 1 shilling.
15th century
| Name | Term of office | Reason for leaving office | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| William Tynbegh | 20 January 1400, having stepped down as a judge | |||
| John Barry | appointed 16 February 1401; | still in office in 1404 | ||
| Robert de Hemynborough | appointed for a second term in 1407, in the same manner as King Richard II had previously granted the office to him. | |||
| John Whyte or White | name=Note23}} | still in office 1426, when he was described as "the King's Attorney in the Exchequer" | ||
| Stephen Roche | 1441 | |||
| William Sutton | 1444 | |||
| Robert FitzRery | 1450 | |||
| Thomas Dowdall | 1463 | |||
| Nicholas Sutton | Ball | 1926a | loc=page 183}} | |
| Thomas Archbold | 1478 | |||
| Thomas Cusacke | 1480 | |||
| Walter St. Lawrence | 1491 | |||
| Clement Fitzleones | Ball | 1926a | loc=page 188}} | By 1505 |
16th century
incomplete - Smyth in his book Chronicle of the Irish Law Officers (London, 1839) noted that the destruction of many State records made it impossible to compile a full list of holders of the office. With the exception of one roll for the 6th year of Henry VIII (1514–5), the patent rolls for the reign of that monarch were extant from the 22nd year of his reign (1530–31), at the time of the Four Courts fire in 1922.
| Name | Portrait | Term of office | Reason for leaving office |
|---|---|---|---|
| John Barnewall, 3rd Baron Trimlestown | 1504 | 1504 | |
| Nicholas Fitzsimons | 1504 or later | 1514 | |
| Unknown | |||
| Thomas St. Lawrence | 18 August 1532 | 12 August 1535 | |
| Robert Dillon | August 1535 | 17 January 1554 | |
| also | |||
| Barnaby Skurloke or Skurlog | 1554 | ||
| re-appointed 26 January 1559 | 1559 | ||
| James Barnewall | 3 September 1559 | ||
| Lucas Dillon | 8 November 1566 | 17 May 1570 | |
| Edward Fitz-Symon | 4 June 1570 | 21 February 1574 | |
| John Bathe | 21 February 1574 | 1577 | |
| Thomas Snagge | 13 September 1577 | 1580 | |
| Christopher Flemyng, or Fleming | 9 September 1580 | ||
| Edmund or Edward Butler | 8 August 1582 | 20 September 1583 | |
| Charles Calthorpe, afterwards Sir Charles | 22 June 1584 | 19 April 1606 | |
17th century
| Name | Portrait | Term of office | Reason for leaving office | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| **Sir John Davys | ||||
| or Davies** | ||||
| MP for County Fermanagh (1613) | [[File:Bishop Joseph Hall.png | 75px]] | 19 April 1606 | 1619 |
| Sir William Ryves | 30 October 1619 | 7 August 1636 | ||
| Richard Osbaldeston | ||||
| of Gray's Inn | 7 August 1636 | June 1640 | ||
| Sir Thomas Tempest | 20 July 1640 | |||
| William Basil | 18 July 1649 | 24 January 1659 | ||
| Robert Shapcote | March 1659 | May 1659 | ||
| Unknown | May 1659 | February 1660 | ||
| Robert Shapcote | February 1660 | May 1660 | ||
| Sir William Domville | ||||
| MP for County Dublin (1661-66) | 23 June 1660 | |||
| Sir Richard Nagle | ||||
| MP for County Cork (1689) | 31 December 1686 | 3 October 1691 | ||
| Sir John Temple | 30 October 1690 | |||
| Robert Rochfort | ||||
| MP for County Westmeath | [[File:Robert_Rochfort.jpg | 75px]] | 10 May 1695 | 12 June 1707 |
18th century
| Name | Portrait | Term of office | Reason for leaving office | Subsequent peerage, if any | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alan Brodrick | |||||
| MP for Cork City | [[File:Alan_Brodrick.jpg | 75px]] | 12 June 1707 | 24 December 1709 | |
| Appointed as Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench for Ireland | |||||
| John Forster | |||||
| MP for Dublin City | 24 December 1709 | Dismissed - | |||
| Appointed as Chief Justice of the Common Pleas for Ireland, 1714 | |||||
| Sir Richard Levinge, Bt | |||||
| MP for Longford Borough (to 1713) | |||||
| MP for Gowran (1713) | |||||
| MP for Kilkenny City (from 1713) | 4 June 1711 | Dismissed - | |||
| Appointed as Chief Justice of the Common Pleas for Ireland, 1721 | |||||
| George Gore | |||||
| MP for Longford Borough | 3 Nov 1714 | 13 May 1720 | |||
| Appointed as a Judge of the Court of Common Pleas (Ireland) | |||||
| John Rogerson | |||||
| MP for Dublin City | 14 May 1720 | 3 April 1727 | |||
| Appointed as Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench for Ireland | |||||
| Thomas Marlay | |||||
| MP for Lanesborough | 5 May 1727 | 29 September 1730 | |||
| Appointed as Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer | |||||
| Robert Jocelyn | |||||
| MP for Newtownards | [[File:Robert_Jocelyn,_1st_Viscount_Jocelyn.jpg | 75px]] | 29 September 1730 | 30 August 1739 | |
| Appointed as Lord Chancellor of Ireland | |||||
| John Bowes | |||||
| MP for Taghmon | [[File:John_Bowes.jpg | 75px]] | 3 Sep 1739 | 21 December 1741 | |
| Appointed as Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer | |||||
| St George Caulfeild | |||||
| MP for Tulsk | 23 Dec 1741 | 27 August 1751 | |||
| Appointed as Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench for Ireland | |||||
| Warden Flood | |||||
| MP for Callan | 27 August 1751 | 31 July 1760 | |||
| Appointed as Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench for Ireland | |||||
| Philip Tisdall | |||||
| MP for Dublin University (to 1776) | |||||
| MP for Armagh Borough (1768–69 and 1776–77) | [[File:Angelika Kauffmann Portrait Philip Tisdall.jpg | 75px]] | 31 July 1760 | 11 September 1777 | Death |
| John Scott | |||||
| MP for Mullingar | [[File:John Scott, 1st Earl of Clonmell by Gilbert Stuart.jpg | 75px]] | 17 Oct 1777 | Dismissed | |
| Appointed as Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench for Ireland, 1784 | |||||
| Barry Yelverton | |||||
| MP for Carrickfergus | 2 July 1782 | 29 November 1783 | |||
| Appointed as Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer | |||||
| John Fitzgibbon | |||||
| MP for Kilmallock | [[File:1stEarlOfClare.jpg | 75px]] | 29 Nov 1783 | 13 June 1789 | |
| Appointed as Lord Chancellor of Ireland | |||||
| Arthur Wolfe | |||||
| MP for Coleraine (to 1790) | |||||
| MP for Jamestown (1790–1797) | |||||
| MP for Dublin City (1797–1798) | [[File:Portrait_of_Arthur_Wolfe_(Viscount_Kilwarden)_by_Hugh_Douglas_Hamilton.jpg | 75px]] | 16 July 1789 | 13 June 1798 | |
| Appointed as Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench for Ireland | |||||
| John Toler | |||||
| MP for Gorey | [[File:John-Toler-1st-Earl-of-Norbury.jpg | 75px]] | 26 June 1798 | 22 October 1800 | |
| Appointed as Chief Justice of the Common Pleas for Ireland |
19th century
| Name | Portrait | Term of office | Political party | Reason for leaving office | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| John Stewart | |||||
| MP for Bangor (Parliament of Ireland) | |||||
| (to 31 December 1800) | |||||
| MP for Tyrone (UK Parliament) | |||||
| (from 1 March 1802) | 9 December 1800 | ||||
| Standish O'Grady | 28 May 1803 | ||||
| 5 October 1805 | |||||
| William Plunket | |||||
| MP for Midhurst (1807) | [[File:William_Conygham_Plunket.jpg | 75px]] | 15 October 1805 | ||
| Ministry left office - he was reappointed in 1822 - see below | |||||
| William Saurin | 15 May 1807 | ||||
| William Plunket | |||||
| MP for Dublin University | [[File:William_Conygham_Plunket.jpg | 75px]] | 15 January 1822 | 18 June 1827 | |
| Henry Joy | 18 June 1827 | 6 January 1831 | |||
| Edward Pennefather | ''23 December 1830 | ||||
| {{sfn | Ball | 1926b | loc=page 274}}'' | ||
| Francis Blackburne | [[File:FrancisBlackburne.jpg | 75px]] | 11 January 1831 | ||
| Ministry left office - he was reappointed in 1841 - see below | |||||
| Louis Perrin | |||||
| MP for Cashel | 29 April 1835 | 31 August 1835 | |||
| Michael O'Loghlen | |||||
| MP for Dungarvan | 31 August 1835 | ||||
| John Richards | 10 November 1836 | ||||
| Stephen Woulfe | |||||
| MP for Cashel | 3 February 1837 | ||||
| Nicholas Ball | |||||
| MP for Clonmel | 11 July 1838 | ||||
| Maziere Brady | 23 February 1839 | ||||
| David Richard Pigot | |||||
| MP for Clonmel | 11 August 1840 | ||||
| Francis Blackburne | [[File:FrancisBlackburne.jpg | 75px]] | 23 September 1841 | ||
| Thomas Berry Cusack Smith | |||||
| MP for Ripon, 1843-6 | 1 November 1842 | ||||
| Richard Wilson Greene | [[File:Richard_Wilson_Greene.jpg | 75px]] | 2 February 1846 | ||
| Richard Moore | 16 July 1846 | ||||
| James Henry Monahan | 21 December 1847 | ||||
| John Hatchell | |||||
| MP for Windsor | 23 September 1850 | ||||
| Joseph Napier | |||||
| MP for Dublin University | February 1852 | ||||
| Abraham Brewster | [[File:Abraham_Brewster_.jpg | 75px]] | 10 January 1853 | ||
| William Keogh | |||||
| MP for Athlone | [[File:William_Nicholas_Keogh_caricature_by_Harry_Furniss.jpg | 75px]] | March 1855 | ||
| John David Fitzgerald | |||||
| MP for Ennis | March 1856 | ||||
| James Whiteside | |||||
| MP for Dublin University | [[File:James_Whiteside.jpg | 75px]] | February 1858 | ||
| John David Fitzgerald | |||||
| MP for Ennis | June 1859 | ||||
| Rickard Deasy | |||||
| MP for County Cork | February 1860 | ||||
| Thomas O'Hagan | |||||
| MP for Tralee (1863-65) | [[File:1stLordOHagan.jpg | 75px]] | 1861 | ||
| James Anthony Lawson | |||||
| MP for Portarlington | 1865 | ||||
| John Edward Walsh | |||||
| MP for Dublin University | 25 July 1866 | ||||
| Michael Morris | |||||
| MP for Galway Borough | [[File:1stLordKillanin.jpg | 75px]] | 1 November 1866 | ||
| Hedges Eyre Chatterton | |||||
| MP for Dublin University | 1867 | ||||
| Robert Warren | |||||
| MP for Dublin University | 1867 | ||||
| John Thomas Ball | |||||
| MP for Dublin University | [[File:John_Thomas_Ball_ILN.jpg | 75px]] | 1868 | ||
| Edward Sullivan | |||||
| MP for Mallow | 12 December 1868 | ||||
| Charles Robert Barry | [[File:Charles Robert Barry, Vanity Fair, 1889-12-21.jpg | 75px]] | 26 January 1870 | ||
| Richard Dowse | |||||
| MP for Londonderry City | [[File:Richard Dowse, Vanity Fair, 1871-03-25,crop.jpg | 75px]] | 13 January 1872 | ||
| Christopher Palles | [[File:ChristopherPalles (cropped).jpg | 75px]] | 5 November 1872 | 10 February 1874 | |
| John Thomas Ball | |||||
| MP for Dublin University | [[File:John Thomas Ball ILN.jpg | 75px]] | 12 March 1874 | ||
| Henry Ormsby | 21 January 1875 | ||||
| George Augustus Chichester May | 27 November 1875 | ||||
| Edward Gibson | |||||
| MP for Dublin University | [[File:Portrait_of_Edward_Gibson,_1st_Baron_Ashbourne.jpg | 75px]] | 15 February 1877 | ||
| Hugh Law | |||||
| MP for County Londonderry | 10 May 1880 | ||||
| William Moore Johnson | |||||
| MP for Mallow | 17 November 1881 | ||||
| Andrew Marshall Porter | |||||
| MP for County Londonderry | 3 January 1883 | ||||
| John Naish | 19 December 1883 | ||||
| Samuel Walker | |||||
| MP for County Londonderry | 1885 | ||||
| Hugh Holmes | |||||
| MP for Dublin University | 3 July 1885 | ||||
| Samuel Walker | February 1886 | ||||
| Hugh Holmes | |||||
| MP for Dublin University | August 1886 | ||||
| John George Gibson | |||||
| MP for Liverpool Walton | 1887 | ||||
| Peter O'Brien | [[File:1stLordOBrien.jpg | 75px]] | 1888 | ||
| Dodgson Hamilton Madden | |||||
| MP for Dublin University | 1890 | ||||
| John Atkinson | [[File:LordAtkinson.jpg | 75px]] | 1892 | ||
| Hugh Hyacinth O'Rorke MacDermot | August 1892 | ||||
| John Atkinson | |||||
| MP for North Londonderry | [[File:LordAtkinson.jpg | 75px]] | 8 July 1895 |
20th century
| Name | Portrait | Term of office | Political party | Reason for leaving office | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| James Campbell | |||||
| MP for Dublin University | [[File:James Campbell, Vanity Fair, 1909-08-25 (cropped).jpg | 75px]] | 4 December 1905 | ||
| Richard Cherry | |||||
| MP for Liverpool Exchange (1906–10) | [[File:Richard_Cherry.jpg | 75px]] | 22 December 1905 | ||
| Redmond Barry | |||||
| MP for North Tyrone (1907–11) | [[File:1911_Redmond_Barry.jpg | 75px]] | 2 December 1909 | ||
| Charles O'Connor | 26 September 1911 | ||||
| Ignatius O'Brien | [[File:Ignatius_John_O'Brien,_1st_Baron_Shandon.jpg | 75px]] | 24 June 1912 | ||
| Thomas Molony | 10 April 1913 | ||||
| John Moriarty | 20 June 1913 | ||||
| Jonathan Pim | 1 July 1914 | ||||
| John Gordon | |||||
| MP for South Londonderry | 8 June 1915 | ||||
| James Campbell | |||||
| MP for Dublin University | [[File:James Campbell, Vanity Fair, 1909-08-25 (cropped).jpg | 75px]] | 9 April 1916 | ||
| James O'Connor | 8 January 1917 | ||||
| Arthur Samuels | |||||
| MP for Dublin University | 7 April 1918 | ||||
| Denis Henry | |||||
| MP for South Londonderry | 6 July 1919 | ||||
| Thomas Watters Brown | |||||
| MP for North Down | 5 August 1921 | 16 November 1921 |
The office was vacant from 16 November 1921 and succeeded by the Attorney General of the Irish Free State on 31 January 1922. The office of Attorney General for Northern Ireland had been created in June 1921.
Notes, references and sources
Footnotes
References
- Haydn's Book of Dignities (for pre-1691 names and dates)
Sources
References
- McCullagh, David. (2010). "The Reluctant Taoiseach: A Biography of John A Costello". [[Gill & MacMillan]].
- Casey, James. (1996). "The Irish Law Officers". Round Hall, Sweet and Maxwell.
- Thomas Dowdall, for example, like Manning before him, was called Serjeant-at-law and King's Attorney in the 1460s at almost the same time. Early holders of the office, including Manning, were permitted to take private clients. Manning is on record as acting as attorney for Meiler Kendal in 1310, prior to his appointment as Attorney-General.''Patent Roll 4 Edward II''
- Smyth ''Chronicle of the Law Officers of Ireland'' Henry Butterworth London 1839
- John White was described in 1426 as "King's Attorney in the [[Court of King's Bench (Ireland)
- ''Close Roll 2 Richard II''
- ''A Calendar of Irish Chancery Letters c.1244-1509''
- Hart, A.R. ''The History of the King's Serjeants at law in Ireland''. Four Courts Press, 2000. pp. 15, 20, 21.
- [[The National Archives]] ''Officers in Ireland anno primo R. Edward III, with their yearly fees''
- [https://chancery.tcd.ie/document/patent/16-edward-iii/3?view=chancery_advanced_search&display=free_text_page&path=search-documents&search=%22K%27s%20Attorney%22®nal_year=All&roll=All&field_year_value%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&field_year_value2%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&order=field_chancery_date&sort=asc ''A Calendar of Irish Chancery Letters c.1244-1509'', published by Trinity College Dublin Entry 3 - 17 April 1342]
- [https://chancery.tcd.ie/document/patent/33-edward-iii/1?view=chancery_advanced_search&display=free_text_page&path=search-documents&search=%22K%27s%20Attorney%22®nal_year=All&roll=All&field_year_value%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&field_year_value2%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&order=field_chancery_date&sort=asc ''A Calendar of Irish Chancery Letters c.1244-1509'', published by Trinity College Dublin Entry 1 - 12 February 1359]
- [https://chancery.tcd.ie/document/patent/7-richard-ii/6?view=chancery_advanced_search&display=free_text_page&path=search-documents&search=%22K%27s%20Attorney%22®nal_year=All&roll=All&field_year_value%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&field_year_value2%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&order=field_chancery_date&sort=asc''A Calendar of Irish Chancery Letters c.1244-1509'', published by Trinity College Dublin Entry 6 - 21 October 1383]
- ''Close Roll 8 Richard II''
- [https://chancery.tcd.ie/document/patent/9-richard-ii/40?view=chancery_advanced_search&display=free_text_page&path=search-documents&search=%22K%27s%20Attorney%22®nal_year=All&roll=All&field_year_value%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&field_year_value2%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&order=field_chancery_date&sort=asc''A Calendar of Irish Chancery Letters c.1244-1509'', published by Trinity College Dublin Entry 40 - 28 July 1385 - ''Patent Roll 9 Richard II '']
- [https://chancery.tcd.ie/document/patent/5-richard-ii/77?view=chancery_advanced_search&display=free_text_page&path=search-documents&search=%22K%27s%20Attorney%22®nal_year=All&roll=All&field_year_value%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&field_year_value2%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&order=field_chancery_date&sort=asc''A Calendar of Irish Chancery Letters c.1244-1509'', published by Trinity College Dublin Entry 77 - 15 January 1382]
- [https://chancery.tcd.ie/document/patent/1-henry-iv/31?view=chancery_advanced_search&display=search_persons_or_page&path=search-persons-text&surnametext=Tynbegh&surname=Tynbegh&forename=Tynbegh&titlestatus=Tynbegh&office=Tynbegh&order=field_regnal_year&sort=asc ''A Calendar of Irish Chancery Letters c.1244-1509'', published by Trinity College Dublin Entry 31 - 16 January 1400 (approximate date)]
- [https://chancery.tcd.ie/document/patent/2-henry-iv/15?view=chancery_advanced_search&display=free_text_page&path=search-documents&search=%22K%27s%20Attorney%22®nal_year=All&roll=All&field_year_value%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&field_year_value2%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&order=field_chancery_date&sort=asc ''A Calendar of Irish Chancery Letters c.1244-1509'', published by Trinity College Dublin Entry 15 - 16 February 1400]
- [https://chancery.tcd.ie/document/patent/5-henry-iv/123?view=chancery_advanced_search&display=free_text_page&path=search-documents&search=%22K%27s%20Attorney%22®nal_year=All&roll=All&field_year_value%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&field_year_value2%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&order=field_chancery_date&sort=asc ''A Calendar of Irish Chancery Letters c.1244-1509'', published by Trinity College Dublin Entry 123 - 20 January 1404]
- ''Patent Roll 8 Henry IV''
- [https://chancery.tcd.ie/document/patent/13-henry-iv/140?view=chancery_advanced_search&display=free_text_page&path=search-documents&search=%22K%27s%20Attorney%22®nal_year=All&roll=All&field_year_value%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&field_year_value2%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&order=field_chancery_date&sort=asc ''A Calendar of Irish Chancery Letters c.1244-1509'', published by Trinity College Dublin Entry 140 - 20 August 1412]
- [https://chancery.tcd.ie/document/patent/1-henry-v/23?view=chancery_advanced_search&display=free_text_page&path=search-documents&search=%22K%27s%20Attorney%22®nal_year=All&roll=All&field_year_value%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&field_year_value2%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&order=field_chancery_date&sort=asc ''A Calendar of Irish Chancery Letters c.1244-1509'', published by Trinity College Dublin Entry 23 - 4 October 1413]
- [https://chancery.tcd.ie/document/close/5-henry-vi/6?view=chancery_advanced_search&display=free_text_page&path=search-documents&search=%22K%27s%20Attorney%22®nal_year=All&roll=All&field_year_value%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&field_year_value2%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&order=field_chancery_date&sort=asc ''A Calendar of Irish Chancery Letters c.1244-1509'', published by Trinity College Dublin Entry 6 - 17 November 1426]
- [https://chancery.tcd.ie/document/patent/29-henry-vi/47?view=chancery_advanced_search&display=free_text_page&path=search-documents&search=%22K%27s%20Attorney%22®nal_year=All&roll=All&field_year_value%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&field_year_value2%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&order=field_regnal_year&sort=asc ''A Calendar of Irish Chancery Letters c.1244-1509'', published by Trinity College Dublin Entry 47 - 10 October 1450]
- [https://chancery.tcd.ie/document/patent/11-edward-iv/6?view=chancery_advanced_search&display=free_text_page&path=search-documents&search=%22K%27s%20Attorney%22®nal_year=All&roll=All&field_year_value%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&field_year_value2%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&order=field_regnal_year&sort=asc ''A Calendar of Irish Chancery Letters c.1244-1509'', published by Trinity College Dublin Entry 6 - 22 May 1471]
- [https://chancery.tcd.ie/document/patent/15-henry-vii/3?view=chancery_advanced_search&display=search_persons_or_page&path=search-persons-text&surnametext=lEONES&surname=lEONES&forename=lEONES&titlestatus=lEONES&office=lEONES ''A Calendar of Irish Chancery Letters c.1244-1509'', published by Trinity College Dublin Entry 3 - 25 October 1499]
- [https://chancery.tcd.ie/document/patent/15-henry-vii/4?view=chancery_advanced_search&display=free_text_page&path=search-documents&search=%22K%27s%20Attorney%22®nal_year=All&roll=All&field_year_value%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&field_year_value2%5Bvalue%5D%5Bdate%5D=&order=field_regnal_year&sort=asc Entry 4 - 4 November 1499]
- [https://archive.org/details/calendarofpatent01irel/page/n41/mode/2up?view=theater Calendar of the patent and close rolls of Chancery in Ireland, page xxxviii]
- [https://archive.org/details/calendarofpatent01irel/page/2/mode/2up?view=theater page 2]
- [https://archive.org/details/calendarofpatent01irel/page/4/mode/2up?view=theater Letters Patent - 25 - 19 August, 24 and 25 Henry VIII]
- [https://archive.org/details/op1250240-1001/page/n35/mode/2up?view=theater Fiant - 44 - 12 August 1535]
- [https://archive.org/details/calendarofpatent01irel/page/16/mode/2up?view=theater Patent - 44 - no date in 1534-6]
- [https://archive.org/details/op1250521-1001/page/n59/mode/2up?view=theater Fiant - 22 - 17 January 1554]
- [https://archive.org/details/calendarofpatent01irel/page/312/mode/2up?view=theater Patent - 52 - 17 January 1554]
- [https://archive.org/details/op1250521-1001/page/n61/mode/2up?view=theater Fiant - 41 - 16 April 1554]
- [https://archive.org/details/calendarofpatent01irel/page/312/mode/2up?view=theater Patent - 53 - 16 April 1554]
- [https://archive.org/details/calendarofpatent01irel/page/342/mode/2up?view=theater Patent - 28 - 15 June 1556 (2 & 3 Philip & Mary) - Membrane 7]
- [https://archive.org/details/op1250521-1001/page/n83/mode/2up?view=theater Fiant - 233 - 1558 - no date]
- [https://archive.org/details/calendarofpatent01irel/page/372/mode/2up?view=theater Patent - page 373 - Art. 70 - no date in 1557/8 (4 & 5 Philip & Mary)- Membrane 9]
- [https://archive.org/details/op1250640-1001/page/n33/mode/2up?view=theater Fiant - 35 - 26 January 1559]
- [https://archive.org/details/calendarofpatent01irel/page/412/mode/2up?view=theater Patent - 169 - Membrane 15]
- [https://archive.org/details/calendarofpatent01irel/page/412/mode/2up?view=theater Patent - 178 - 3 September 1559 - John Barnewall]
- [https://archive.org/details/op1250640-1001/page/n141/mode/2up?view=theater Fiant - 946 - 8 November 1566]
- [https://archive.org/details/op1250640-1001/page/n231/mode/2up?view=theater Fiant - 1551 - 4 June 1570]
- [https://archive.org/details/op1250640-1001/page/n233/mode/2up?view=theater Fiant - 1552 - 4 June 1570]
- [https://archive.org/details/op1250902-1001/page/n141/mode/2up?view=theater Fiant - 2551 - 21 February 1574]
- [https://archive.org/details/op1250902-1001/page/n141/mode/2up?view=theater Fiant - 2552 - 21 February 1574]
- [https://archive.org/details/calendarofpatent2157dubl/page/10/mode/2up?view=theater - Letter of Appointment - 13 September, 20 Elizabeth (1578)]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20120212215340/http://www.galaxy.bedfordshire.gov.uk/webingres/bedfordshire/vlib/0.digitised_resources/thomas_snagge_article.htm Bedfordshire Library Website, Local Biographies - Thomas Snagge], retrieved 4 May 2023
- "Snagge, Thomas".
- [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951p00685041m&view=1up&seq=141 Fiant - 3662 - 9 September 1580]
- [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951p00685041m&view=1up&seq=190 Fiant - 4010 - 28 August 1582]
- [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951p00685041m&view=1up&seq=224 - Fiant - 4211 - 20 September 1583]
- [https://archive.org/details/op1251438-1001/page/n51/mode/2up?view=theater Fiant - 4458 - 22 June 1584]
- [https://www.dib.ie/biography/forster-john-a3333 Dictionary of Irish Biography]
- [https://www.dib.ie/biography/levinge-sir-richard-a4818 Dictionary of Irish Biography]
- [https://www.dib.ie/biography/scott-john-a7949 Dictionary of Irish Biography]
- [https://www.dib.ie/biography/stewart-sir-john-a8308 Dictionary of Irish Biography], citing [https://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1790-1820/member/stewart-john-i-1758-1825 History of Parliament]
- (1838). "Debrett's complete peerage of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland".
- "Plunket, William Conyngham, first Baron Plunket".
- Webb, Alfred. (1878). "A Compendium of Irish Biography". M. H Gill & Son.
- "Blackburne, Francis (1782?–1867)".
- {{Cite IrishBio. Webb. Alfred. (1878)
- The transition from the Tory Party to the Conservative Party is considered to have occurred with the [[Tamworth Manifesto]] in December 1834
- "Brewster, Abraham".
- "Atkinson, John, Baron Atkinson".
- (1994). "British Political Facts, 1900–1994". Macmillan.
- He unsuccessfully contested the parliamentary constituency of [[Londonderry City (UK Parliament constituency). Londonderry City]] in 1872.
- He had unsuccessfully sought re-election for the parliamentary constituency of [[Dungarvan (UK Parliament constituency). Dungarvan]] in 1868.
- He had unsuccessfully contested the parliamentary constituency of [[Carrickfergus (UK Parliament constituency). Carrickfergus]] in 1874.
- He had unsuccessfully contested the parliamentary constituency of [[Mallow (UK Parliament constituency). Mallow]] in 1883.
- He had unsuccessfully contested the parliamentary constituency of [[North Londonderry (UK Parliament constituency). North Londonderry]] in 1885.
- He had unsuccessfully contested the parliamentary constituency of [[West Derbyshire (UK Parliament constituency). West Derbyshire]] in 1892.
- Blackburne, Edward. (1874). "Life of the Right Hon. Francis Blackburne: Late Lord Chancellor of Ireland". Macmillan and Co..
- However, [https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Page%3AChronicle_of_the_law_officers_of_Ireland.djvu/196 Chronicle of the Law Officers of Ireland] does not mention him, and neither [https://archive.org/details/judgesinireland10002ball/page/354/mode/2up?view=theater Elrington Ball's ''The Judges in Ireland'', Volume 2, page 354] nor [https://www-oxforddnb-com.wikipedialibrary.idm.oclc.org/display/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-21864?rskey=k06Jnl&result=1 Pennefather's article in the Dictionary of National Biography] mentions service in this office. "[T]he attorney-general-ship was ... offered to ... Edward Pennefather ... and on his declining to serve in a reform administration it was given on Pennefather's advice to ... Francis Blackburne".
- "was in politics a conservative"
- "was a conservative in politics"
- "was [after 1798] allied with the tory party"
- he was one of the "Grenvillites who [in 1822] joined Liverpool's government"
- "In October 1805 Pitt made Plunket attorney-general, and Plunket retained that office in the 'ministry of all the talents'. Hitherto, with official approval, he had treated the post as professional and non-political. Now it became a party and parliamentary one. He ... was urged by Lord Grenville to enter the House of Commons. ... early in 1807. He ... became an adherent of Lord Grenville ... Having identified himself with the whigs, he declined the request of the new tory administration that he retain the attorney-generalship."
- "something of a republican by nature, but fashioned by circumstances into a Tory"
- "With all his present Toryism, he seems to have been then a Whig"
- "though known to be a tory ... with a view to the Irish administration having a broad political base"
- "Disappointed at not being named chief justice of the king's bench, he retired and was created a baronet on 21 June 1803. King George III ascribed his resignation to ill-health and his weaknesses as a law officer."
- "nor was he ever in the Irish or British House of Commons"
- "With the collapse of Lord North's government in March 1782, he was dismissed from office. Scott was generally believed to have known that he would be removed and to have decided to provoke his dismissal by asserting during the debates on legislative independence that Great Britain had no right to bind Ireland by acts of parliament"
- "In 1714 he was replaced as Irish attorney general in the whig purge which followed the accession of George I."
- "on the accession of George I in 1714 was superseded as attorney-general, but was offered the place of a justice of the King’s Bench, which he declined"
- "[W]hen the Irish administration came under the domination of the ultra-tory lord chancellor, Sir Constantine Phipps, he was dropped as attorney general in 1711 and emerged as one of the principal leaders of the opposition."
- Date of patent
- Date of Privy Seal
- Date of appointment to office in next column
- Attorney-General for Williamite Ireland only until the [[Treaty of Limerick]] of 3 October 1691
- Date of the [[Treaty of Limerick]]
- Attorney-General for Jacobite Ireland only after the appointment of [[John Temple (Irish politician). Sir John Temple]] as Attorney-General for Williamite Ireland on 30 October 1690
- Restored to the position when the secluded members of the [[Rump Parliament]] were allowed in February 1660
- Some sources refer to him as King's Serjeant, but the roles of Serjeant and Attorney at the time were easily confused.
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