Philip Bermingham
Philip Bermingham (c.1420-1490) was an Irish judge who held the office of Lord Chief Justice of Ireland. He was regarded as "the most learned Irish lawyer of his time", but he had a somewhat turbulent political career and was twice accused of treason.
Background
He belonged to a junior branch of the great Anglo-Irish dynasty of Bermingham, which held the titles Earl of Louth and Baron Athenry. He was probably the grandson of John Bermyngham, judge of the Court of King's Bench (Ireland), who died in 1415.[1] Patrick Bermingham, a later Chief Justice, was his cousin. Little seems to be known of his own parents.
Career
He is first heard of during the Wars of the Roses, as legal adviser to James Butler, 5th Earl of Ormonde, who was a staunch supporter of the House of Lancaster. Ormonde was executed by the rival dynasty, the House of York, after their decisive victory at the Battle of Towton in March 1461, and Bermingham himself was condemned to death as a traitor in 1462.[2] He soon received a royal pardon and under the generally tolerant regime of the new Yorkist King Edward IV his Lancastrian past was not held against him.
He became King's Serjeant in Ireland in 1463; the following year he was nominated as Chief Justice of the Irish Common Pleas but for unknown reasons did not take up office. He held lands in County Louth and at Dunshaughlin in County Meath where he helped found a chantry.[3] In 1474 he was appointed Lord Chief Justice of Ireland. In 1478 he was described as one of those "men of influence" who opposed the new Lord Deputy of Ireland, Henry, Lord Grey of Codnor, entirely frustrated his efforts to establish his authority in Ireland, and managed to secure his recall.[4]
Readings in law
At a time when there was no formal training for law students in Dublin, Bermingham was one of a small number of senior judges who provided a rudimentary form of education for those students who would later go on to one of the English Inns of Court. Many years later Sir William Darcy, the Vice-Treasurer of Ireland, recalled that in 1482-3 he was one of a number of students who studied the leading English legal texts with John Estrete, Deputy to the Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer, while during the holidays Bermingham taught them dancing and the harp (these were not simply for pleasure but formed part of a young lawyer's education).[5]
Nicholas Sutton, Baron of the Court of Exchequer (Ireland), who died young in 1478, thought highly enough of him to leave his family in Bermingham's care.[6]
Later years
He was continued in office by Richard III and Henry VII. Like nearly all the Anglo-Irish nobility he made the mistake of supporting the pretender Lambert Simnel, and faced charges of treason after the ruin of Simnel's cause at the Battle of Stoke. Henry VII, however, decided on a policy of clemency, and Bermingham, together with most of his judicial colleagues, (as well as Simnel himself) was quickly pardoned.[7] In 1488 he pledged his fealty to the King in the person of the KIng's representative, Sir Richard Edgcumbe.[8]
He died in 1490 and was buried in Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin. Little seems to be known about hos wife
His daughter Catherine married Christopher Plunket of Dunsoghly and was the mother of another Chief Justice, Sir John Plunket.[9]
He was called: "a man pre-eminently learned in the laws of his country".
Legal offices | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by John Chevir |
Lord Chief Justice of Ireland 1474 - 1490 |
Succeeded by Thomas Cusacke |
References
- ↑ Ball, F. Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221-1921 John Murray London 1926 Vol.1 p. 184
- ↑ Otway-Ruthvn, A. J. History of Mediaeval Ireland Barnes and Noble p.398
- ↑ Ball p.184
- ↑ Otway-Ruthven p. 398
- ↑ Kenny, Colum King's Inns and the Kingdom of Ireland Irish Academic Press 19992 pp.21-2
- ↑ Ball p.103
- ↑ Ball p.106
- ↑ D'Alton, John King James's Irish Army List reissued 1997 Celtic Bookshop Limerick p.526
- ↑ Ball, p.208