Readings Newsletter
Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier.
Sign in or sign up for free!
You’re not far away from qualifying for FREE standard shipping within Australia
You’ve qualified for FREE standard shipping within Australia
The cart is loading…
In 1575, the Lord Admiral of England, Edward Clinton, appointed Ambrose Forth as the first judge of the Admiralty in Ireland. Between 1575 and 1879, an independent Court of Admiralty functioned in Ireland, processing civil disputes over matters like seamen’s wages, collision, and salvage. This book is an institutional history of this tribunal over its 300-hundred-year existence. It describes the often colorful - and sometimes venal - personalities of those men - like Adam Loftus, William Petty, Hugh Baillie, and Jonah Barrington - who held the office of judge of this Court. The study describes the levels and categories of judicial business conducted by the Court. It provides an account of the constant jurisdictional and doctrinal controversies in which the Court was involved - with the King’s Bench of Ireland, with Irish municipal corporations, and with the English Court of Admiralty - over the limits of its jurisdiction in civil and prize matters. .. .based on extensive original research….includes a wealth of previously unpublished information… International Journal of Maritime History, June 2012, Vol. XXIV, No. 1 (Series: Irish Legal History Society)
$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout
In 1575, the Lord Admiral of England, Edward Clinton, appointed Ambrose Forth as the first judge of the Admiralty in Ireland. Between 1575 and 1879, an independent Court of Admiralty functioned in Ireland, processing civil disputes over matters like seamen’s wages, collision, and salvage. This book is an institutional history of this tribunal over its 300-hundred-year existence. It describes the often colorful - and sometimes venal - personalities of those men - like Adam Loftus, William Petty, Hugh Baillie, and Jonah Barrington - who held the office of judge of this Court. The study describes the levels and categories of judicial business conducted by the Court. It provides an account of the constant jurisdictional and doctrinal controversies in which the Court was involved - with the King’s Bench of Ireland, with Irish municipal corporations, and with the English Court of Admiralty - over the limits of its jurisdiction in civil and prize matters. .. .based on extensive original research….includes a wealth of previously unpublished information… International Journal of Maritime History, June 2012, Vol. XXIV, No. 1 (Series: Irish Legal History Society)