Thomas de Dent

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Dent, Cumbria, birthplace of Thomas Dent, present day

Thomas de Dent, or Thomas Dyvelyn, or Thomas of Dublin (died after 1361) was an English born cleric and judge who held high office in Ireland, and was praised as a diligent and hard working Crown official, who damaged his health through overwork. [1]

He was born at Dent, then in the West Riding of Yorkshire (now in Cumbria), and may have been the son of John de Dent.[2] During his years in Ireland he was sometimes known as Thomas Dyvelyn, which was an early form of "Thomas of Dublin".[3]He took holy orders, and became a clerk in the Royal service. He is first heard of in 1331 as the defendant in a lawsuit for poaching and trespass at Ingleton, North Yorkshire brought by Lord Mowbray; John de Dent, possibly his father, was named as co-defendant.[2]

Career[]

The lawsuit for trespass in no way impeded his career. He came to Ireland to serve as King's Attorney (the office which was later called Serjeant-at-law) in 1331. He quickly became a trusted member of the Irish administration, and in 1332 was sent to Westminster to report on the crisis which led to the imprisonment of Maurice FitzGerald, 1st Earl of Desmond and other Anglo-Irish nobles. In 1334 he was appointed a justice of the Court of Common Pleas (Ireland).[4] He was transferred to the Court of King's Bench (Ireland) in 1337. He became Lord Chief Justice of Ireland in 1341, as part of a widespread reform of the Irish judiciary, which included the replacement of Irish born officials with English (a common remedy of the English Crown over many years for complaints about the corruption and inefficiency of the Irish government). He later complained that for some time he sat on the Court alone, with no puisne justices to assist him. He was back in England in 1343, when he served on a Royal Commission at Kendal. He was then appointed Chief Justice of the Irish Common Pleas, and served in that office from 1344–58.[4] He stepped down as Chief Justice of the Pleas in 1358, due according to his own account to his "infirmity". His salary, according to his own petition for payment of it, was seriously in arrears when he retired.[3]

He was granted a lease of the royal manor of Esker, near Lucan in County Dublin in 1351:[2] Esker was often leased out to royal servants who were in high favour with the Crown. In 1355, on his own petition, he was granted a special allowance of £13 for his "great and strange labours" in 1354-5, when he served as Chief Justice without any puisne judges to assist him, injuring his own heath thereby, and for his general diligence in the King's business.[1]

Petition for payment of his salary[]

He is last heard of in 1361, when he was visiting England.[5] He may have been in some financial distress in his last years, judging by his petition to the English Parliament asking for payment of the sums due to him, which he evidently made shortly after he left office in 1358. According to the petition he was forced to step down as Chief Justice due to ill-health, and his fees were now seriously in arrears. He requested that the arrears be paid from the King's Treasury in England, or any other suitable source. [3]

References[]

Notes

  1. ^ a b Close Roll 29 Edward III 30 July 1355
  2. ^ a b c Ball p.74
  3. ^ a b c National Archives SC/8/44/2189
  4. ^ a b Hart p.167
  5. ^ Hart p.74

Sources

  • Ball, F. Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221-1921 London John Murray 1926
  • Close Rolls of Edward III 1355
  • Hart, A. R. History of the King's Serjeant-at-law in Ireland Dublin Four Courts Press 2000
  • Mackay, Ronan "Dent, Thomas" Cambridge Dictionary of Irish Biography
  • Smyth, Constantine Joseph Chronicle of the Law Officers of Ireland Henry Butterworth London 1839
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