-
Justiciar is the
English form of the
medieval Latin term
justiciarius or
justitiarius (meaning "judge" or "justice"). The
Chief Justiciar was the king's...
- 78
Mason William II pp. 103–104
Hollister Henry I pp. 386–387 West
Justiciarship in
England p. 11
Knowles Monastic Order p. 631
Burton Monastic and Religious...
- Briwerre,
Geoffrey fitz Peter, and
William Marshal as ****ociates in the
justiciarship,
under Puiset and Longchamp. As Justiciar,
Longchamp sent
judges throughout...
- Canterbury,
effected a reconciliation.
Hubert officially resigned the
Justiciarship (about 28 May 1234) and no
longer exercised the
power of the office...
- "coroner" is derived. The eyre of 1194 was
initiated under Hubert Walter's
justiciarship to
restore royal justice following the
anarchy of
Prince John's rebellion...
-
courts and
reported to the king personally. Normally,
there were two
Justiciarships,
organised by
linguistic boundaries: the
Justiciar of
Scotia and the...
- Encyclopaedia, 5th edition, London, 1967, vol. 6, p. 31. F.J. West, The
Justiciarship in
England 1066–1232 (Cambridge
University Press 1966). R.V. Turner...
- Ranulf"
Oxford Dictionary of
National Biography Bates "Origins of the
Justiciarship"
Proceedings of the
Battle Conference IV p. 11 Adams,
Laurie Schneider...
- order, at Roxburgh, Scone, Berwick-upon-Tweed,
Stirling and Perth. The
Justiciarship too was
created in David's reign.
Although this
institution had Anglo-Norman...
- the
royal household (chamberlain,
keeper of the Wardrobe). The
chief justiciarship lost most of its
powers and was
reduced to
supervising the judiciary...