Paul Smith
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Working within the law
Catholics and the legal profession
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The law and legal process cannot be understood without regard to the practitioners who were familiar with its principles, practices and systems. Chapter 5 explores how three Catholic lawyers could exploit the law to make a living or protect and enhance their family and financial interests. The careers of some of the more significant practitioners are relatively well documented and understood. Rather less is known about lawyers who did not exercise their profession in the courts, or in Dublin, and three case studies are explored. As with all case studies, these individuals are not fully representative of the universal experience, but they complement the evidence supplied by other studies. Sir John Walshe is a significant figure as a Munster lawyer whose career was played out on a regionally restricted stage. After 1660, he served as Ormond’s seneschal, but the title of the office does little justice to the complexity of the relationship between the lawyer and his client. Sir William Talbot had no formal legal qualifications and worked primarily as a land agent. His family were prominent Leinster lawyers and politicians. Finally, Gerald Dillon was a lawyer from Connacht who represented both Catholic and Protestant clients. Dillon rose to high office nationally, participated in the negotiation of the Articles of Limerick, and chose to accompany James II into exile. This chapter suggests that, notwithstanding professional skill and status, legal practitioners were as vulnerable as many lay Catholics to the law’s vicissitudes.

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