- William of Drogheada
William of Drogheda,
academic andecclesiastical lawyer , d. 1245.A native of
Drogheda ,Ireland , William was the best knownOxford lawyer of the 13th centry. He seems to have often pleaded cases at theUniversity Church of St Mary the Virgin . His posts included rector of the church of Petha (Petham ,Kent ?) and in 1245 the rector of Grafton Underwood,Northamptonshire . He described himself as aregent in law.His single work, "Summa aurea", is concerned solely with legal practise, procedures and forms for canon law, presenting and winning a case. A recent description states that "The author's aim seems to have been to give a complete guide to every sort of action which an eccleiastical lawyer might have to deal."1
William outlines procedures for:
* - calling
witnesses
* - what to do if any - including the judge - fail to appear
* -liability
* -punishment
* - beheaviour ofadvocates and judges
* - the question offees
* - the issueing oflegal documents The "Summa" is very incomplete, and appears to consist of the first of the six projected books of the work. This incompleteness may be due to it being abandoned due to its scale, rather than William's death.
Drogheada was murdered by his
squire , Ralph de Boklande, at this house in the parish of St Peter in the East, Oxford; it is now known as Drawda Hall, onHigh Street, Oxford .In January 1241 he had granted it to the abbey of
Monk Sherborne on condition that they celebrated daily mass "in our church of Sherborne where my mother and father will lie after their deaths and I along with them."ources
* "A New History of Ireland", volume one, pp.965-68.
* 1, op. cit., p. 966.
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