James Stanihurst (died 1573), also spelt James Stanyhurst) was for three terms Speaker of the Irish House of Commons.[1][2] He was also the first judge to hold the position of Recorder of Dublin.[3][4]
^Centre for Neo-Latin Studies, University College Cork
JamesStanihurst (died 1573), also spelt James Stanyhurst) was for three terms Speaker of the Irish House of Commons. He was also the first judge to hold...
Stanyhurst or Stanihurst is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: JamesStanihurst (c. 1522–1571), Irish politician Richard Stanihurst (1547–1618)...
grandfather, JamesStanihurst, had been speaker of the Irish parliament. Ussher's father, Arland Ussher, was a clerk in chancery who married Stanihurst's daughter...
with his university friend, Richard Stanihurst, where he was the guest of Richard and his father, JamesStanihurst, the Speaker of the Irish House of Commons...
Stanyhurst (or Stanihurst) (1547–1618) was an Anglo-Irish alchemist, translator, poet and historian, who was born in Dublin. His father, James Stanyhurst...
Martin and F.J. Byrne (Clarendon Press 1984), ISBN 0-19-821745-5 Lydon, James F. (Summer 1995). "'Ireland Corporate of itself' the Parliament of 1460"...
William Fitzwilliam from 1535: jointly to Nicholas Stanyhurst (father of JamesStanihurst) and Thomas Alen (brother of John Alan) from 1554: Thomas Alen alone...
Notes Peerage John Chevir 1450 Kilkenny City Thomas Cusack 1541 1543 JamesStanihurst 1557 1568 1557 1560 1568 Dublin City Nicholas Walsh 1585 1586 Waterford...
Pederson mentioned that James Ware, writing in 1639, believed that the birthplace of Sacrobosco was near Dublin. Stanihurst and even Pederson were probably...
Recorder was held by Thomas Fitzsimon in 1547, and by his son-in-law JamesStanihurst, Speaker of the Irish House of Commons, in 1564. The last Recorder...
and acknowledges the monarch's right to amend legislative proposals. JamesStanihurst is Speaker of the Irish House of Commons. July 10 – July 19: Thomas...
Gerhard Dorn (c. 1530–1584) Martin Ruland the Elder (1532–1602) Richard Stanihurst (1547–1618) Tycho Brahe (1546–1601) Samuel Norton (1548–1621) Edward Kelley...
Dublin. David Rothe, Roman Catholic Bishop of Ossory December 27 – JamesStanihurst, politician Robert Weston, Dean of the Arches and Lord Chancellor of...
(secondary coordinates) Harris's Table. Ware-Harris, Antiquities, 1745 James Ware, De Hibernia, et Antiquitatibus ejus, 1654 edition A. Cogan, The Diocese...
Jewels of England from the Tower of London in 1671 (d. 1680) Richard Stanihurst, translator, poet and historian (b. 1547) Moody, T. W.; et al., eds. (1989)...
so-called English Pale were echoed by other commentators such as Richard Stanihurst who, while protesting the Englishness of the Palesmen in 1577, opined...
deed for the estate dates back to 1200 A.D. when it was known as the "Stanihurst". It passed through the Bayley family to their descendants, the Shireburns...
Scuyr 1538–1539 James FitzSymond 1539–1540 Nicholas Bennet 1540–1541 Walter Tyrrell 1541–1542 Nicholas Umfre 1542–1543 Nicholas Stanihurst 1543–1546 No entry...
c. 1554) Unknown dates François de Boivin, French chronicler Richard Stanihurst, Irish translator of Virgil (born 1547) Probable year – Bento Teixeira...
lull the back retreate One famous description of the pipes from Richard Stanihurst's De Rebus Hibernicis (1586), reads as follows in English translation:...
Colm; Stanyhurst, Richard (1981). Richard Stanihurst the Dubliner, 1547-1618 : a biography, with a Stanihurst text, On Ireland's past. Blackrock: Irish...
Stanihurst, Richard (1979). Richard Holinshed's Irish Chronicle (1577), Edited by Liam Miller and Eilleen Power. Dublin: Dolmen Press. Todd, James Henthorn...
history of Wales) Reginald Scot – The Discoverie of Witchcraft Richard Stanihurst – De rebus in Hibernia gestis (Of matters in the history of Ireland) Lucas...
delight, even in Dublin, speak Irishe". The Old English historian Richard Stanihurst (1547–1618) wrote as follows: "When their posteritie became not altogither...
century as Vicus Piscariorum, Viscus Piscariæ, and as Fish Street. In 1577, Stanihurst named it St John's Street. In the fifteenth century, it was referred to...