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Robert Gardiner (Chief Justice)


Sir Robert Gardiner (1540-1619) was an English-born judge in Ireland who held the office of Lord Chief Justice of Ireland for eighteen years. In addition to his judicial duties he was a trusted political adviser to both Elizabeth I and James I.

He was the son of Thomas Gardiner of Shimpling in Suffolk. Born in 1540, he entered Lincoln's Inn in 1562 and was reader of the Inn in 1585. He was called to the Bar in 1570.

Queen Elizabeth, who, despite their occasional quarrels, had great trust in Gardiner, sent him to Ireland as Lord Chief Justice in 1586 with exceptional powers to review the operation of the Courts of Common Law. Crawford states that he had "a mandate to reform both courts and administration", but it does not seem that he had much success in this mission.

Irish politics at the time was dominated by the feud between the Lord Deputy of Ireland, Sir John Perrot, and his opponents, who were led by Adam Loftus, the Archbishop of Dublin. Gardiner took Loftus' side and worked for Perrot's recall. He was appointed one of the commissioners to deal with the aftermath of the Desmond Rebellion in 1588, and negotiated with Hugh O'Neill in 1594 and 1596. He was Lord Justice of Ireland in 1597. He fought against Hugh O'Neill in 1598 and against the Spanish Army at Kinsale in 1601-2.

Despite a quarrel between them in 1597, the Queen retained great confidence in Gardiner, and knighted him in 1591. He seems to have been considered irreplaceable, despite his constant pleas, from early in his career in Ireland, to be allowed to retire on health grounds. Like some (though by no means all) English settlers in Ireland he disliked the damp Irish climate and believed that it was damaging his health. In 1603 he was finally permitted to retire.


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