James Dyer
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Sir James Dyer (1510-1582) was a judge and Speaker of the British House of Commons during the reign of Edward VI of England.
Dyer was knighted at Whitehall on 9 April 1553, Strand Inn, preparatory 1520s, Middle Temple abt. 1530, called to the bar 1537?, bencher 1540s, serjeant-at-law 17 Oct. 1552 and MP for Wells, in Somerset, and later for Cambridgeshire, speaker of the house of commons 1553, justice of the peace for Cambridgeshire 1547, judge of the court of common pleas 1557, Chief Justice of the Common Pleas from January 1559 until his death.
"a judge of profound knowledge and judgment in the laws of the land, and principally in the form of good pleading and true entries of judgments, and of great piety and sincerity, who in his heart abhorred all corruption and deceit; of a bountiful and generous disposition, a patron and preferrer of men learned in the law and expert clerks; of singular assiduity and observation, as appears by his book of reports, all written with his own hand, and of a fine, reverend and venerable countenance and personage." (Coke, 9.14v–15)
- J. H. Baker, ‘Dyer, Sir James (1510-1582)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 12 April 2005
- J. M. R. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press 1888
- Foss's Lives of the Judges
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Categories: Cleanup from February 2007 | All pages needing cleanup | 1510 births | 1582 deaths | Chief Justices of the Common Pleas | English judges | English knights | Speakers of the House of Commons of England | Members of the pre-1707 English Parliament | Tudor people | British government biography stubs