|
| |
|
Godbout – Racicot / LeBeuf – LaHaye
|
|
|
1646 - 1721 (75 years)
-
| Name |
William Worth [1] |
| Born |
1646 |
Cork, Ireland |
| Gender |
Male |
| Occupation |
Accused of favoring fanatics and persecuting Catholics during the earl of Clarendon's viceroyalty |
| Occupation |
Lawyer |
| Occupation |
Recorder of Cork, Ireland |
| Occupation |
1681 |
| Elevated to the judicial bench as junior baron of the Irish court of the exchequer |
| Occupation |
1685 |
| Re-appointed by James II on his accession to the throne |
| Occupation |
1690-1691 |
| Not re-appointed to the court of the exchequer by William of Orange following the military eclipse of Jacobitism in Ireland |
| Occupation |
1692-1705 |
| Employed as a commissioner with the responsibility for the management of the duke of Ormonde's estates |
| Property |
Extensive land holdings in Dublin, Limerick, Carlow, Kilkenny and Tipperary |
| Died |
1721 |
Ireland |
| Person ID |
I12075 |
Godbout |
| Last Modified |
18 Apr 2017 |
-
| Sources |
- [S581] Sir Edward Newenham MP, 1734-1814, Defender of the Protestant Constitution, James Kelly, (Four Courts Press, Dublin, Ireland, 2004).
|
|
|
|
|