John Macdonell (judge)

Sir John Macdonell KCB FBA (1 August 1846 17 March 1921) was a British jurist. He was King's Remembrancer (1912–1920) and invested as a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath.[1][2] Shaw of Dunfermline gives a prefatory biography in Historical Trials.[3]

John Macdonell

John Macdonnell married writer and journalist Agnes Harrison in 1873.[4]

Selected publications

  • A Survey of Political Economy. Edinburgh: Edmonston and Douglas. 1871. Retrieved 27 February 2019 via Internet Archive.[5]
  • The Land Question; with particular reference to England and Scotland. London: Macmillan. 1873 via HathiTrust.
  • The Law of Master and Servant, 1883
  • Macdonell, John; Manson, Edward William Donoghue, eds. (1913). Great Jurists of the World. London: John Murray. Retrieved 10 February 2019 via Internet Archive.; 1914 edition, Boston: Little, Brown & Co.
  • Law and Eugenics, 1916
  • Historical Trials OUP, 1927; republished in 1931, 1933, 1936 as #23 in Thinker's Library

References

  1. Fillebrown, Charles Bowdoin. The Principles of Natural Taxation. Chicago: A. C. McClurg & co., 1917. Page 23.
  2. "MACDONELL, Sir John". Who's Who. Vol. 59. 1907. p. 1117.
  3. Macdonell, John (1922). Lee, Robert Warden (ed.). Historical Trials; with a Preface by the Right Hon. Lord Shaw of Dunfermline (1st ed.). Oxford: At the Clarendon Press. pp. vii–ix. Retrieved 10 February 2019 via Internet Archive.
  4. "Death of Lady Macdonell". The Times (43865). 21 January 1925. p. 16.
  5. "Review of A Survey of Political Economy by John Macdonell and The Theory of Political Economy by Prof. Stanley Jevons". The Athenaeum (2297): 589–590. 4 November 1871.
Legal offices
Preceded by
James Robert Mellor
King's Remembrancer
1912–1920
Succeeded by
Sir Thomas Chitty, 1st Baronet


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.