Born in Rhode Island, Arthur Browne was a lawyer, a scholar, and a
politician in the Ireland of the late 18th century, where he established
a brilliant reputation at a time of enormous conflict and upheaval. The
pre-eminent maritime lawyer of his era, Browne was also an MP in the
Irish parliament, and the Regius Professor of Civil and Canon Law at
Trinity College Dublin, where he was described as 'one of the most able
and learned academic lawyers ever to teach there.' A brilliant and
forceful debater, Browne opposed violent revolution, supported the
Catholics, and became one of the most powerful liberal voices in the
Irish parliament in the 1790s. His international reputation as a legal
scholar was established by his two-volume study on the civil law and the
law of the admiralty in 1797 and 1799, a work that had a major influence
around the world, and especially with American maritime law. This new
book explores how the American-born Browne became a leading figure in
Irish law, academics, and politics, and it provides an entirely new
perspective on his role in parliament during the controversial passing
of the Act of Union in 1800. (Series: Irish Legal History Society, Vol.
26) [Subject: Legal History, History, Legal Studies, Irish Studies,
18th & 19th Century, Maritime Law, Act of Union]