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Middle Temple

The Honourable Society of the Middle Temple, commonly known simply as Middle Temple, is one of the four Inns of Court exclusively entitled to call their members to the English Bar as barristers, the others being the Inner Temple, Gray's Inn and Lincoln's Inn. It is located in the wider Temple area of London, near the Royal Courts of Justice, and within the City of London. As a liberty, it functions largely as an independent local government authority.

The Honourable Society of the Middle Temple
Middle Temple Hall
General information
Town or cityLondon
CountryEngland
Coordinates51°30′44″N 0°06′39″W / 51.51212211529157°N 0.1108662249555948°W / 51.51212211529157; -0.1108662249555948
Website
https://www.middletemple.org.uk/
Fountain Court, at the heart of Middle Temple

History

 
Part of Middle Temple, c. 1830, as drawn by Thomas Shepherd. The great hall is beneath the cupola.
 
Middle Temple Library, 1892, by Herbert Railton

During the 12th and early 13th centuries the law was taught, in the City of London, primarily by the clergy. But a papal bull in 1218 prohibited the clergy from practising in the secular courts (where the English common law system operated, as opposed to the Roman civil law favoured by the Church). As a result, law began to be practised and taught by laymen instead of by clerics. To protect their schools from competition, first Henry II and later Henry III issued proclamations prohibiting the teaching of the civil law within the City of London.[1] The common law lawyers migrated to the hamlet of Holborn, as it was easy to get to the law courts at Westminster Hall and was just outside the City.[2] They were based in guilds, which in time became the Inns of Court.[3]

The Middle Temple is the western part of "The Temple", which was the headquarters of the Knights Templar until they were dissolved in 1312. There have been lawyers in the Temple since 1320, when they were the tenants of the Earl of Lancaster, who had held the Temple since 1315.[4] The Temple later belonged to the Knights Hospitaller. In 1346 the knights again leased the premises to the lawyers – the eastern part (which became Inner Temple) to lawyers from Thavie's Inn, an Inn of Chancery in Holborn, and the western part to lawyers from St George's Inn.[5] The Cross of St George is still part of the arms of Middle Temple today.

All of the Inn's records were burned during the Peasants' Revolt of 1381.[6]

After Henry VIII seized the Temple from the Knights Hospitaller in 1540, each Inn continued to hold its share of the Temple as tenants of the Crown for £10 a year,[7] until it was granted to them jointly in 1608 by James I, to be held in perpetuity so long as they continue to provide education and accommodation to lawyers and students and maintain the Temple Church and its Master.[8] The Temple Church, consecrated in 1185, still stands as a "Royal Peculiar" (extra-diocesan) church of the Inner and Middle Temples.[9]

Much of the Middle Temple was destroyed in a fire in January 1679, which caused more damage to the Inn than the Great Fire of 1666. The Thames being frozen over, beer from the Temple cellars was used to fight the fire, which was eventually only contained by blowing up some buildings with gunpowder. The Lord Mayor of London tried to exploit the occasion to assert his own jurisdiction over the Temple – which was independent of the City – and on being thwarted in this endeavour, he turned back a fire engine which was on its way to the fire from the City.[10]

The first woman to be admitted to any Inn was Helena Florence Normanton, who joined Middle Temple as a student member on 24 December 1919.[11]

The Temple was damaged extensively during the Blitz (1940–1944). The Library was destroyed, much of the Church was destroyed, the Master's House burned down, and the Hall was badly damaged. 112 chambers were destroyed, out of a pre-war total of 285 (39%).[12]

The Inns served as colleges for the education of lawyers until they stopped being responsible for legal education in 1852, although they continue to provide training in areas such as advocacy and ethics for students, pupil barristers and newly qualified barristers. Most of the Inn is occupied by barristers' offices, known as barristers' chambers. One of the Middle Temple's main functions now is to provide education and support to new members of the profession. This is done through advocacy training, the provision of scholarships (over £1 million in 2011), subsidised accommodation both in the Temple and in Clapham,[13] and by providing events where junior members may meet senior colleagues for help and advice.

In 2008 the 400th anniversary of the charter of James I was celebrated by Elizabeth II issuing new letters patent confirming the original grant.[8]

Buildings

The Middle Temple owns 43 buildings, many of which are listed buildings. The ones in the Temple itself are still held under the 1608 letters patent of James I, but some others just outside the Temple were bought subsequently.[14] Some buildings are modern, replacing ones which were destroyed in The Blitz, but others date back to the 16th century. (There is a list here, showing the dates of construction, architect, and listed status.) The Inn is also jointly responsible, with Inner Temple, for Temple Church and the Master's House next to the church, a Georgian townhouse built in 1764.[15]

The Hall

 
Interior of the hall and its double-hammerbeam roof

Construction of Middle Temple Hall began in 1562 and was completed in the early 1570s. Its hammerbeam roof has been said to be the best in London.[16] Queen Elizabeth I visited the hall in 1578, unannounced, to inspect the new building and listen to a debate between barristers. This is the earliest known visit of a reigning monarch to an Inn of Court.[17] One of the tables at the end of the hall is traditionally said to have been made from the timbers of the Golden Hinde, the ship used by Sir Francis Drake to circumnavigate the world.[18] Above the table is a massive painting of King Charles I thought to be a copy by Peter Lely of the original by Anthony van Dyck,[19] and also portraits of Charles II, James II, William III, Elizabeth I, Queen Anne and George I.[20] On the walls are panels bearing the coats of arms of Readers (senior members[note 1]) dating back to 1597.[21]

The first recorded performance of Shakespeare's play Twelfth Night occurred in the hall on 2 February 1602.[22] Shakespeare himself was probably present.[23]

The hall survived the Great Fire of London in 1666, but was damaged by bombing in the Second World War.

Middle Temple Hall is at the heart of the Inn, and the Inn's student members are required to attend a minimum of 10 qualifying sessions, 6 of which must be attended in person at the Inn. Qualifying sessions, formerly known as "dinners", combine collegiate and educational elements and will usually combine a dinner or reception with lectures, debates, mooting, or musical performances.

Middle Temple Hall is also a popular venue for banqueting, weddings, receptions and parties. In recent years, it has become a much-used film location—the cobbled streets, historic buildings and gas lighting give it a unique atmosphere.

Library

Little is known about the original library, which was probably just a room in a barristers' chambers. All the books were stolen prior to the reign of Henry VIII. In 1625 a new library was established at the site of what is now Garden Court, and in 1641 it was enlarged when a member of the Inn, Robert Ashley, died and left his collection of books and £300 to the Inn. This library was demolished in 1830. After an interval of three decades, a new library was built, in a Gothic style designed by architect H. R. Abraham. It was opened by The Prince of Wales on 31 October 1861.[24] This Victorian library was badly damaged during the London Blitz in 1940, and was demolished following the war. A new Library was constructed in the 1950s to a design by Edward Maufe and opened by the Queen Mother in 1958.[25] The building still houses the Inn's library and archives as well as various administrative offices, and is now known as the Ashley Building.

Middle Temple Library possesses Emery Molyneux's terrestrial and celestial globes, which are of particular historical cartographical value.

Gatehouse

The present gatehouse, on Fleet Street on the northern boundary of the Inn, was built in 1684 by Sir Christopher Wren. It replaced an earlier one which had been allowed to decay until it had to be demolished.[26] It leads into Middle Temple Lane, which proceeds southwards through the Inn to end at gates on the Victoria Embankment, south of the Temple. All of the buildings in the Temple lying west of the lane belong to Middle Temple; the buildings to the east belong to one Inn or the other.

Chambers

West of Middle Temple Lane

Proceeding south from the Fleet Street gatehouse, Middle Temple Lane passes Brick Court to the west, so called because it is said to consist of the first brick buildings to be built in the Temple, in the reign of Elizabeth I. Sir William Blackstone worked here before becoming the first professor to lecture in law at Oxford University. The poet and playwright Oliver Goldsmith also lived here from 1765 (having earlier resided in Garden Court), and is buried in the Temple Church. Blackstone, living on the floor below Goldsmith's chambers, complained about the noise made by Goldsmith's raucous parties, which were attended by many celebrities of the time, including Samuel Johnson. Blackstone later moved to Pump Court; whether because of the parties or for some other reason is unknown.[27]

Next to Brick Court are the buildings called Essex Court, which actually form part of the same courtyard. The earliest record of Essex Court is from 1640, but the original buildings were replaced in 1656 and 1677.[28] Today Essex Court and Brick Court are occupied by barristers' chambers. Through a passageway to the west is New Court, built by Wren, and a gate leading out of the Temple into Devereux Court and Essex Street. (Another passageway to the north leads through Outer Temple to Fleet Street.)

South of New Court and Essex Court lies Fountain Court. The fountain there was described by Charles Dickens in Martin Chuzzlewit.[29] In her notes to her poem The Middle Temple Gardens, Letitia Elizabeth Landon says of it: 'it is the poetry of the place, or, rather, the voice of the poetry with which it is filled'. To the south of Fountain Court are, from west to east, Garden Court (where the old library used to be), Middle Temple Gardens (which extend to the southern perimeter of the Temple), and Middle Temple Hall. The current buildings of Garden Court, which lie along the western edge of the Temple, were constructed in 1883.[30] South of Garden Court are Blackstone House, Queen Elizabeth Building, and a gate leading out of the Temple (and a short distance from Temple tube station).

South of the hall, and east of the gardens, are Plowden Buildings, built in 1831, which contain the Treasurer's office. South of that is the current library, and then, at the end of Middle Temple Lane, are the buildings called Temple Gardens, built on both sides of the lane by both Inns in 1861.[31] The western part belongs to Middle Temple, and the eastern part is Inner Temple's. The lane passes through the middle of Temple Gardens via an archway and leads out of the Temple.

East of the lane

Along the east side of Middle Temple Lane (proceeding northwards from the southern archway), the buildings belong to Inner Temple, until the lane reaches Lamb Buildings. Lamb Buildings belong to Middle Temple, which bought the land from Inner Temple after the Great Fire of 1666. Inner Temple needed the money because it found itself short of funds due to the extensive property destruction. Lamb Buildings are built on the site of Caesar's Buildings, which were destroyed in the fire, and which had belonged to Inner Temple.[32] The Lamb of God is the symbol of Middle Temple and is engraved above the entrances to the building.

Behind Lamb Buildings, further east, is Elm Court, built in 1880.[33] The buildings on the south and east sides of Elm Court are part of Inner Temple; the west and north buildings are Middle Temple. Further north is Pump Court, one of the oldest courts in the Temple.[34] Most of the buildings here belong to Middle Temple, except those in the north west corner. Further east are Middle Temple's cloisters, leading to Church Court between Temple Church and Inner Temple Hall. North of Pump Court is Inner Temple's Hare Court, and then more buildings belonging to Middle Temple, until the lane ends at the gate to Fleet Street.

Parallel with and to the east of Middle Temple Lane lies Inner Temple Lane, which runs from Fleet Street to Church Court. On the east side of Inner Temple Lane, and opposite Hare Court, is Goldsmith Building, so named because of its proximity to Goldsmith's tomb in the adjacent Temple Church. Despite its location in the Inner Temple, Goldsmith Building actually belongs to Middle Temple, for reasons which are no longer remembered. It was built in 1861.[35]

Structure and governance

The Inn's supreme body is its Parliament, which is made up of the Benchers (judges and senior barristers), who are elected for life, and headed by the Treasurer who is elected annually. Parliament approves the Inn's budget and authorises Call of qualified student members to the Bar.[36] Members of the British royal family who are made honorary benchers are known as "Royal Benchers". The first of these was Albert Edward, Prince of Wales, later Edward VII, made a Royal Bencher when he opened the newly constructed library in 1861.[8]

The Inn is run from day to day by an Executive Committee and four other committees, which are accountable to the Parliament.[37] The Executive Committee consists of 14 voting members (including the Treasurer and the Deputy Treasurer) and two non-voting members (including the Under Treasurer).[38]

The Treasurer for 2023 is David Lloyd Jones, Lord Lloyd-Jones, and the Deputy Treasurer is Paul Darling OBE KC.[39] The Chief Executive and Under Treasurer is Guy Perricone, who previously held the post from 2013 to 2020, rejoining the Inn in 2022.[40]

Liberty

Middle Temple (like the Inner Temple) is one of the few remaining liberties, an old name for a geographic division. It is an independent extra-parochial area,[41] historically not governed by the City of London Corporation[42] (and is today regarded as a local authority for most purposes)[43] and equally outside the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the Bishop of London. The Middle Temple's functions as a local council are set out in the Temples Order 1971.[44]

It geographically falls within the boundaries and wards of the City, but can be thought of as an independent enclave.

Some of the Inn's buildings (those along Essex Street, Devereux Court and the Queen Elizabeth Building near the Embankment) lie just outside the liberty of the Middle Temple and the City's boundary, and are actually situated in the City of Westminster. Quadrant House (7–15 Fleet Street) was acquired by the Middle Temple in 1999, and after five years of conversion is now a barristers' chambers.[45] This lies outside the liberty (though immediately adjacent to it) but is within the City of London.

Badge and coat of arms

 
Coat of arms

The badge of the Middle Temple consists of the Lamb of God with a flag bearing the Saint George's Cross. This symbol appears in the centre of the Inn's coat of arms, against a background consisting of the same cross (a red cross on a white field). The cross, and the lamb with the flag, each were symbols of the Knights Templar.[46]

Notable members

Royal benchers

Other honorary benchers

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Readers are Benchers of the Inn, who traditionally were appointed to give a 'Reading.'
  2. ^ The Prince's appointment as Treasurer was honorary, and the office's functions were performed by the Deputy Treasurer.

References

  1. ^ Bellot, Hugh H.L. (1902). The Inner and Middle Temple: Legal, Literary and Historical Associations. London: Methuen & Co. p. 32.
  2. ^ Watt, Francis; Barton, Dunbar Plunket; Benham, Charles (1928). The Story of the Inns of Court. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. OCLC 77565485.
  3. ^ Bellot, p. 36
  4. ^ Bellot (1902), p. 20.
  5. ^ Bellot (1902), p. 22.
  6. ^ Bellot, p. 118.
  7. ^ Bellot (1902), pp. 19–25.
  8. ^ a b c d "June 2017: Royalty and the Inn". Middle Temple.
  9. ^ "Temple Church" Inner Temple Library, retrieved 5 August 2018.
  10. ^ Bellot (1902), pp. 324–25.
  11. ^ Middle Temple website
  12. ^ Middle Temple Ordeal (1947), Middle Temple, pp. 40, 54
  13. ^ Middle Temple accommodation for students (accessed 26 April 2007) 31 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ "Buildings," Middle Temple website, retrieved 12 November 2017.
  15. ^ Bellot (1902), p. 231
  16. ^ Bellot (1902), p. 281
  17. ^ Baker, Sir John (2017). "A Royal visit to the Temple in 1578". The Law Quarterly Review. 133: 535–537.
  18. ^ Bellot (1902), p. 282
  19. ^ "Royal Paintings in Middle Temple Hall" (retrieved 19 February 2021).
  20. ^ Bellot (1902), p. 283
  21. ^ "Middle Temple Hall," Middle Temple website, retrieved 3 November 2017.
  22. ^ British library website (retrieved 3 November 2017).
  23. ^ Bellot (1902), pp. 286-288
  24. ^ Bellot (1902), pp. 290-293
  25. ^ "History of the Library". Middle Temple. Retrieved 26 September 2019.
  26. ^ Bellot (1902), p. 269
  27. ^ Bellot (1902), pp. 276-280
  28. ^ Bellot (1902), p. 301
  29. ^ Bellot (1902), p. 275
  30. ^ Bellot (1902), p. 293
  31. ^ Bellot (1902), p. 294
  32. ^ Bellot (1902), p. 304
  33. ^ Bellot (1902), p. 298
  34. ^ Bellot (1902), p. 300
  35. ^ Bellot (1902), p. 303
  36. ^ "Parliament," Middle Temple website, retrieved 30 October 2017.
  37. ^ "Standing Committees," Middle Temple website, retrieved 30 October 2017.
  38. ^ "Executive Committee," Middle Temple website, retrieved 30 October 2017.
  39. ^ "Officers of the Inn," Middle Temple website, retrieved 14 January 2023.
  40. ^ "The Executive Management of the Inn" at Middle Temple's official website (retrieved 7 May 2022).
  41. ^ Association for Geographic Information[permanent dead link] What place is that then?
  42. ^ City of London (Approved Premises for Marriage) Act 1996 "By ancient custom the Honourable Society of the Inner Temple and the Honourable Society of the Middle Temple exercise powers within the areas of the Inner Temple and the Middle Temple respectively ('the Temples') concerning (inter alia) the regulation and governance of the Temples"
  43. ^ Middle Temple as a local authority 30 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  44. ^ Temples Order 1971, released as part of a response from Under-Treasurer of the Middle Temple to a request made using WhatDoTheyKnow, accessed 16 September 2012.
  45. ^ Building talk 5 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine Major £12m Fleet Street refurbishment (2005)
  46. ^ Bellot (1902), p. 28
  47. ^ Bellot (1902), p. 290
  48. ^ Odgers, William Blake (1918). "Sir William Blackstone". Yale Law Journal. The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc. 27 (1), p. 601
  49. ^ "Admissions to House & Chambers" (1833-1844). Middle Temple Archive, ID: MT/3/AHC/8. The Honourable Society of the Middle Temple.
  50. ^ Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers vol. 108, 1892
  51. ^ Middle Temple website: Royal Benchers
  52. ^ a b c "Prince William becomes honorary barrister". The Daily Telegraph. 7 July 2009. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 27 June 2019. The Prince is the sixth member of the Royal Family to be called to the Bench as a Royal Bencher and is following in the footsteps of the Queen Mother, called in 1944, and his mother Diana, Princess of Wales, called in 1988.
  53. ^ Middle Temple website: Honorary Benchers

External links

  • Official website
  • John Hatsell: 18th Century Middle Temple - UK Parliament Living Heritage
  • John Glynn MP & Middle Temple - UK Parliament Living Heritage

middle, temple, honourable, society, commonly, known, simply, four, inns, court, exclusively, entitled, call, their, members, english, barristers, others, being, inner, temple, gray, lincoln, located, wider, temple, area, london, near, royal, courts, justice, . The Honourable Society of the Middle Temple commonly known simply as Middle Temple is one of the four Inns of Court exclusively entitled to call their members to the English Bar as barristers the others being the Inner Temple Gray s Inn and Lincoln s Inn It is located in the wider Temple area of London near the Royal Courts of Justice and within the City of London As a liberty it functions largely as an independent local government authority The Honourable Society of the Middle TempleMiddle Temple HallGeneral informationTown or cityLondonCountryEnglandCoordinates51 30 44 N 0 06 39 W 51 51212211529157 N 0 1108662249555948 W 51 51212211529157 0 1108662249555948Websitehttps www middletemple org uk Fountain Court at the heart of Middle Temple Contents 1 History 2 Buildings 2 1 The Hall 2 2 Library 2 3 Gatehouse 2 4 Chambers 2 4 1 West of Middle Temple Lane 2 4 2 East of the lane 3 Structure and governance 3 1 Liberty 3 2 Badge and coat of arms 4 Notable members 4 1 Royal benchers 4 2 Other honorary benchers 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksHistory Edit Part of Middle Temple c 1830 as drawn by Thomas Shepherd The great hall is beneath the cupola Middle Temple Library 1892 by Herbert Railton During the 12th and early 13th centuries the law was taught in the City of London primarily by the clergy But a papal bull in 1218 prohibited the clergy from practising in the secular courts where the English common law system operated as opposed to the Roman civil law favoured by the Church As a result law began to be practised and taught by laymen instead of by clerics To protect their schools from competition first Henry II and later Henry III issued proclamations prohibiting the teaching of the civil law within the City of London 1 The common law lawyers migrated to the hamlet of Holborn as it was easy to get to the law courts at Westminster Hall and was just outside the City 2 They were based in guilds which in time became the Inns of Court 3 The Middle Temple is the western part of The Temple which was the headquarters of the Knights Templar until they were dissolved in 1312 There have been lawyers in the Temple since 1320 when they were the tenants of the Earl of Lancaster who had held the Temple since 1315 4 The Temple later belonged to the Knights Hospitaller In 1346 the knights again leased the premises to the lawyers the eastern part which became Inner Temple to lawyers from Thavie s Inn an Inn of Chancery in Holborn and the western part to lawyers from St George s Inn 5 The Cross of St George is still part of the arms of Middle Temple today All of the Inn s records were burned during the Peasants Revolt of 1381 6 After Henry VIII seized the Temple from the Knights Hospitaller in 1540 each Inn continued to hold its share of the Temple as tenants of the Crown for 10 a year 7 until it was granted to them jointly in 1608 by James I to be held in perpetuity so long as they continue to provide education and accommodation to lawyers and students and maintain the Temple Church and its Master 8 The Temple Church consecrated in 1185 still stands as a Royal Peculiar extra diocesan church of the Inner and Middle Temples 9 Much of the Middle Temple was destroyed in a fire in January 1679 which caused more damage to the Inn than the Great Fire of 1666 The Thames being frozen over beer from the Temple cellars was used to fight the fire which was eventually only contained by blowing up some buildings with gunpowder The Lord Mayor of London tried to exploit the occasion to assert his own jurisdiction over the Temple which was independent of the City and on being thwarted in this endeavour he turned back a fire engine which was on its way to the fire from the City 10 The first woman to be admitted to any Inn was Helena Florence Normanton who joined Middle Temple as a student member on 24 December 1919 11 The Temple was damaged extensively during the Blitz 1940 1944 The Library was destroyed much of the Church was destroyed the Master s House burned down and the Hall was badly damaged 112 chambers were destroyed out of a pre war total of 285 39 12 The Inns served as colleges for the education of lawyers until they stopped being responsible for legal education in 1852 although they continue to provide training in areas such as advocacy and ethics for students pupil barristers and newly qualified barristers Most of the Inn is occupied by barristers offices known as barristers chambers One of the Middle Temple s main functions now is to provide education and support to new members of the profession This is done through advocacy training the provision of scholarships over 1 million in 2011 subsidised accommodation both in the Temple and in Clapham 13 and by providing events where junior members may meet senior colleagues for help and advice In 2008 the 400th anniversary of the charter of James I was celebrated by Elizabeth II issuing new letters patent confirming the original grant 8 Buildings EditThe Middle Temple owns 43 buildings many of which are listed buildings The ones in the Temple itself are still held under the 1608 letters patent of James I but some others just outside the Temple were bought subsequently 14 Some buildings are modern replacing ones which were destroyed in The Blitz but others date back to the 16th century There is a list here showing the dates of construction architect and listed status The Inn is also jointly responsible with Inner Temple for Temple Church and the Master s House next to the church a Georgian townhouse built in 1764 15 The Hall Edit Interior of the hall and its double hammerbeam roof Construction of Middle Temple Hall began in 1562 and was completed in the early 1570s Its hammerbeam roof has been said to be the best in London 16 Queen Elizabeth I visited the hall in 1578 unannounced to inspect the new building and listen to a debate between barristers This is the earliest known visit of a reigning monarch to an Inn of Court 17 One of the tables at the end of the hall is traditionally said to have been made from the timbers of the Golden Hinde the ship used by Sir Francis Drake to circumnavigate the world 18 Above the table is a massive painting of King Charles I thought to be a copy by Peter Lely of the original by Anthony van Dyck 19 and also portraits of Charles II James II William III Elizabeth I Queen Anne and George I 20 On the walls are panels bearing the coats of arms of Readers senior members note 1 dating back to 1597 21 The first recorded performance of Shakespeare s play Twelfth Night occurred in the hall on 2 February 1602 22 Shakespeare himself was probably present 23 The hall survived the Great Fire of London in 1666 but was damaged by bombing in the Second World War Middle Temple Hall is at the heart of the Inn and the Inn s student members are required to attend a minimum of 10 qualifying sessions 6 of which must be attended in person at the Inn Qualifying sessions formerly known as dinners combine collegiate and educational elements and will usually combine a dinner or reception with lectures debates mooting or musical performances Middle Temple Hall is also a popular venue for banqueting weddings receptions and parties In recent years it has become a much used film location the cobbled streets historic buildings and gas lighting give it a unique atmosphere Library Edit Little is known about the original library which was probably just a room in a barristers chambers All the books were stolen prior to the reign of Henry VIII In 1625 a new library was established at the site of what is now Garden Court and in 1641 it was enlarged when a member of the Inn Robert Ashley died and left his collection of books and 300 to the Inn This library was demolished in 1830 After an interval of three decades a new library was built in a Gothic style designed by architect H R Abraham It was opened by The Prince of Wales on 31 October 1861 24 This Victorian library was badly damaged during the London Blitz in 1940 and was demolished following the war A new Library was constructed in the 1950s to a design by Edward Maufe and opened by the Queen Mother in 1958 25 The building still houses the Inn s library and archives as well as various administrative offices and is now known as the Ashley Building Middle Temple Library possesses Emery Molyneux s terrestrial and celestial globes which are of particular historical cartographical value Gatehouse Edit The present gatehouse on Fleet Street on the northern boundary of the Inn was built in 1684 by Sir Christopher Wren It replaced an earlier one which had been allowed to decay until it had to be demolished 26 It leads into Middle Temple Lane which proceeds southwards through the Inn to end at gates on the Victoria Embankment south of the Temple All of the buildings in the Temple lying west of the lane belong to Middle Temple the buildings to the east belong to one Inn or the other Chambers Edit West of Middle Temple Lane Edit Proceeding south from the Fleet Street gatehouse Middle Temple Lane passes Brick Court to the west so called because it is said to consist of the first brick buildings to be built in the Temple in the reign of Elizabeth I Sir William Blackstone worked here before becoming the first professor to lecture in law at Oxford University The poet and playwright Oliver Goldsmith also lived here from 1765 having earlier resided in Garden Court and is buried in the Temple Church Blackstone living on the floor below Goldsmith s chambers complained about the noise made by Goldsmith s raucous parties which were attended by many celebrities of the time including Samuel Johnson Blackstone later moved to Pump Court whether because of the parties or for some other reason is unknown 27 Next to Brick Court are the buildings called Essex Court which actually form part of the same courtyard The earliest record of Essex Court is from 1640 but the original buildings were replaced in 1656 and 1677 28 Today Essex Court and Brick Court are occupied by barristers chambers Through a passageway to the west is New Court built by Wren and a gate leading out of the Temple into Devereux Court and Essex Street Another passageway to the north leads through Outer Temple to Fleet Street Wikisource has original text related to this article The Middle Temple Gardens a poem by L E L South of New Court and Essex Court lies Fountain Court The fountain there was described by Charles Dickens in Martin Chuzzlewit 29 In her notes to her poem The Middle Temple Gardens Letitia Elizabeth Landon says of it it is the poetry of the place or rather the voice of the poetry with which it is filled To the south of Fountain Court are from west to east Garden Court where the old library used to be Middle Temple Gardens which extend to the southern perimeter of the Temple and Middle Temple Hall The current buildings of Garden Court which lie along the western edge of the Temple were constructed in 1883 30 South of Garden Court are Blackstone House Queen Elizabeth Building and a gate leading out of the Temple and a short distance from Temple tube station South of the hall and east of the gardens are Plowden Buildings built in 1831 which contain the Treasurer s office South of that is the current library and then at the end of Middle Temple Lane are the buildings called Temple Gardens built on both sides of the lane by both Inns in 1861 31 The western part belongs to Middle Temple and the eastern part is Inner Temple s The lane passes through the middle of Temple Gardens via an archway and leads out of the Temple East of the lane Edit Along the east side of Middle Temple Lane proceeding northwards from the southern archway the buildings belong to Inner Temple until the lane reaches Lamb Buildings Lamb Buildings belong to Middle Temple which bought the land from Inner Temple after the Great Fire of 1666 Inner Temple needed the money because it found itself short of funds due to the extensive property destruction Lamb Buildings are built on the site of Caesar s Buildings which were destroyed in the fire and which had belonged to Inner Temple 32 The Lamb of God is the symbol of Middle Temple and is engraved above the entrances to the building Behind Lamb Buildings further east is Elm Court built in 1880 33 The buildings on the south and east sides of Elm Court are part of Inner Temple the west and north buildings are Middle Temple Further north is Pump Court one of the oldest courts in the Temple 34 Most of the buildings here belong to Middle Temple except those in the north west corner Further east are Middle Temple s cloisters leading to Church Court between Temple Church and Inner Temple Hall North of Pump Court is Inner Temple s Hare Court and then more buildings belonging to Middle Temple until the lane ends at the gate to Fleet Street Parallel with and to the east of Middle Temple Lane lies Inner Temple Lane which runs from Fleet Street to Church Court On the east side of Inner Temple Lane and opposite Hare Court is Goldsmith Building so named because of its proximity to Goldsmith s tomb in the adjacent Temple Church Despite its location in the Inner Temple Goldsmith Building actually belongs to Middle Temple for reasons which are no longer remembered It was built in 1861 35 Structure and governance EditThe Inn s supreme body is its Parliament which is made up of the Benchers judges and senior barristers who are elected for life and headed by the Treasurer who is elected annually Parliament approves the Inn s budget and authorises Call of qualified student members to the Bar 36 Members of the British royal family who are made honorary benchers are known as Royal Benchers The first of these was Albert Edward Prince of Wales later Edward VII made a Royal Bencher when he opened the newly constructed library in 1861 8 The Inn is run from day to day by an Executive Committee and four other committees which are accountable to the Parliament 37 The Executive Committee consists of 14 voting members including the Treasurer and the Deputy Treasurer and two non voting members including the Under Treasurer 38 The Treasurer for 2023 is David Lloyd Jones Lord Lloyd Jones and the Deputy Treasurer is Paul Darling OBE KC 39 The Chief Executive and Under Treasurer is Guy Perricone who previously held the post from 2013 to 2020 rejoining the Inn in 2022 40 Liberty Edit Middle Temple like the Inner Temple is one of the few remaining liberties an old name for a geographic division It is an independent extra parochial area 41 historically not governed by the City of London Corporation 42 and is today regarded as a local authority for most purposes 43 and equally outside the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the Bishop of London The Middle Temple s functions as a local council are set out in the Temples Order 1971 44 It geographically falls within the boundaries and wards of the City but can be thought of as an independent enclave Some of the Inn s buildings those along Essex Street Devereux Court and the Queen Elizabeth Building near the Embankment lie just outside the liberty of the Middle Temple and the City s boundary and are actually situated in the City of Westminster Quadrant House 7 15 Fleet Street was acquired by the Middle Temple in 1999 and after five years of conversion is now a barristers chambers 45 This lies outside the liberty though immediately adjacent to it but is within the City of London Badge and coat of arms Edit Coat of arms The badge of the Middle Temple consists of the Lamb of God with a flag bearing the Saint George s Cross This symbol appears in the centre of the Inn s coat of arms against a background consisting of the same cross a red cross on a white field The cross and the lamb with the flag each were symbols of the Knights Templar 46 Notable members EditSee also Category Members of the Middle Temple Sir Edmund Plowden William Byrd II Sir John Popham Sir Walter Raleigh 47 Arthur Onslow John Evelyn Sir William Blackstone 48 Charles Dickens 49 Thomas Morris Chester Vallabhbhai Patel Chittaranjan Das Geoffrey HoweRoyal benchers Edit The Prince of Wales later Edward VII 1861 served as Treasurer in 1866 8 note 2 Prince Albert Victor Duke of Clarence and Avondale 1885 50 The Prince of Wales later Edward VIII 1919 51 Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother 1944 52 Diana Princess of Wales 1988 52 William Prince of Wales 2009 52 Other honorary benchers Edit William Howard Taft 1922 US chief justice and president 53 Anthony Eden 1952 prime minister Harold Macmillan 1958 prime minister Warren E Burger 1971 US chief justice Lord Denning 1972 master of the rollsSee also EditList of members of Middle TempleNotes Edit Readers are Benchers of the Inn who traditionally were appointed to give a Reading The Prince s appointment as Treasurer was honorary and the office s functions were performed by the Deputy Treasurer References Edit Bellot Hugh H L 1902 The Inner and Middle Temple Legal Literary and Historical Associations London Methuen amp Co p 32 Watt Francis Barton Dunbar Plunket Benham Charles 1928 The Story of the Inns of Court Boston Houghton Mifflin OCLC 77565485 Bellot p 36 Bellot 1902 p 20 Bellot 1902 p 22 Bellot p 118 Bellot 1902 pp 19 25 a b c d June 2017 Royalty and the Inn Middle Temple Temple Church Inner Temple Library retrieved 5 August 2018 Bellot 1902 pp 324 25 Middle Temple website Middle Temple Ordeal 1947 Middle Temple pp 40 54 Middle Temple accommodation for students accessed 26 April 2007 Archived 31 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Buildings Middle Temple website retrieved 12 November 2017 Bellot 1902 p 231 Bellot 1902 p 281 Baker Sir John 2017 A Royal visit to the Temple in 1578 The Law Quarterly Review 133 535 537 Bellot 1902 p 282 Royal Paintings in Middle Temple Hall retrieved 19 February 2021 Bellot 1902 p 283 Middle Temple Hall Middle Temple website retrieved 3 November 2017 British library website retrieved 3 November 2017 Bellot 1902 pp 286 288 Bellot 1902 pp 290 293 History of the Library Middle Temple Retrieved 26 September 2019 Bellot 1902 p 269 Bellot 1902 pp 276 280 Bellot 1902 p 301 Bellot 1902 p 275 Bellot 1902 p 293 Bellot 1902 p 294 Bellot 1902 p 304 Bellot 1902 p 298 Bellot 1902 p 300 Bellot 1902 p 303 Parliament Middle Temple website retrieved 30 October 2017 Standing Committees Middle Temple website retrieved 30 October 2017 Executive Committee Middle Temple website retrieved 30 October 2017 Officers of the Inn Middle Temple website retrieved 14 January 2023 The Executive Management of the Inn at Middle Temple s official website retrieved 7 May 2022 Association for Geographic Information permanent dead link What place is that then City of London Approved Premises for Marriage Act 1996 By ancient custom the Honourable Society of the Inner Temple and the Honourable Society of the Middle Temple exercise powers within the areas of the Inner Temple and the Middle Temple respectively the Temples concerning inter alia the regulation and governance of the Temples Middle Temple as a local authority Archived 30 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine Temples Order 1971 released as part of a response from Under Treasurer of the Middle Temple to a request made using WhatDoTheyKnow accessed 16 September 2012 Building talk Archived 5 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine Major 12m Fleet Street refurbishment 2005 Bellot 1902 p 28 Bellot 1902 p 290 Odgers William Blake 1918 Sir William Blackstone Yale Law Journal The Yale Law Journal Company Inc 27 1 p 601 Admissions to House amp Chambers 1833 1844 Middle Temple Archive ID MT 3 AHC 8 The Honourable Society of the Middle Temple Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers vol 108 1892 Middle Temple website Royal Benchers a b c Prince William becomes honorary barrister The Daily Telegraph 7 July 2009 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 27 June 2019 The Prince is the sixth member of the Royal Family to be called to the Bench as a Royal Bencher and is following in the footsteps of the Queen Mother called in 1944 and his mother Diana Princess of Wales called in 1988 Middle Temple website Honorary BenchersExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Middle Temple Official website John Hatsell 18th Century Middle Temple UK Parliament Living Heritage John Glynn MP amp Middle Temple UK Parliament Living Heritage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Middle Temple amp oldid 1143413425, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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