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The Law Society of Ireland (Irish: Dlí-Chumann na hÉireann) is a professional body established on 24 June 1830 and is the educational, representative and regulatory body of the solicitors' profession in Ireland. As of 2020, the Law Society had over eleven thousand solicitor members, a staff of 150 and an annual turnover of over €30m.
At a meeting of the Irish Bar in February 1816, the Law Library Society was established for the purposes of providing a subscription-based lending library of legal texts to practising barristers. This led to the development of the Law Library as a distinctive feature of the Irish Bar whereby members of the Bar practised not from chambers but ...
The Honorable Society of King's Inns [a] (Irish: Cumann Onórach Óstaí an Rí) is the "Inn of Court" for the Bar of Ireland.Established in 1541, King's Inns is Ireland's oldest school of law and one of Ireland's significant historical environments.
This is a partial list of notable learned societies, professional bodies and engineering societies operating in Ireland: . Accounting Technicians Ireland, formerly the Institute of Accounting Technicians in Ireland (IATI)
The Law Society of Ireland was established on 24 June 1830 with premises at Inns Quay, Dublin. In November 1830, the committee of the Society submitted a memorial to the benchers as to the ‘necessity and propriety’ of erecting chambers for the use of solicitors with the funds that solicitors had been levied to pay to King's Inns over the years. [5]
Law Society of Ireland – granted a royal charter in 1852 under the name "The Incorporated Society of Attorneys and Solicitors of Ireland" Institution of Engineers of Ireland – granted a royal charter in 1877 [13] The High School Dublin Erasmus Smith Trust granted a royal charter in 1669
The independence of most of Ireland in December 1922 as the Irish Free State was marked more by continuity with the British legal system than with change. The Free State later became the Republic of Ireland in April 1949. The legal profession remained divided between barristers (or abhcóidí in Irish) and solicitors (or aturnaetha in Irish ...
At a meeting of the Irish Bar in February 1816, the Law Library Society was established for the purposes of providing a subscription-based lending library of legal texts to practising barristers. This led to the development of the Law Library as a distinctive feature of the Irish Bar whereby members of the Bar practised not from chambers but ...