Nicholas Lumbard or Lombard (died after 1368) was an Irish barrister and judge of the fourteenth century.
[1] The family, as their name suggests, had come to Ireland from Lombardy, in northern Italy, in the thirteenth century.
[1] In 1364 Richard White, the Lord Chief Justice of Ireland, was sent by the Irish House of Commons to Westminster to present a report on "the true state of affairs in Ireland" and specifically to complain about maladministration by certain Crown officials.
[3] The last record of him as a judge seems to be in 1368, when he was still sitting on the King's Bench: the Council ordered him to be paid 20 marks, being a half year's arrears of his salary.
[4] In the same year he received custody of a suspected traitor and had him lodged in Dublin Castle.