Peter Rowe (judge)

[10] He was briefly transferred to the office of Chief Justice of the Irish Common Pleas in 1391, on the urging of Bishop Braybrooke, "with the same fees that John Keppock previously enjoyed".

[5] There is a glimpse of his career in the Close Rolls of Richard II for 1380-81, in a case in which the English Crown had an interest, since the feudal overlord of the lands in question was the King's cousin Edmund Mortimer, then a royal ward.

[12] Two citizens of Dublin, Richard Dunart and Thomas Cusack, each claimed the right to hold part of the Mortimer lands at Trim, County Meath.

[13] In 1392 he issued a writ of supersedeas to stay any further criminal proceedings against Richard Wynchendon's son, who was accused of felony, he having surrendered himself and found sureties for his good behaviour.

[15] They had at least one son, Nicholas, who inherited Liscarton from his mother,[16] and was given full possession of the lands in 1427 (an unusually late date since he must have attained his majority several years earlier).