470 CAILLY CAILLY BARONY BY i. Thomas de Cailly, of Buckenham, Norfolk, s. of WRIT. Adam de C. (living 1303), by his 2nd wife, Emma, da. T of Robert de Tateshall,(^) of Buckenham, afsd., was, in •^ " 1306, on the death of his cousin, Robert de Tateshall, [Lord Tateshall] (to whom the said Emma was great •^ ' ' aunt), found one of his 3 coheirs, being then aged 24 and more. He was sum. to Pari, by writs directed Thome de Cailli, from 4 Mar. 1308/9 to 16 June 13 11, whereby he is held to have become LORD CAILLY.^) He m. Margaret, da. of Sir Walter de Norwich, of Mettingham, Suffolk, by Margaret, his wife. He d. s.p.^ between 10 May and 30 July 13 16, which last date is that of the writ for his Inq. p. m.{f) His widow ot., probably about 1320, Robert (d'Ufford), 1st Earl of Suffolk, who d. 4 Nov. 1369. She d. early in 1368, and was bur. in Campsey Priory, Suffolk. CAIRNS and CAIRNS OF GARMOYLE BARONY. I. Hugh McCalmont Cairns, 2nd s. of William I „^ C, of Cultra, CO. Down, by his ist wife, Rosanna, da. of '* Hugh Johnson, was b. 27 Dec. 18 19, ed. at Trin. Coll. FART DOM Dublin, where he was first class in classics, B.A. 1838, LL.B. and LL.D. 1862; Student of Law at Dublin, 1839; I. 1878. at Lincoln's Inn, 1841, and at the Middle Temple, 1844; Barrister (Mid. Temple), 1844, rapidly acquiring an extensive practice; M.P. (Conservative) for Belfast 1852-66; Q.C. and Bencher (Line. Inn) 1856; Solicitor Gen., Feb. 1858 to June 1859; knighted 17 Mar. 1858; Hon. LL.D. Cambridge, 9 June 1862; Hon. D.C.L. Oxford, 17 June 1863; Attorney Gen., July to Oct. 1866; Lord Justice of Appeal in Chancery, Oct. 1866 to 1868; P.C. 10 Nov. 1866; Chancellor of the Univ. of Dublin 1867 till his death. He was cr., 27 Feb. 1867, BARON CAIRNS OF GARMOYLE, co. Antrim, and, as such, assisted in passing through the upper house the Reform Bill of the Con- servative Government. From 29 Feb. to 9 Dec. 1868, he was Lord Chancellor,() and again from Feb. 1874 to Apr. 1880. During the (^) He was the senior coheir of the (Aubigny) Earls of Arundel. See vol. i, p. 239, note "b." V.G. C") As to how far these early writs of summons did in fact create any peerage title, see Appendix A in the last volume. V.G. if) Adam de Clifton, s. of his sister, Margaret, by Roger de Clifton, was his heir and then aged 9 years and more. In 1376 John de Clifton (aged 15 in 1368), grand- son and h. of this Adam, was sum. to Pari. See Clifton, Barony, cr. 1376. C^) Thus "within 3 years [he] passed through 3 legal offices, Attorney Gen., Lord Justice of Appeal, and Lord Chancellor; rising from a practising Barrister to the highest seat in the law, from a simple member of the House of Commons to the