INNER TEMPLE


Inner Temple Library, 1892, by Herbert Railton


Inner Temple Gardens

The Inner Temple Treasury

'The Honourable Society of the Inner Temple' is one of the four Inns of Court around the Royal Courts of Justice in London which may call members to the Bar and so entitle them to practise as barristers. (The other Inns are Middle Temple, Gray's Inn and Lincoln's Inn.)
The Temple was occupied in the twelfth century by the Knights Templar, who gave the area its name, and built the Temple Church which survives as the parish church of the Inner Temple and Middle Temple. The Inner Temple was first recorded as being used for legal purposes when lawyers' residences were burned down in Wat Tyler's revolt. It is an independent extra-parochial area, historically not governed by the Corporation of London and equally outside the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the Bishop of London.
The Inn suffered heavily from wartime bombing between September 1940 and May 1941, because of its proximity to the Thames. The buildings destroyed included the Library and the Hall although others, such as 2 King's Bench Walk, were fortunate to survive.
The oldest surviving buildings in the Inner Temple date from the seventeenth century and are on King's Bench Walk (named after the King's Bench Office which was there until the nineteenth century), though the first storey of the Knights Templars' medieval buttery (where food was served) survives as part of the larger building that contains the new Hall. Many other parts of the Inn are Victorian.
The Temple is often used as a location for both television and cinema.

Contents
Famous members
External links

Famous members



Geoffrey Chaucer (reputed)

Thomas de Littleton

William Catesby

Sir Edward Coke

Sir Francis Drake

Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester

Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex

Christopher Hatton

Thomas Morton, a member of the associated Inn of Chancery Clifford's Inn

William Wycherly

Judge Jeffreys

James Boswell

Samuel Johnson (resided at the Inner Temple for a period, though not a member)

William Paca

Karl Pearson, and his father William Pearson, QC

George Phillippo

Thomas Hughes

William Schwenk Gilbert

Bram Stoker

Mohandas Gandhi (called 1891, disbarred 1922, reinstated 1988)

John Maynard Keynes

Clement Atlee

Jawaharlal Nehru

Mohammed Ali Jinnah

Cecil Rhodes

Ivy Williams, the first female barrister

A.J.P. Taylor

Seretse Khama, president of Botswana (admitted 1946)

Derry Irvine

Lord Woolf

Elizabeth Butler-Sloss

Jack Straw

Michael Howard

John Mortimer (whose best-known creation, Horace Rumpole, was also an Inner Templar)

Richard Searby

Malcolm Bishop

Thomas Willing

Musa Alami

Tuanku Abdul Rahman ibni Almarhum Tuanku Muhammad

Tunku Abdul Rahman

External links



Inner Temple website

Inner Temple Banqueting website

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