Sir Thomas Caesar (1561–1610), judge, was the second son of Dr.
Caesar Adelmare, court physician to Queens
Mary and
Elizabeth, and brother to
Sir Julius Caesar.
He was born at Great St. Helen's, Bishopsgate, in 1561, and was educated at the
Merchant Taylors' School, which he left in 1578. He became a member of the
Inner Temple in October 1580. He was elected to parliament from
Appleby in 1601.
His career at the bar was wholly undistinguished. Nevertheless, on 26 May 1610, he was created puisne or cursitor
Baron of the Exchequer
The Barons of the Exchequer, or ''barones scaccarii'', were the judges of the English court known as the Exchequer of Pleas. The Barons consisted of a Chief Baron of the Exchequer and several puisne (''inferior'') barons. When Robert Shute was a ...
. He was knighted the ensuing month at
Whitehall Palace, and from an undated letter of his spiritual adviser,
William Crashaw, relating the fact of his death and describing the ‘godly disposition’ in which he met it, endorsed by his brother Sir Julius with the date 18 July 1610, would seem to have died then or shortly before. The vacancy caused by his death was filled in the following October.
He married three times. His first wife died in 1590, leaving three children, who all died in infancy. His second wife was Anne, daughter of George Lynn of
Southwick, Northamptonshire, and widow of Nicholas Beeston of
Lincolnshire; she died without issue. By his third wife, Susan, daughter of Sir
William Ryder,
Lord Mayor of London in 1600, whom he married on 18 Jan. 1592/3, he had eight children, three sons and five daughters, who all survived him.
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17th-century English judges
1561 births
1610 deaths
English people of Italian descent
Barons of the Exchequer
Members of the Inner Temple
English MPs 1601
Knights Bachelor
People educated at Merchant Taylors' School, Northwood
Thomas
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