Sir Robert Broke SL (died 5 September 1558) was a British justice, politician and legal writer. He was the eldest son of Thomas Broke of Claverley, Shropshire and his wife Margaret. He studied at Strand Inn, and from there was admitted to Middle Temple at some point between 1525 and 1528 and studying pleading with the Prothonotary John Jenour. In 1542 he became a bencher, and read on the 1540 Statute of Limitations; the reading circulated in manuscript and was subsequently printed in 1547. His second reading was in 1551 on the subject of pleas of the crown, using chapter 18 of Magna Carta as the source, and this also circulated via manuscript before being published in 1641, almost one hundred years after his death.[1] His legal career began in 1536 when he was appointed Common Serjeant of London on the recommendation of Henry VIII; how he gained such royal favour is unknown. He was made Recorder of London in 1545 and served as a Member of Parliament for the City of London until 1555, serving as Speaker of the House of Commons of England in 1554. Holding these offices did not stop him from pursuing private practice, and his signature is found on bills in chancery in the 1530s and 1540s. During this time he was also deputy chief steward for the Duchy of Lancaster, and was created a Serjeant-at-law in 1552.
On 8 October 1554 he was appointed Chief Justice of the Common Pleas and knighted the following January. He fell out with the court's Puisne Justices when he appointed Thomas Gatacre, his wife's brother, as Chief Prothonotary in 1557. The justices rejected him, and Broke's second choice, William Wheteley, was then allowed to take office despite judicial preference for another candidate. He died on 5 September 1588 while visiting friends in Pattishall, and was buried in Claverley Church in a tomb bearing his effigy and those of his two wives. He married his first wife Anne in the 1530s, and she gave birth to his eldest son John and at least three other children before dying. In 1544 he remarried to Dorothy, and had at least four daughters and five sons. Dorothy survived after his death, and his will shows that he had seventeen children in all.
| Legal offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Sir Richard Morgan |
Chief Justice of the Common Pleas 1554–1558 |
Succeeded by Sir Anthony Browne |
| Political offices | ||
| Preceded by Sir John Pollard |
Speaker of the House of Commons 1554 |
Succeeded by Sir Clement Higham |
| Parliament of England | ||
| Preceded by Sir Roger Cholmley John Sturgeon Paul Withypoll Sir Richard Gresham |
Member of Parliament for the City of London with Sir Roger Cholmley 1545–1547 John Sturgeon 1545–1547 Paul Withypoll 1545–1547 Sir Martin Bowes 1547–1553, 1554 Thomas Curteys 1547–1552 Thomas Bacon 1547–1552 John Blundell 1552–1554 John Marshe 1553–1554 Sir Rowland Hill 1553–1554 1545–1554 |
Succeeded by Sir Martin Bowes Ralph Cholmley Richard Grafton Richard Burnell |
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