William Chevir
William Chevir, or Chevyr was an Irish politician and judge, whose career was marked by accusations of oppression and corruption.
Family
He was born in Kilkenny city, son of John Chevir, justice of the peace for County Kilkenny; his younger brother, John Chevir junior, became Lord Chief Justice of Ireland. The surname, which is rather uncommon in Ireland, is probably an early form of Cheever; Chevre and Chevyr are other contemporary spellings of the name. They were an Anglo-Norman family who settled in County Wexford after the Norman Conquest of Ireland. Sir William Chevre, the first of the family to come to Ireland, was a witness to the foundation charter for Tintern Abbey, County Wexford. In 1421 William's father was granted lands in County Wexford which had been held by Gilbert Talbot, Lord of Wexford.Image:Southern face of Tintern Abbey, Co Wexford.JPG|thumb|Tintern Abbey, County Wexford
William was married and had at least one son:
- Walter, who married Catherine Welles, daughter of Sir William Welles, Lord Chancellor of Ireland and Anne Barnwell, and had issue, including:
- *Sir Nicholas Cheevers,
- *Elizabeth, who married Thomas Ussher,
- *Margaret, wife of Bartholomew Aylmer and mother of Sir Gerald Aylmer.
Career
We have a glimpse of his judicial career in 1441.
Talbot–Ormonde feud
Irish politics in the 1430s and 1440s was dominated by the bitter feud between the Earl of Ormonde, by then Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, and Richard Talbot, Archbishop of Dublin, backed by his powerful brother John Talbot, 1st Earl of Shrewsbury, who had also been Lord Lieutenant. Nearly all Crown officials found themselves forced to take sides in the feud: William Chevir was a staunch adherent of Ormonde.Giles Thorndon, the English-born Lord Treasurer of Ireland, had a long and impressive record of service to the House of Lancaster, but he was quite out of his depth in Ireland, which was then in a state of exceptional political turmoil. In general, he backed the Talbots, but Ormonde persuaded him to appoint Chevir as his deputy in 1442. According to Thordon's later complaint to the Privy Council, Chevir was guilty of such obvious maladministration that Thorndon refused to reappoint him as his deputy in 1443, whereupon Ormonde in retaliation despoiled Thorndon's property. Both sides to the feud made bitter complaints to the English Crown, which however was more interested in ending the feud than punishing those involved, and matters dragged on inconclusively. Chevir probably died in December 1446, since his successor on the Court, Edward Somerton, was appointed in January 1447.Patent Roll 25 Henry VI Thorndon returned to England soon afterwards, and lived to a great age, dying in 1477.