Office: | Judge-Advocate-General of the Army |
Term Start: | 6 November 1838 |
Term End: | 21 February 1839 |
Predecessor: | Robert Cutlar Fergusson |
Successor: | Sir George Grey, Bt |
Birth Date: | 1775 |
Death Place: | High Beech, Waltham Abbey |
Alma Mater: | Corpus Christi College, Cambridge |
Parents: | William John Arabin |
Children: | Richard Arabin |
William St Julien Arabin (177315 December 1841) was a British lawyer and judge who served as the Judge-Advocate-General of the Army for a three-and-a-half-month period (6 November 183821 February 1839).
Arabin was born abroad,[1] one of many sons of Henrietta Molyneux and her husband and Gen. William John Arabin (originally from Dublin), who left him significant estates in Essex and Middlesex.[2] [3] His father divorced his mother in 1786 following her affair with Thomas Sutton of Moulsey.[4]
He was descended from one of the oldest families in Provence. His Huguenot ancestor Bartholomew d'Arabin fled to Holland after the revocation of the edict of Nantes in 1685, and came over to England with King William III in 1688.[5] His maternal grandparents were Sir Capel Molyneux, 3rd Baronet and the former Elizabeth East (sister of Sir William East, 1st Baronet).
Arabin attended St Paul's School, London and then studied Law at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. He was admitted to Inner Temple in 1793, and was called to the bar in 1801. He was appointed serjeant-at-law in 1824.[6]
He was Deputy Recorder of the City of London. He served as Judge-Advocate-General of the Army 183839. He was a judge of the Central Criminal Court and of Sheriffs' Court, London. He was a Verderer of the forests of Epping and Hainault.[7]
As a judge, Arabin was known as an eccentric figure who was notorious for his confused pronouncements.[8] Some of his most famous quotes include:[9] [10]
On 12 October 1803, Arabin married Mary Meux in Camden.[14] She was a daughter of brewer Richard Meux[15] and Mary (née Brougham) Meux and sister to Sir Henry Meux, 1st Baronet.[16] [17] A sister, Fanny Meux, was the wife of Vicesimus Knox.[18] Together, William and Mary were the parents of:
He died at Arabin House in High Beech, Waltham Abbey, Essex, in 1841.[3]
Through his son Richard Arabin (1811-1865), he was a grandfather of William St Julien Arabin (1842-1907), Alice Charlotte Arabin (wife of Hon. Arthur Charles Lewin Cadogan, a son of Henry Cadogan, 4th Earl Cadogan), and Marianne Elizabeth Arabin (wife of John William Gordon Woodford, son of Sir Alexander George Woodford).[21]
. Arabinesque at Law . Robert Megarry . 31 December 1969 . . 978-0854900107.