Patrick Barrett

Patrick Barrett (died 10 November 1415) was an Irishman who held religious and secular high offices in Ireland.

Biography

He was an Augustinian Canon at Kells Priory in County Kilkenny until appointed Bishop of Ferns on 10 December 1400. He was consecrated bishop at Rome in December 1400. Barrett was also the Lord Chancellor of Ireland from 1410 to 1412. He died on 10 November 1415 and was buried at Kells Priory.[1][2]

gollark: They obviously can't actually stop people from using encryption in general. Encryption is very widely distributed maths and code. Even if all the code ceased to exist you could reconstruct working stuff from even just the Wikipedia pages.
gollark: And the many times the UK and other places have insisted that end to end encryption is bad because something something terrorism think of the children everything will be awful if we can't spy on all messages ever.
gollark: There was that fun time when the UK Home Secretary talked about "getting people who understand the necessary hashtags" talking when yet again demanding an impossible magic backdoor.
gollark: I was going to write a blog post on my highly active™ website about this but it turns out that writing is hard and other people did it better.
gollark: Yes, many governments are being terrible about crypto recently.

References

  1. Patrick Barrett. Ricorso. Retrieved 20 September 2012.
  2. Cotton, Henry (1848). The Succession of the Prelates and Members of the Cathedral Bodies of Ireland. Fasti ecclesiae Hiberniae. Vol. 2, The Province of Leinster. Dublin: Hodges and Smith. pp. 333–334.



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