Eleanor V. E. Sharpston

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Eleanor V. E. Sharpston (b. 1955), QC, Advocate General at the Court of Justice of the European Communities.

The UK's Advocate General at the Court of Justice of the European Communities since January 10, 2006, Eleanor Sharpston QC studied economics, languages and law at King’s College, Cambridge (1973-77), followed by university teaching and research at Corpus Christi College, Oxford (1977-80). She was called to the Bar by the Middle Temple in 1980 and was a barrister in private practice from 1980-87 and 1990-2005 Queen's Counsel: 1999; Bencher of Middle Temple (2005). In the intervening years she worked as Legal Secretary (referendaire) in the Chambers of Advocate General, subsequently Judge, Sir Gordon Slynn now Lord Slynn of Hadley (1987-90). She was also a Lecturer in EC and comparative law (Director of European Legal Studies) at University College London (1990-92) and then a Lecturer in the Faculty of Law (1992-98), and subsequently Affiliated Lecturer (1998-2005), at the University of Cambridge. She was Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for European Legal Studies of the University of Cambridge (1998-2005) and remains a fellow of King’s College, Cambridge (since 1992).


Eleanor Sharpston QC is also a member of the Irish Bar and the Gibraltar Bar. She has published books and articles on EU law. Having spent her childhood in Brazil and then her adolescence and half her practising life in continental Europe, she speaks a number of European languages. Her off-duty activities include: playing classical guitar and violin, rowing and squash (in both of which she got University "blues"), sailing square riggers, skiing and scuba diving.[1]


She served as joint head of Hailsham Chambers in London, with her colleague Michael Pooles QC, from 2003-2006.[2]. Amongst her many high-profile cases at the Bar she was perhaps best known for acting (together with her colleague Philip Moser) for the prosecution in the case of the Metric Martyrs, Thoburn v Sunderland City Council.[3]


In 1991 she married David Lyon, a maritime historian and also a "Kingsman" whom she met through their mutual nautical interests. Their extremely happy and successful partnership was far briefer than either deserved. Both had just finished lecturing on a Caribbean cruise when he suffered a brain haemorrhage and died in a Miami hospital in 2000. [4]



[edit] Notes

  1. ^ See: cv prepared for Durham University lecture 2006: http://www.dur.ac.uk/resources/deli/annuallecture/Sharpston_bio_2006.pdf
  2. ^ See: cv prepared for Durham University lecture 2006: http://www.dur.ac.uk/resources/deli/annuallecture/Sharpston_bio_2006.pdf
  3. ^ case report at: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2002/195.html
  4. ^ See: Obituary, The Independent, # April 27, 2000, online at: http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_20000427/ai_n14307265