Career
He was Chief Justice of the Irish Common Pleas and Dean of Street Patrick"s Cathedral. He is perhaps most notable as the first Chancellor of the, (which is not to be confused with Trinity College, Dublin). Little is known of his background and early life, although his name may suggest that his family had a connection with Rudyard, Staffordshire.
He is first heard of in Dublin in 1307 as Treasurer of Street Patrick"s Cathedral, Dublin.
He was elected Dean of Street Patrick"s in 1312 and apparently served in that capacity until his elevation to the Bench in 1329. He became a Doctor of Civil Law in 1320.
In 1325 he was sent to Kilkenny to sit as one of the judges at the trial of the celebrated Witch of Kilkenny, Alice Kyteler. He became Chief Justice of the Irish Common Pleas in 1329, but served for only two years.
He was dead by 1349.
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Pope Clement V issued a Papal Bulletin in 1311 for the foundation of a University in Dublin, but the project was hampered from the beginning by inadequate funds, and the University did not actually open until 1320.
From the beginning it was closely associated with Street Patrick"s Cathedral, and de Rodyard, as Dean, was an obvious choice as the first Chancellor. Although a number of Chairs were endowed, the University never flourished, and it was suppressed at the Reformation.