The 18th century legal writer
Thomas Edlyne Tomlins, in an 1820 legal dictionary, defines "conservator of the peace" as a person who until the creation of the
justices of the peace by
King Edward III, had "an especial charge to see the king's peace kept" either as incident to other offices or of itself. The
king was the "principal conservator of the peace within all his dominions"; other general conservators of the peace included the
Lord Chancellor or
Lord Keeper,
Lord Treasurer,
Lord High Steward,
Earl Marischal,
Lord High Constable, justices of the
King's Bench, and
Master of the Rolls. At
common law,
sheriffs and sometimes
constables were regarded as conservators of the peace within their
county, and constables and
tythingmen were also seen as conservators of the peace within their jurisdiction. More recently, the
chamberlain of
Chester was a conservator in the county of
Cheshire. ==Virginia==