Monday, 16 March 2026

Thirty Five Years Have Passed Since I was Called To The Bar of England and Wales

A photograph of me on Call Night at the Middle Temple, left, and a record of my Call to the Bar of England & Wales in the Daily Telegraph, Tuesday, February 5th, 1991.

Last month marked 35 years since my Call to the Bar of England and Wales at the Honourable Society of the Middle Temple during Michaelmas Term, 1991.

I had been among the pioneer intake of the Bar Vocational Course which had been inaugurated by the Council of Legal Education (CLE) at the Inns of Court, School of Law (ICSL). The CLE, a supervisory body established to by the four Inns of Court to regulate the legal education of barristers in England and Wales, founded the School in 1852.

Call Night did not only signify the passing of formal assessments, it represented the culmination of keeping dining terms, that is, attending 12 formal dinners at my Inn, the Middle Temple.

The origins of the Middle Temple lie in the acquisition by lawyers in the 14th century of land that had once been the site of the headquarters of the Knights Templar before their overthrow and abolishment. King James I formal granted the Temple estate to the Inns of Court by letters patent in 1608. This Charter established that the land be used to educate and accommodate lawyers in perpetuity.

Among the famous members of the Middle Temple were the writers Charles Dickens and John Buchan.

I was called at Middle Temple Hall, an Elizabethan building which survived the Great Fire of London in 1666.

© Adeyinka Makinde (2026).

Adeyinka Makinde is based in London, England.

Tuesday, 10 March 2026

Lieutenant Commander Emmanuel Makinde: A Military Attache in Mess Dress

Lieutenant Commander Emmanuel Makinde, the Deputy Defence Adviser at the Nigerian High Commission in London, photographed in the early 1970s at a function organised by the military section of the High Commission. (Image: Makinde Family Archive).

My father’s mess dress, modelled on that of the Royal Navy, consisted of the following:

. A mess jacket with aiguillettes, an ornamental braided cord ending with aiglets (metal tips), and shoulder boards

. A white waistcoat

. A white dress shirt with wing collar and black bow tie

. High-waisted, plain navy blue trousers

. Black dress shoes

Lieutenant Commander Makinde’s task as a naval attaché was to serve as the primary liaison figure between the Nigerian Navy and Britain’s maritime forces. This included his keeping abreast of the completing of the construction of two corvettes ordered by the Nigerian Navy by the British shipbuilding firm Vosper Thornycroft. NNS Otobo and NNS Dorina were commissioned in Portsmouth respectively on May 25th, 1971 and December 8th, 1972.

His liaison duties also covered the refurbishment of NNS Nigeria, the flagship of the Nigerian Navy. He attended the re-commissioning ceremony at Cammel Laird’s yard in Birkenhead, Merseyside on April 28th, 1972. Present at that event was the retired Captain James Rawe, the ex-Royal Navy Nigerian Navy pioneer who became the Principal Staff Officer and Commander of the Naval Base, Apapa. Rawe had planned the amphibious landings orchestrated by the Nigerian Navy during the Nigerian Civil War. My father arranged for the visit made by Rawe to Nigeria to naval installations in Lagos, Port Harcourt and Calabar in 1973.

My Father’s 18-month-long posting to London ended in April, 1973.

Lieutenant Commander Makinde, who had previously served as the Flag Lieutenant and Flag Secretary to the Chief of Naval Staff, went on to become the Director of Naval Supplies.

He retired in 1982 at the rank of Captain.

© Adeyinka Makinde (2026).

Adeyinka Makinde is a writer based in London, England.