IRISH PEDIGREES
(HEBER GENEALOGIES)
O'BRIEN. (No. 2.)
Marquises of Thomond
Murrough, the third son of Turlogh Donn, who is No. 120 on the "O'Brien" (Kings of Thomond) pedigree, was the ancestor of this branch of that family: |
121 |
Murrough:* son of Turlogh Donn; d. 1551; was the first "Earl of Thomond" and "Baron of Inchiquin; m. Eleanor, dau. of Thomas FitzGerald, Knight of the Valley, and had three sons and three daughters; the sons were:
I. Dermod of whom presently.
II. Teige, of Smithstwon Castle, who m. Mór, dau. of Donal O'Brien, and had:
I. Turlogh, who d.s.p.
I. Honoria, who m. Richard Wingfield, an ancestor of the Viscounts Powerscourt.
II. Slaine, who m. Teige, son of Connor, the Third Earl of Thomond.
III. Hannah, who m. Donogh O'Brien.
III. Donogh, from whom descended O'Brien of Dromoland.
The daughters were:
I. Margaret, b. 1535, who m. Richard, the second Earl of Clanricard.
II. Slaine, whose second husband was Sir Donal O'Brien, of Dough.
III. Honoria, who m. Sir Dermod O'Shaughnessy, of Gort, and had issue. |
122 |
Dermod, who d. 1557; eldest son of Murrough; inherited the Barony of Inchiquin, only - the Earldom of Thomond having been conferred on his cousin Donogh Ramhar, who is No. 122 on the "O'Brien" (Kings of Thomond) pedigree. Dermod m. Margaret, dau. of said Donogh, and had: |
123 |
Murrough, who d. in 1573; was the third Baron of Inchiquin; m. Anabella (or Mable), dau. of Christopher Nugent, the ninth Lord Delvin, and had: |
124 |
Murrough, the fourth Baron, who d. in 1597; m. Margaret, dau. of Sir Thomas Cusack, Knt., Lord Chancellor, and Lord Justice of the "Pale," and had:
I. Dermod, of whom presently.
II. Teige, who m. Slaine, dau. of Murrough O'Brien of Ara.
I. Slaine, who m. William Dongan, Recorder of Dublin. |
125 |
Dermod, who d. 1624: the elder son of Murrough; was the fifth Baron; m. Ellen, dau. of Sir Edward Fitzgerald, of Ballymaloe and Cloyne, Knt., and had four sons and three daughters:
I. Murrough, of whom presently.
II. Henry, a Lieutenant-Colonel in the army of Charles I., King of England.
III. Christopher, who d. in infancy.
IV. Christopher (2), a Lieutenant-Colonel in the Irish Confederate Army, who was created "Baron of Inchiquin," by the Supreme Council of the Catholic Confederation at Kilkenny; m. Honoria, dau. of Turlogh MacMahon of Clonderala.
I. Honoria, who m. Anthony Stoughton of Rattoo, in the co. Kerry, and had, besides other children, Elizabeth Stoughton, who m. Colonel Roger Moore, of Johnstwon, near Dublin, and had Elizabeth, who m. Colonel Henry Edgeworth, and had:
I. Henry Edgeworth, of Lizard, near Edgeworthstown, in the co. Longford.
II. Robert.
III. Rev. Essex Edgeworth of Templemichael, in the said county, who, in Nov., 1719, m. Elizabeth, dau. of Sir Robert King, Bart., from whom the Earls of Kingston and the Viscounts Lorton descended.
I. Maria,
II. Elizabeth.
II. Mary: the second dau. of Dermod, m. His Grace, the Most Rev. Dr. Boyle, Protestant Archbishop of Armagh.
III. Anne: the third dau. d. unm. |
126 |
Murrough-an-Toitean:* son of Dermod, d. in 1674; was the sixth Baron and the first Earl of Inchiquin: m. Elizabeth, dau. of Sir William St. Leger, Knt., President, of Munster, and had:
I. William, of whom presently.
II. Charles, slain at the siege of Maestricht.
III. John, who served as a Captain in the United Provinces under the Prince of Orange.
I. Elizabeth, whose second husband was John MacNamara, of Cratloe.
II. Honoria, who m. Theobald, the third Lord Brittas (outlawed in 1691), by whom she had two sons and one dau.:
I. John, fourth Lord Brittas, a Captain in the French Army, who had a son, also a Captain in that Army, and known as the fifth Lord Brittas (and likewise Lord Castleconnell, a title forfeited by his grandfather in 1691, for his adherence to King James II.); another son, Thomas, a Benedictine monk, who d. at Perugia in 1722; and Elizabeth, who m. James (FitzTheobald) Mathew, of Thurles.
III. Mary, whose first husband was Henry Boyle, of Castlemartyr, father of Henry, first Earl of Shannon.
IV. Finola, who d.s.p. |
127 |
William: eldest son of Murrough-an-Toitean; was the second Earl of Inchiquin; d. at his castle of Rostellan, near Cloyne, in 1691. Married Mary, dau. of Edward Villiers, Knt., and sister of Edward, Earl of Jersey, and had:
I. William, who d. 1719, m. Anne, Countess of Orkney, and had:
I. William, Lord O'Brien, who d.s.p.
II. George, Lord O'Brien
III. Augustus, d.s.p.
IV. Murrough, d.s.p.
I. Mary, who married Murrough, the fifth Earl of Inchiquin.
II. Anne.
III. Frances.
IV. Elizabeth.
II. James, of whom presently.
III. Charles, who d. unm.
IV. Donal, who d. 1768.
I. Mary: the elder daughter of William; married Robert (died 1744), 19th Earl of Kildare.
II. Henrietta. |
128 |
James (died 1771), M.P. for Youghal: second son of William (d. 1691); married Mary, dau. of Very Rev. William Jephson, Protestant Dean of Kilmore, and had:
I. Murrough (d. 1808), the fifth Earl, who was created Marquis of Thomond; m. the Lady Mary O'Brien, but d. without male issue: in default of which the remainder was to the issue of his brother Edward, who d. in 1801, in the lifetime of Murrough.
II. Edward, of whom presently.
III. John, who was a Lieutenant on the english Navy.
I. Mary.
II. Anne, who m. the Most Rev. Dr. Cox, Protestant Archbishop of Cashel, and had a son:
I. Richard Cox.
III. Henrietta, whose first husband was Teige O'Loughlin, of Burren, in the co. Clare. |
129 |
Edward: the second son of James; d. 1801; married Mary, daughter of - Carrick, and had:
I. William, the second Marquis of Thomond, who d. 1846; succeeded to the title on the death of his uncle, Murrough, in February, 1808; married Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Trotter, Esq., of Duleek, by whom he had four daughters.
II. James, of whom presently.
III. Edward, R.N. |
130 |
James; the third Marquis: second son of Edward; was the seventh Earl, and the twelfth Baron. Was an Admiral of the White G.C.H., and commanded the "Emerald" at the capture of St. Lucia and Surinan. Married twice: first, in 1800, to Miss Bridgeman - Willyams; and secondly, to Jane, daughter of Thomas Ottley, Esq., but died in 1855, without surviving male issue, and on his death the Marquisate of Thomond, and Earldom of Inchiquin became extinct. The "Barony" devolved on the Dromoland branch of the O'Brien family, in the person of Sir Lucius O'Brien, who is No. 131 on the "O'Brien" (Lords of Inchiquin) pedigree, infra. |
* Murrough: This Murrough O'Brien, having, A.D. 1543, dispossessed his nephew, Donogh, of the principality of Thomond, repaired to England and made his submission to King Henry VIII., to whom he resigned the principality, and was created therefor "Earl of Thomond," and Baron of Inchiquin: the conditions being, that he should utterly forsake and give up the name O'Brien, and all claims to which he might pretend by the same; and take such name as the king should please to give him; and he and his heirs and the inheritors of his lands should use the English dress, customs, manners, and language; that he should give up the Irish dress, customs, and language, and keep no kerns or gallowglasses. - CONNELLAN. |
* Murrough-an-Toitean: Murrough-an-toitean defeated the Irish under Lord Taaffe and Sir Alexander MacDonnell (commonly called "Alastrum Mór," who was the eldest son of Sir James, of Eanagh and Ballybannagh, No. 118 on the "MacDonnell," of the County Clare pedigree), at the Battle of Knocknaness, on the 13th of November, 1647; for which the Parliament sent him a letter of thanks, with a present of $1,000. In 1648, he reduced Nenagh, as appears by the following letter which he wrote to his firend, Colonel David Crosbie, Governor of Kerry:
"I have reduced Nenagh, and am this day marching after Owen Roe (O'Neill), either to the Boyne or Borris-in-Leix. Preston is before Athy, and being possessed of part of it three days since, it is confidently believed he is Mr. (Master) of it by this tyme. I have now only to advise you to use your best care in keeping ye county in good order, remayneing
" Your affectinate friend,
"Inchiquin.
"Ballynedill,
17th Sept., 1648."
Of Murrough-an-Toitean we read in De Vere's Wail of Thomond:
"Can it be? Can it be? Can O'Brien be traitor?
Can the great House Dalcassian be faithless to Eire?
The sons of the stranger have wrong'd - let them hate her!
Old Thomond well knows them; they hate her for hire!
Can our Murrough be leagued with the rebels and ranters
'Gainst his faith and his country, his king and his race?
Can he bear the low wailings, the curses, the banters?
There's a scourge worse than these - the applause of the base!
"Was the hand that set fire to the churches descended
From the band of the King that uprear'd them, BOROIMHE?
When the blood of the priests and the people ran blended,
Who was it cried, 'Spare them not?' Inchiquin, who?
Some Fury o'er-ruled thee! some root hast thou eaten!
Twas a demon that stalked in thy shape! 'Twas not thou!
Oh, Murrogh! not tears of the angels can sweeten
That blood-stain; that Cain-mark erase from thy brow!"
Soon after the reduction of Nenagh, Murrough-an-Toitean changed sides: Early in 1649, he openly espoused the cause of Charles II., who in a letter from the Hague appointed Murrough President of Munster; and on the 14th of April of same year he was pronounced a traitor by the Commonwealth Parliament. On the 1st of June following he sent the subjoined communication:
"To the Officer commanding in Cheeffe, Castlemaine.
"By the Lord President of Maunster:
"You, and the rest of the Warders of Castlemaine, are hereby required to be obedient to the directions and commands of Coll. David Crosbie uppon all occasions, admonition (ammunition) out of the said Castle; thereof you may not faile at yor pill (peril); and for yor soe doeing this shall be yor Warrant.
'Inchiquin
"Dated the first of June, 1649." |
Soon after the reduction of Nenagh, Murrough-an-Toitean changed sides: Early in 1649, he openly espoused the cause of Charles II., who in a letter from the Hague appointed Murrough President of Munster; and on the 14th of April of same year he was pronounced a traitor by the Commonwealth Parliament. On the 1st of June following he sent the subjoined communication: |
"To the Officer commanding in Cheeffe, Castlemaine.
"By the Lord President of Maunster:
"You, and the rest of the Warders of Castlemaine, are hereby required to be obedient ot the directions and commands of Coll. David Crosbie uppon all occasions, and to deliver him, if occasion shall require for his Maties. (Majesty's) service, admonition (ammunition) out of the said Castle; thereof you may not faile at yor pill (peril); and for yor soe doeing this shall be yor Warrant.
'Inchiquin.
"Dated the first of June, 1649." |
REF: Irish Pedigrees by O'Hart, Volume 1, dated 1892, reprinted 1989.
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