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- [source4071145385] KNDD-WHX
FamilySearch.org, (Publication Date: 31 JAN 2023
Media: Website / URL).
- [source4071145386] Richard Mór de Burgh, 1st Baron of Connaught (1193-1243), Wikipedia, (Publication Date: 30 NOV 2022
Media: Website / URL).
Richard Mór de Burgh, 1st Baron of Connaught (c.1194–1243), was a Hiberno-Norman aristocrat who was Seneschal of Munster and Justiciar of Ireland (1228–32). Richard Mór de Burgh, was born towards the end of the year in 1193 (and came of age in 1214). He was the eldest son and heir of William de Burgh and his wife (daughter of Domnall Mór Ua Briain, King of Thomond). Before 21 April 1225, he married Egidia de Lacy (daughter of Walter de Lacy and his wife Margaret de Braose), with which alliance he acquired the cantred of Eóghanacht Caisil with the castle of Ardmayle in Tipperary. Richard and Egidia had three sons and four daughters.
Justiciar of Ireland (13 February 1228 – 16 June 1232) Richard de Burgh died shortly before 17 February 1243.
- [source4071145387] Richard de Burgh, Lord Connaught, Justiciar of Ireland (1193-1243), Our Royal, Titled, Noble, and Commoner Ancestors, (Publication Date: 30 NOV 2022
Media: Website / URL).
William FitzAdelm died in 1204.1In 1179 he obtained a grant of a large part of Connaught.1 He held the office of Governor of Wexford.1Child of William FitzAdelmRichard de Burgh, Lord of Connaught+ d. c 17 Feb 1243Citations[S21] L. G. Pine, The New Extinct Peerage 1884-1971: Containing Extinct, Abeyant, Dormant and Suspended Peerages With Genealogies and Arms (London, U.K.: Heraldry Today, 1972), page 69. Hereinafter cited as The New Extinct Peerage.
- [source4071145390] Richard de Burgh, Lord of Connaught in The Peerage.
- [source4071145391] Oxford Dictionary of National Biography "Burgh, Walter de, 1st earl of Ulster", (Publication Date: 29 OCT 2022).
Identification of Walter de Burgh as Mac William Burke in the Annals of the Kingdom of Ireland, Vol. 3, pg. 359, footnote m; pg. 387, footnote k; pg 389-390, footnote q; pg. 393-395, footnote f.Earls of Ulster in Cokayne's Complete Peerage, Vol. 8, pgs. 4-6The Lordship of Connaught in Cokayne's Complete Peerage, Vol. 1, pg XIRichard de Burgh in the Annals of the Kingdom of Ireland, Vol. 3, pgs. 263-264Burgh (Bourke) line in O'Hart's Irish Pedigrees, pgs. 849-850 William FitzAdelm de Burgh in Burke's Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, pg. 66
- [source4071145399] Richard de Burgh Bio, (Publication Date: 17 JUN 2016).
RICHARD de Burgh (-Gascony before 17 Feb 1243). King Henry III ordered "Richard de Burgh to have seisin of all the lands which belonged to William, Richard´s father, in Ireland and whereof the latter was disseised by King John" by charter dated 14 Apr 1220[468]. Lord of Connaught. Justiciar of Ireland 1228-1232. The Annals of Ulster record in 1228 that "the Justiciate of Ireland was assumed by the son of William de Burgh (namely, Richard)”[469]. Henry III King of England wrote to "Ricardo de Burgo", dated 13 Jan 1233, ordering him to surrender his castles to "fideli nostro Mauricio filio Geroldi justiciarum nostrum Hiberniæ"[470]. A writ dated [29] Dec "[28?] Hen III" and 7 Mar "27 Hen III" after the death of "Richard de Burgo" assigns dower to "Egidia late the wife of the said Richard" but names no heir[471].
m as her first marriage, EGIDIA de Lacy, daughter of WALTER de Lacy Lord of Meath & his wife Margery de Briouse (-[22 Feb 1247/5 Nov 1248]). A writ dated [29] Dec "[28?] Hen III" and 7 Mar "27 Hen III" after the death of "Richard de Burgo" assigns dower to "Egidia late the wife of the said Richard" but names no heir[472]. A charter dated 22 Feb 1247 records the homage of "Richard son and heir of Richard de Burgh for all his father´s lands…in Ireland…saving the dower of Egidia, who was Richard´s wife"[473]. She married secondly Richard de Rochester. Her second marriage is confirmed by a charter dated 8 Oct 1249 which records that "the Dominican friars of London have shown to the king that Egidia, who was the wife of Richard de Burgh senior, received 180 marks in which Richard was bound to Hubert de Burgh late Earl of Kent and which the Earl had left by his will to the friars, and that Richard of Rochester who subsequently married Egidia wasted her chattels" and the order to restore property to the friars[474]. A charter dated 5 Nov 1248 mandates "Peter de Bermingham to cause dower to be assigned to Alice who was the wife of Richard de Burgh…son and heir of Richard de Burgh who died in the king´s service at Bordeaux" and to have dower "of all the lands whereof Egidia, who was the wife of the latter, was endowed"[475].
Richard & his wife had seven children:
a) daughter . m HAMON de Valognes, son of --- (-before 17 Dec 1243).
b) ALICE de Burgh (-after 17 Feb 1243). m --- (-before 17 Feb 1243).
c) MARGERY de Burgh (-after 1 Mar 1253). m (1242 or before) THEOBALD Butler, son of THEOBALD Butler & his first wife Joan de Mareis (-bur Arklow 1248 before 3 Aug).
d) daughter . m as his second wife, GERALD de Prendergast, son of --- (-before 28 Oct 1251).
e) RICHARD de Burgh ([1225/29]-[19 May/6 Nov] 1248). He succeeded his father as Lord of Connaught. m ALICE, daughter of --- (-after 5 Nov 1248).
f) WALTER de Burgh (-Galway Castle 28 Jul 1271). He succeeded his brother in 1248 as Lord of Connaught. In 1264 he exchanged land in Munster for land in Ulster with Edward, son of Henry III King of England, and was created Earl of Ulster around this time[484].
g) WILLIAM de Burgh (-killed 1270). m ---.
** from Wikipedia listing for Richard Mór de Burgh, 1st Baron of Connaught as of 6/17/2016
Richard Mór de Burgh, 1st Lord of Connacht (c. 1194 – 1242),[1] was a Hiberno-Norman aristocrat and Justiciar of Ireland.
Background
De Burgh was the eldest son of William de Burgh and his wife who was a daughter of Domnall Mór Ua Briain, King of Thomond. De Burgh's principal estate was in the barony of Loughrea where he built a castle in 1236 and a town was founded. He also founded Galway town and Ballinasloe. The islands on Lough Mask and Lough Orben were also part of his demesne.
From the death of his father in 1206 to 1214, Richard was a ward of the crown of England until he received his inheritance. In 1215 he briefly served in the household of his uncle Hubert de Burgh, Earl of Kent. In 1223 and again in 1225 he was appointed seneschal of Munster and keeper of Limerick castle.[2]
Connacht
In 1224, Richard claimed Connacht, which had been granted to his father but never, in fact, conquered by him. He asserted that the grant to Cathal Crobdearg Ua Conchobair, the Gaelic king, after his father's death had been on condition of faithful service, and that his son Aedh mac Cathal Crobdearg Ua Conchobair, who succeeded Cathal that year, had forfeited it. He had the favour of the justiciar of England, Hubert de Burgh, and was awarded Connacht in May 1227. Having been given custody of the counties of Cork and Waterford and all the crown lands of Decies and Desmond, he was appointed Justiciar of Ireland from 1228 to 1232.
When in 1232 Hubert de Burgh fell from grace, Richard was able to distance himself and avoid being campaigned against by the king of England, Henry III. It was only in 1235 when he summoned the whole feudal host of the English lords and magnates to aid him that he expelled Felim mac Cathal Crobderg Ua Conchobair, the Gaelic king, from Connacht. He and his lieutenants received great shares of land, while Felim was obliged to do homage and was allowed only to keep five cantreds Roscommon from the Crown. Richard de Burgh held the remaining 25 cantreds of Connacht in chief of the crown of England. De Burgh took the title of "Lord of Connacht".[1]
Wife and children
Before 1225 he married Egidia de Lacy, daughter of Walter de Lacy, and Margaret de Braose. With this alliance he acquired the cantred of Eóghanacht Caisil with the castle of Ardmayle in Tipperary.
Richard de Burgh had three sons and may have had four daughters:
Sir Richard de Burgh, Lord of Connaught, Constable of Montgomery Castle, married a relative of Eleanor of Provence,[3] but died without issue in Poitou in 1248.
Walter de Burgh, 1st Earl of Ulster, Lord of Connaught, died 1271.
William Óg de Burgh, who was the ancestor of the Mac William family, died 1270.
Aleys married Muirchertach O Briain.
Margery de Burgh (? – after March 1253), married Theobald Butler, 3rd Chief Butler of Ireland
Unnamed daughter who married Sir Gerald de Prendergast of Beauvoir, by whom she had a daughter, Maud.
Unnamed daughter who married Hamon de Valoynes and had a daughter, Mabel de Valoynes.
Richard died on 17 February 1241/42.
Notes
Curtis, Edmund (2004) [1950]. A History of Ireland (6th ed.). New York: Routledge. pp. 70–72. ISBN 0-415-27949-6.
B. Smith, 'Burgh, Richard de (died 1243)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, online edn, Oxford University Press, September 2004
Mathew Paris, Chronica majora, iv, pp 628, 655.
A New History of Ireland, volume IX, Oxford, 1984;
Earls of Ulster and Lords of Connacht, 1205–1460 (De Burgh, De Lacy and Mortimer), p. 170;
Mac William Burkes: Mac William Iochtar (de Burgh), Lords of Lower Connacht and Viscounts of Mayo, 1332–1649, p. 171;
Burke of Clanricard: Mac William Uachtar (de Burgh), Lords of Upper Connacht and Earls of Clanricard, 1332–1722.
References
Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700 by Frederick Lewis Weis; Lines 73-30, 177B-8, 177B-9.
The Tribes and customs of Hy-Many, John O'Donovan, 1843
The Surnames of Ireland, Edward MacLysaght, Dublin, 1978.
The Anglo-Normans in Co. Galway: the process of colonisation, Patrick Holland, Journal of the Galway Archaeological and Historical Society, vol. 41,(1987–88)
Excavation on the line of the medieval town defences of Loughrea, Co. Galway, J.G.A.& H.S., vol. 41, (1987–88)
Anglo-Norman Galway; rectangular earthworks and moated sites, Patrick Holland, J.G.A. & H.S., vol. 46 (1993)
Rindown Castle: a royal fortress in Co. Roscommon, Sheelagh Harbison, J.G.A. & H.S., vol. 47 (1995)
The Anglo-Norman landscape in County Galway; land-holdings, castles and settlements, Patrick Holland, J.G.A.& H.S., vol. 49 (1997)
Annals of Ulster at CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts at University College Cork
Annals of Tigernach at CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts at University College Cork
Revised edition of McCarthy's synchronisms at Trinity College Dublin.
Cawley, Charles, Medieval Lands Project on Richard Mor de Burgh, son of William, Lord of Connaught and his descendants, Medieval Lands database, FMG, retrieved August 2012
- [source4071145389] Richard Mór de Burgh (1194-1243), "Find A Grave Index", (Publication Date: 31 JAN 2023
Media: Website / URL), "Find A Grave Index," database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:731X-JD3Z : 15 June 2022), Richard Mór de Burgh, ; Burial, Athenry, , County Galway, Ireland, Abbey Graveyard; citing record ID 194332650, Find a Grave, http://www.findagrave.com.
1st Baron of Connaught
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/194332650/richard-m%C3%B3r-de_burgh
Richard Mór de Burgh
BIRTH 1194 Ireland
DEATH 17 Feb 1243 (aged 48–49) Ireland
BURIAL Abbey Graveyard
Athenry, County Galway, Ireland
MEMORIAL ID 194332650
1st Baron of Connaught
Spouse: Egidia (Gille) de Lacy de Burgh 1202–1240 (m. 1225)
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