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ULICK DE BURGH See also: EARL of (d
.
1544), styled MacWilliam, and Ne-gan or NagCeann (i.e
.
" of the Heads," " having made a See also: mount of the heads of men slain in See also: battle which he covered up with See also: earth "), was the son of See also: Richard or Rickard de Burgh, See also: lord of See also: Clanricarde, by a daughter of See also: Madden of Portumna, and See also: grandson of Ulick de
Burgh, lord of Clanricarde (1467-1487), the collateral heir male of the earls of See also: Ulster
.
On the See also: death of the last earl in 1333, his only See also: child See also: Elizabeth had married Lionel, duke of
See also: Clarence, and the earldom became merged in the See also: crown, in consequence of which the de Burghs abjured See also: English See also: laws and See also: sovereignty, and See also: chose for their chiefs the sons of See also: Sir See also: William, the " Red " earl of Ulster's
See also: brother, the elder William taking the title of MacWilliam Eighter (Uachtar, i.e
.
Upper), and becoming the ancestor of the earls of Clanricarde, and his brother Sir Edmond that of Mac-William Oughter (Ochtar, i.e
.
See also: Lower), and founding the See also: family of the earls of Mayo
.
In 1361 the duke of Clarence was sent over as lord-See also: lieutenant to See also: Ireland to enforce his claims as See also: husband of the heir general, but failed, and the chiefs of the de Burghs maintained their independence of English sovereignty for several generations
.
Ulick de Burgh succeeded to the headship of his clan, exercised a quasi-royal authority and held vast estates in county See also: Galway, in Connaught, including Loughry, Dunkellin, Kiltartan (Hilltaraght) and See also: Athenry, as well as Clare and See also: Leitrim
.
In See also: March 1541, however, he wrote to
See also: Henry VIII., lamenting the degeneracy of his family, " which have been brought to Irish and disobedient
See also: rule by reason of See also: marriage and nurseing with those Irish, sometime rebels, near adjoining to me," and placing himself and his estates in the See also: king's hands
.
The same
See also: year he was See also: present at See also: Dublin, when the See also: act was passed making Henry VIII. king of Ireland
.
In 1543, in See also: company with other Irish chiefs, he visited the king at See also: Greenwich, made full submission, undertook to introduce English See also: manners and abandon Irish names, received a regrant of the greater See also: part of his estates with the addition of other lands, was confirmed in the captainship and rule of Clanricarde, and was created on the 1st of See also: July 1543 earl of Clanricarde and baron of Dunkellin in the See also: peerage of Ireland, with unusual ceremony
.
" The making of McWilliam earl of Clanricarde made all the country during his See also: time quiet and obedient," states Lord Chancellor Cusake in his review of the See also: state of Ireland in 1553.1 He did not live long, however, to enjoy his new English dignities, but died shortly after returning to Ireland about March 1544
.
He is called by the annalist of Loch Ce " a haughty and proud lord," who reduced many under his yoke, and by the Four Masters " the most illustrious of the English in Connaught." Clanricarde married (1) Grany orSee also: Grace, daughter of Mulrone O'Carroll, " See also: prince of See also: Ely," by whom he had Richard or Rickard " the Saxon," who succeeded him as 2nd earl of Clanricarde (grandfather of the 4th earl, whose son became See also: marquess of Clanricarde), this See also: alliance being the only one declared valid
.
After parting with his first wife he married (2) Honora, See also: sister of Ulick de Burgh, from whom he also parted
.
He married (3) Mary See also: Lynch, by whom he had See also: John, who claimed the earldom in 1568
.
Other sons, according to Burke's Peerage, were
See also: Thomas " the Athlete," shot in 1545,
See also: Redmond " of the See also: Broom " (d
.
1595), and Edmund (d
.
1597)
.
See also See also: Annals of Ireland by the Four Masters (ed. by O
.
Connellan, 1846), p
.
132 note, and reign of Henry VIII.; Annals of Loch Ce (Rerum Brit
.
Medii Aevi Scriptores) (S4) (1871); Hist
.
Mem. of the O'Briens, by J
.
0
.
Donoghue (1860), pp 159, 519; Ireland under the Tudors, by R . Bagwell, vol. i.; State Papers, Ireland, CarewSee also: MSS. and See also: Gairdner's Letters and Papers of Henry VIII.; See also: Cotton MSS
.
Brit
.
See also: Mus., Titus B xi. f
.
388
.
(P
.
C
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