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Honora Burke

Honora Burke became Honora FitzJames, Duchess of Berwick on Tweed (c. 1675 – 1698), married Patrick Sarsfield and went into French exile where he followed her soon afterwards. After his death at the Battle of Landen, she married James FitzJames, 1st Duke of Berwick, an illegitimate son of James II. She may have introduced the country dance (contredanse anglaise) to the French court.

Honora Burke
Duchess of Berwick
Bornc. 1675
Portumna Castle
Died16 January 1698
Pézenas, Languedoc, France
Spouse(s)
Issue
Detail
James Sarsfield; James, 2nd Duke of Berwick
FatherWilliam, 7th Earl of Clanricarde
MotherHelen MacCarty

Birth and origins edit

Honora was born about 1675 at Portumna Castle, County Galway.[1] She was the youngest child of William Burke and his second wife, Helen MacCarty. Her father was William Burke, 7th Earl of Clanricarde. The Burkes (originally De Burgh) were an Old English family long-established in Connacht. Her mother was a daughter of Donough MacCarty, 1st Earl of Clancarty and thus belonged to the MacCarthy of Muskerry dynasty, a Gaelic Irish family that descended from the kings of Desmond.[2] She had previously been married to Sir John Fitzgerald of Dromana.[3] Honora was raised as a Roman Catholic. She was often called Honora de Burgh during this period.[1]

Family tree
Honora Burke with her two husbands, her parents, and other selected relatives.[a]
William
Burke

d. 1626
Donough
1st Earl
Clancarty

1594–1665
Eleanor
Butler

1612–1682
William
Burke
7th Earl
Clanricarde

d. 1687
Helen
MacCarty

d. 1722
Justin
MacCarthy
Viscount
Mount-
cashel

d. 1694
Ulick
d. 1691
Margaret
d. 1744
Patrick
Sarsfield
1st Earl
Lucan

1655–1693
Honora
Burke

c. 1675 – 1698
James
FitzJames
1st Duke
Berwick

1670–1734
James
Sarsfield
2nd Earl
Lucan

1693–1719
James
Fitz-James
Stuart
2nd Duke
Berwick

1696–1738
Legend
Honora listed among her siblings
She appears below at the bottom of the list of siblings as the youngest:
  1. Ulick (1670–1691), created Viscount of Galway and slain at the Battle of Aughrim fighting for the Jacobites[4][b]
  2. Margaret (1673–1744), first married Bryan Magennis, 5th Viscount of Iveagh and then Thomas Butler of Garryricken[5][b]
  3. William, died childless in France[6][b]
  4. Honora (c. 1675 – 1698)
Honora's half-siblings
Half-siblings from her father's first marriage were:[7]
  1. Richard (died after 1708), became the 8th Earl of Clanricarde[8]
  2. John (1642–1722), became the 9th Earl of Clanricarde[9] and
  3. Thomas (died 1688), killed at the Siege of Buda, Hungary[10][b][c][11]

Early life edit

Her father died in 1687[12] and was succeeded by her half-brother Richard as the 8th Earl of Clanricarde. Honora inherited a fortune of £3,500 from her father.[13] Her mother married thirdly, sometime between 1687 and 1700, to Colonel Thomas Burke.[14]

First marriage edit

In the winter of 1689/90 [15] Honora, aged 15,[16] married Patrick Sarsfield, aged about 35, at Portumna Abbey.[17][18] The couple went to live in Sarsfield's house at Lucan near Dublin.[17] Sarsfield was at that time the eldest living son of a landowner from County Kildare and an experienced soldier, serving in the Irish Army of James II during the Williamite War in Ireland.[19]

Sarsfield rose rapidly to become one of the leaders of the Jacobite movement in Ireland, noted in particular for the Ballyneety Raid on King William's artillery train shortly before the Siege of Limerick (1690).[20] In January 1691 James II ennobled him for this achievement making him the 1st Earl of Lucan.[21] She therefore became Countess of Lucan. After the surrender of Limerick following a second siege in 1691, Lucan led the defeated Irish Army to France to continue serving the exiled James II, an event known as the Flight of the Wild Geese.[22]

Honora had probably left for France a year earlier with other Jacobite ladies.[23] In France she was admired for her beauty and is said to have introduced "les contredanses anglaises" (English country dance) to the French Court.[24][25] In 1692 her husband participated in a failed plan to invade England.[26]

In April 1693 Honora and Patrick had one son:[27]

  1. James Francis Edward (1693–1719), became the 2nd Earl of Lucan and took part in the planned 1719 Jacobite Rising in Ireland, but died of natural causes shortly afterwards.[28]

He was named after James Francis Edward Stuart, the Jacobite Prince of Wales, later known as the Old Pretender.

On 29 July 1693 Lucan was mortally wounded at the Battle of Landen[29] and died shortly afterwards at Huy.[30]

It has been said that Catalina Sarsfield, who married a German adventurer, known for having briefly established himself as King Theodore of Corsica, was a daughter of Honora and her first husband.[31][32] In fact Catalina (the Spanish form of Catherine) came from the Limerick branch of the Sarsfield family and was born in Nantes to David Sarsfield, a distant cousin of Lucan.[33][citation needed]

After Lucan's death the dowager countess joined the Jacobite court-in-exile at Saint-Germain-en-Laye near Paris. She tried to help the Irish community there, part of which lived in great poverty but lacked herself the means.[34]

 
English portrait of Honora de Burke

Second marriage edit

At Saint-Germain-en-Laye the dowager Countess Lucan met James FitzJames, 1st Duke of Berwick and fell in love with him. Berwick was an illegitimate son of James II and Arabella Churchill, and pursued a brilliant military career since an early age. He had served alongside Lucan in Ireland. Honora married James on 26 March 1695 in the chapel of the Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye.[35] making her the Duchess of Berwick. The King was not overjoyed at the marriage, as he had wanted his son to make a grander match that might have helped the Jacobite cause.[36] In that same year her husband was attainted in England and therefore lost, at least officially, his title.[37] However, she and her husband continued to use it and were generally known as the Duke and Duchess of Berwick. Saint-Simon, for example calls him so in 1698.[38]

Honora and James had a son:

  • James (1696–1738), who served in the Spanish Army and founded a dynasty in that country.[39]

Death and timeline edit

She died on 16 January 1698[40][41] of consumption,[42][38] leaving her husband in "great grief". She was buried in the Convent of English Benedictines[43] in Pontoise.[44] Her burial was attended many prominent Jacobites: Henry FitzJames (Berwicks's brother), Lord Perth, Melfort, Richard Hamilton, James Porter, Lord Waldegrave, and Dominic Maguire (the Primate of all Ireland).[45]

Her husband married Anne Bulkeley, daughter of Henry Bulkeley (Master of the Household to James II) three years later on 18 April 1700.[46]

Timeline
As her birth date is uncertain, so are all her ages.
Age Date Event
0 1675, about Born at Portumna Castle.[1][16]
10 1685, 6 Feb Accession of King James II, succeeding King Charles II[47]
12 1687, Oct Father died.[12]
13 1689, 9 Jan Married Sarsfield at Portumna Abbey.[19][17]
14 1689, 13 Feb Accession of William and Mary, succeeding King James II[48]
14 1689, 12 Mar King James II landed at Kinsale.[49]
15–16 1691, Jan Became Countess of Lucan as Sarsfield is created Earl of Lucan by James II.[21]
16 1691, 12 Jul Brother Ulick slain at the Battle of Aughrim.[4]
18 1693, Apr Son James Francis Edward born.[27]
18 1693, 29 Jul 1st husband mortally wounded at the Battle of Landen.[29]
19 1695, 9 Jan Married 2ndly Berwick at Saint-Germain-en-Laye and became Duchess of Berwick.[36]
19–20 1695 2nd husband attainted in England.[37]
21 1696, 21 Oct Son James born.[39]
22 1698, 16 Jan Died at Pézenas, Languedoc, France.[40][38]

Notes and references edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Also see the lists of siblings and children in the text.
  2. ^ a b c d Lodge by error ignores Clanricarde's second marriage to Helen and lists all the children as born by Lettice Shirley, his first wife.
  3. ^ There probably is some error here as the siege of Buda was in 1686.

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c Burke 2005, p. 21, line 19. "Honora de Burgh was born C 1675 at Portumna Castle, Co. Galway."
  2. ^ O'Hart 1892, p. 122. "Cormac MacCarty Mor, Prince of Desmond (see the MacCarty Mór Stem, No. 115,) had a second son, Dermod Mór, of Muscry (now Muskerry) who was the ancestor of MacCarthy, lords of Muscry and earls of Clan Carthy."
  3. ^ Cokayne 1913, p. 233, line 2. "He [Clanricarde] m. [married] 2ndly Helen, widow of sir John FitzGerald, of Dromana, co. Waterford (who d. [died] 1662), da. [daughter] of Donough (MacCarty), 1st Earl of Clancarty [I. [Ireland]] by Eleanor ..."
  4. ^ a b Lodge 1789, p. 138, line 13. "Ulick, created by privy seal, dated at Whitehall, 9 May, and by patent 2 June 1687, baron of Tyaquin in the co. of Galway, and Viscount of Galway; was a nobleman of true courage and endowed with many good qualities; he commanded a regiment of foot in K. James's army; and in that station was killed at Aghrim, 12 July 1691, being not full 22 years old."
  5. ^ Lodge 1789, p. 138, line 27. "Margaret, born in 1673 and married first in 1689 to Bryan Viscount Magennis, of Iveagh who dying in 1692, she remarried in 1696 with Thomas Butler of Kilcash in the co. of Tipperary, Esq.; where she died his widow, 19 July, 1744."
  6. ^ Lodge 1789, p. 138, line 26. "William died in his minority in France."
  7. ^ Debrett 1828, p. 643. "Richard, 6th earl, who also d. [died] without issue, and was succeeded by his brother William, 7th earl, father of Richard, 8th earl (who died without issue) and John, 9th earl, who d. 17 October 1722, leaving issue."
  8. ^ Cokayne 1913, p. 233. "8. Richard (Bourke), Earl of Clanricarde & [I. [Ireland]], s. [son] and h. [heir] by 1st wife. He conformed to the established Church in or before 1681."
  9. ^ Cokayne 1913, p. 234. "9. John (Bourke), Earl of Clanricarde & [I. [Ireland]], br. [brother] and h. [heir] male by full blood. He was born 1642 ..."
  10. ^ Lodge 1789, p. 138, line 11. "Thomas, who was killed in 1688 at the siege of Buda, in Hungary, then possessed by the Turks ..."
  11. ^ Burke 1869, p. 228, left column, line 6. "Thomas, killed at Buda."
  12. ^ a b Cokayne 1913, p. 233, line 5a. "He [Clanricarde] d. Oct. 1687."
  13. ^ Hardy 1913, p. 14. "... the late Earl of Clanricarde bequeathed to his daughter, Lady Honor Burke, who since married Colonel Sarsfield, the sum of 3,500l by his last will and testament, which is forfeited to the King by her marriage with the said Patrick Sarsfield ..."
  14. ^ Cokayne 1913, p. 233, line 5b. "His [Clanricarde's] widow m. [married] 3rdly before 1 Feb. 1699/1700, Thomas Bourke, who died between 29 May 1718 and 5 Dec. 1720."
  15. ^ https://www.dib.ie/biography/sarsfield-patrick-a7924
  16. ^ a b Wauchope 2004, p. 994, right column. "Sarsfield married Lady Honora Bourke, a fifteen-year-old ..."
  17. ^ a b c Burke 2005, p. 21, line 32. "Honora married (1) Patrick Sarsfield at Portumna Abbey 9th Jan 1689, age just 16 years, after heir marriage, Honora and Patrick went to live at Sarsfield's house in Lucan, Dublin."
  18. ^ Ruvigny 1904, p. 81, last line. "He [Sarsfield] married Lady Honora, second daughter of William (Bourke) seventh Earl of Clanricarde [I.], by his second wife, Lady Ellen, daughter of Donough (MacCarty), first Earl of Clancarty [I. [Ireland]]."
  19. ^ a b Lodge 1789, p. 138, line 32. "Lady Honora (first married to Patrick Sarsfield, Earl of Lucan, who was killed in the battle of Landen, 29 July, 1693, by whom she had one son who died without issue in Flanders ..."
  20. ^ Wauchope 2004, p. 965, left column. "... in the early hours of 12 August 1690, he attacked the siege train while it camped at Ballyneety, near Cullen, co. Tipperary, some 12 miles from Limerick."
  21. ^ a b Ruvigny 1904, p. 81, line 18. "He greatly distinguished him at the first siege of Limerick in August 1690 and in reward was created by King James, January 1690/91 ... Earl of Lucan."
  22. ^ Wauchope 2004, p. 966, left column. "Lucan left Ireland for the last time on 22 December 1691, having succeeded in getting over 12,000 Irish soldiers transported to France to join King James."
  23. ^ Wauchope 2004, p. 966, right column, line 27. "... had been evacuated to France during the war in Ireland before being joined by her husband in early 1692 at the Jacobite court in exile at St Germain-en-Laye."
  24. ^ Petrie 1953, p. 101:"Her son by her second marriage wrote of her '... et ce fut elle qui introduisit à la cour de France la mode de danser les contredanses anglaises.'"
  25. ^ Wauchope 2004, p. 996, right column, line 30. "Admired for her beauty, she is credited with the introduction of the 'çontradanses anglaises' to the French Court."
  26. ^ O'Callaghan 1854, p. 165. "... to be commanded, under the king, by the veteran Marshal de Bellefonds, to whom Patrick Sarsfield, Earl of Lucan, was Maréchal de camp or Major General."
  27. ^ a b Wauchope 2004, p. 996, right column, line 32. "With Lucan she had one child, James Francis Edward (the Jacobite second earl), born in April 1693, three months before she was widowed."
  28. ^ Todhunter 1895, p. 202, line 19. "He [James Sarsfield] died, without issue, at St. Omer, May 12th, 1719."
  29. ^ a b Todhunter 1895, p. 202, line 1. "It was in the last charge that Sarsfield, at the head of the flower of French cavalry (no Irish regiment being engaged), as he drove the enemy down to the river, was struck by a musket ball in the breast, and fell."
  30. ^ Todhunter 1895, p. 202, line 9. "He was carried from the field to the village of Huy, where he died in a few days, of the fever induced by his wound."
  31. ^ Ruvigny 1904, p. 82. "Lady [____] Sarsfield, married about 1718, Baron Theodore de Neuhof, sometime King of Corsica."
  32. ^ Todhunter 1895, p. 202, line 23. "His daughter married Baron de Neuburg, styled King of Corsica."
  33. ^ Gasper 2013, p. 41. "Neuhoff's presentation to the king and queen of Spain had an unexpected consequence: one of the queen's maids of honour fell in love with him. She was Catalina Sarsfield, the daughter of David Sarsfield, an Irish Catholic exile who fought for Philip in Spain ..."
  34. ^ Lyons 2008, p. 69. "The protection that the widows of the Earl of Tyconnell (d. 1691) and Patrick Sarsfield (d.1692) gave to the Irish at St. Germain-en-Laye was significant but ultimately inadequate ..."
  35. ^ Handley 2004, p. 882, left column, line 32. "On 26 March 1695 Berwick married, in the royal chapel at St Germain-en-Laye, Honora Sarsfield, née Bourke ..."
  36. ^ a b Lodge 1789, p. 138, last line. "[Honora] secondly was married in the chapel of the Castle of St Germains, near Paris, in 1695, to James Fitz-James, Duke of Berwick, Marshal, Duke and Peer of France, eldest natural son of James II. by Arabella, sister to John Churchill Duke of Marlborough ..."
  37. ^ a b Burke 1866, p. 208, right column, line 43. "Marshal Berwick was attainted in 1695, when the dukedom of Berwick and his minor English honours became forfeited."
  38. ^ a b c Saint-Simon 1879, p. 24. "Le duc de Berwick perdit en même temps [1698] une très aimable femme qu'il avoit épousée par amour, et qui avoit très bien réussi à la cour et à Saint-Germain ... Elle était à la première fleur de son âge, belle, touchante, faite à peindre, une nymphe."
  39. ^ a b FitzJames 1778, p. 153, footnote. "Il m'en reste un fils qui naquit le 21 octobre 1696 ..."
  40. ^ a b FitzJames 1778, p. 153, line 11. "Ma femme ... mourut au mois de Janvier de cette année [1698] ..."
  41. ^ Mulcahy 2003, p. 119. "She died in the month of January 1698. She was not yet twenty-three."
  42. ^ Handley 2004, p. 882, left column, last line. "On 16 January 1698 his wife died of consumption at Pézenas in Languedoc;"
  43. ^ Trou 1841, p. 236, line 24. "... le tombeau en marbre blanc de la princesse Honorée, fille de Guillaume Burke, paire d'Irlande et épouse de Jacques Fitz-James, duc de Berwick."
  44. ^ Handley 2004, p. 882, right column, line 1. "... she was buried at Pontoise."
  45. ^ Trou 1841, p. 236–237.
  46. ^ Handley 2004, p. 882, right column, line 6. "In Paris on 18 April he married Anne (c. 1675–1751), daughter of Henry Bulkeley, master of the household to James II."
  47. ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 44, line 46. "James II. ... acc. 6 Feb. 1685 ..."
  48. ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 45, line 11. "William III. ... acc. 13 Feb. 1689 ..."
  49. ^ Witherow 1879, p. 55, line 21. "On Tuesday the 12th of March, King James arrived at Kinsale from France ..."

Sources edit

  • Burke, Bernard (1866). A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire (New ed.). London: Harrison. OCLC 11501348.
  • Burke, Bernard (1869). A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerage and Baronetage of the British Empire (31st ed.). London: Harrison. OCLC 1045624502. (for Clanricarde)
  • Burke, Jim (2005). A History of De Burgo, De Burgh, De Burca, Burke, Bourke. Ireland: Séamus de Búrka. OCLC 619552006. – Jim Burke!
  • Cokayne, George Edward (1913). Gibbs, Vicary (ed.). The complete peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, extant, extinct, or dormant. Vol. III (2nd ed.). London: St Catherine Press. OCLC 228661424. – Canonteign to Cutts (for Clancarty and Clanricarde)
  • Debrett, John (1828). Peerage of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. Vol. II (17th ed.). London: F. C. and J. Rivington. OCLC 54499602. – Scotland and Ireland
  • FitzJames, James FitzJames, the Duke of Berwick (1778). Mémoires du Maréchal de Berwick (in French). Vol. Tome premier. Paris: Moutard. OCLC 1049657563.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Fryde, E. B.; Greenway, D. E.; Porter, S.; Roy, I., eds. (1986). Handbook of British Chronology. Royal Historical Society Guides and Handbooks, No. 2 (3rd ed.). London: Offices of the Royal Historical Society. ISBN 0-86193-106-8. – (for timeline)
  • Gasper, Julia (2013). Theodore Von Neuhoff, King of Corsica: The Man Behind the Legend. Newark, Delaware: University of Delaware Press. ISBN 978-1-61149-440-2.
  • Handley, Stuart (2004). "FitzJames, James (1650/51–1712)". In Matthew, Colin; Harrison, Brian (eds.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 19. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 881–884. ISBN 0-19-861369-5.
  • Hardy, William John (1913). Calendar of the State Papers, Domestic Series, of the Reign of William III. 1 January—31 December, 1696. London: His/Her Majesty's Stationery Office. pp. 6 v. OCLC 878147296.
  • Lodge, John (1789). Archdall, Mervyn (ed.). The Peerage of Ireland or, A Genealogical History of the Present Nobility of that Kingdom. Vol. I. Dublin: James Moore. OCLC 264906028. – Blood royal, dukes, earls (for Clanricarde)
  • Lyons, Mary Ann (2008). "Digne de compassion: female dependants of Irish Jacobite soldiers in France, c.1692-c.1730". Eighteenth-Century Ireland. 23: 55–75. doi:10.3828/eci.2008.6. JSTOR 27806924.
  • Mulcahy, John (2003). "Honora Burke, the Flower of Portumna". Irish Arts Review. 20 (3): 118–119. JSTOR 25502985.
  • O'Callaghan, John Cornelius (1854). History of the Irish Brigades in the Service of France. New York: P. O'Shea Publisher. OCLC 1046538374.
  • O'Hart, John (1892). Irish Pedigrees: Or, the Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation. Vol. I (5th ed.). Dublin: James Duffy & Co. OCLC 7239210. – Irish stem
  • Petrie, Charles (1953). The Marshal Duke of Berwick: The Picture of an Age. London: Eyre and Spottiswoode. OCLC 1049657563.
  • Ruvigny, Melville Henry, Marquis de (1904). Jacobite Peerage Baronetage Knightage and Grants of Honour. Edinburgh: T C & E C Jack. OCLC 655825906.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Saint-Simon, Louis de Rouvroy, duc de (1879). Boislisle, Arthur de (ed.). Mémoires du duc de Saint-Simon (in French). Vol. Tome cinquième (2nd ed.). Paris: Hachette. OCLC 1068033585.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) – 1698
  • Todhunter, John (1895). Life of Patrick Sarsfield, Earl of Lucan. London: T. Fisher Unwin. OCLC 6152671.
  • Trou, M. l'abbé (1841). Recherches historiques, archéologiques et biographiques sur la ville de Pontoise (in French). Pontoise: Dufey. OCLC 162335368.
  • Wauchope, Piers (2004). "Sarsfield, Patrick, Jacobite first earl of Lucan (d. 1693)". In Matthew, Colin; Harrison, Brian (eds.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 48. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 993–996. ISBN 0-19-861398-9.
  • Witherow, Thomas (1879). Derry and Enniskillen in the Year 1689. London & Belfast: William Mallan & Son. OCLC 82779901. (for timeline)

External links edit

honora, burke, became, honora, fitzjames, duchess, berwick, tweed, 1675, 1698, married, patrick, sarsfield, went, into, french, exile, where, followed, soon, afterwards, after, death, battle, landen, married, james, fitzjames, duke, berwick, illegitimate, jame. Honora Burke became Honora FitzJames Duchess of Berwick on Tweed c 1675 1698 married Patrick Sarsfield and went into French exile where he followed her soon afterwards After his death at the Battle of Landen she married James FitzJames 1st Duke of Berwick an illegitimate son of James II She may have introduced the country dance contredanse anglaise to the French court Honora BurkeDuchess of BerwickBornc 1675 Portumna CastleDied16 January 1698Pezenas Languedoc FranceSpouse s Patrick Sarsfield 1st Earl of LucanJames 1st Duke of BerwickIssueDetailJames Sarsfield James 2nd Duke of BerwickFatherWilliam 7th Earl of ClanricardeMotherHelen MacCarty Contents 1 Birth and origins 2 Early life 3 First marriage 4 Second marriage 5 Death and timeline 6 Notes and references 6 1 Notes 6 2 Citations 6 3 Sources 7 External linksBirth and origins editHonora was born about 1675 at Portumna Castle County Galway 1 She was the youngest child of William Burke and his second wife Helen MacCarty Her father was William Burke 7th Earl of Clanricarde The Burkes originally De Burgh were an Old English family long established in Connacht Her mother was a daughter of Donough MacCarty 1st Earl of Clancarty and thus belonged to the MacCarthy of Muskerry dynasty a Gaelic Irish family that descended from the kings of Desmond 2 She had previously been married to Sir John Fitzgerald of Dromana 3 Honora was raised as a Roman Catholic She was often called Honora de Burgh during this period 1 Family treeHonora Burke with her two husbands her parents and other selected relatives a WilliamBurked 1626Donough1st EarlClancarty1594 1665EleanorButler1612 1682WilliamBurke7th EarlClanricarded 1687HelenMacCartyd 1722JustinMacCarthyViscountMount casheld 1694Ulickd 1691Margaretd 1744PatrickSarsfield1st EarlLucan1655 1693HonoraBurkec 1675 1698JamesFitzJames1st DukeBerwick1670 1734JamesSarsfield2nd EarlLucan1693 1719JamesFitz JamesStuart2nd DukeBerwick1696 1738LegendXXXSubject ofthe articleXXXDukes ofBerwickXXXEarls ofLucanXXXEarls ofClanricardeXXXEarls ofClancartyHonora listed among her siblingsShe appears below at the bottom of the list of siblings as the youngest Ulick 1670 1691 created Viscount of Galway and slain at the Battle of Aughrim fighting for the Jacobites 4 b Margaret 1673 1744 first married Bryan Magennis 5th Viscount of Iveagh and then Thomas Butler of Garryricken 5 b William died childless in France 6 b Honora c 1675 1698 Honora s half siblingsHalf siblings from her father s first marriage were 7 Richard died after 1708 became the 8th Earl of Clanricarde 8 John 1642 1722 became the 9th Earl of Clanricarde 9 and Thomas died 1688 killed at the Siege of Buda Hungary 10 b c 11 Early life editHer father died in 1687 12 and was succeeded by her half brother Richard as the 8th Earl of Clanricarde Honora inherited a fortune of 3 500 from her father 13 Her mother married thirdly sometime between 1687 and 1700 to Colonel Thomas Burke 14 First marriage editIn the winter of 1689 90 15 Honora aged 15 16 married Patrick Sarsfield aged about 35 at Portumna Abbey 17 18 The couple went to live in Sarsfield s house at Lucan near Dublin 17 Sarsfield was at that time the eldest living son of a landowner from County Kildare and an experienced soldier serving in the Irish Army of James II during the Williamite War in Ireland 19 Sarsfield rose rapidly to become one of the leaders of the Jacobite movement in Ireland noted in particular for the Ballyneety Raid on King William s artillery train shortly before the Siege of Limerick 1690 20 In January 1691 James II ennobled him for this achievement making him the 1st Earl of Lucan 21 She therefore became Countess of Lucan After the surrender of Limerick following a second siege in 1691 Lucan led the defeated Irish Army to France to continue serving the exiled James II an event known as the Flight of the Wild Geese 22 Honora had probably left for France a year earlier with other Jacobite ladies 23 In France she was admired for her beauty and is said to have introduced les contredanses anglaises English country dance to the French Court 24 25 In 1692 her husband participated in a failed plan to invade England 26 In April 1693 Honora and Patrick had one son 27 James Francis Edward 1693 1719 became the 2nd Earl of Lucan and took part in the planned 1719 Jacobite Rising in Ireland but died of natural causes shortly afterwards 28 He was named after James Francis Edward Stuart the Jacobite Prince of Wales later known as the Old Pretender On 29 July 1693 Lucan was mortally wounded at the Battle of Landen 29 and died shortly afterwards at Huy 30 It has been said that Catalina Sarsfield who married a German adventurer known for having briefly established himself as King Theodore of Corsica was a daughter of Honora and her first husband 31 32 In fact Catalina the Spanish form of Catherine came from the Limerick branch of the Sarsfield family and was born in Nantes to David Sarsfield a distant cousin of Lucan 33 citation needed After Lucan s death the dowager countess joined the Jacobite court in exile at Saint Germain en Laye near Paris She tried to help the Irish community there part of which lived in great poverty but lacked herself the means 34 nbsp English portrait of Honora de BurkeSecond marriage editAt Saint Germain en Laye the dowager Countess Lucan met James FitzJames 1st Duke of Berwick and fell in love with him Berwick was an illegitimate son of James II and Arabella Churchill and pursued a brilliant military career since an early age He had served alongside Lucan in Ireland Honora married James on 26 March 1695 in the chapel of the Chateau de Saint Germain en Laye 35 making her the Duchess of Berwick The King was not overjoyed at the marriage as he had wanted his son to make a grander match that might have helped the Jacobite cause 36 In that same year her husband was attainted in England and therefore lost at least officially his title 37 However she and her husband continued to use it and were generally known as the Duke and Duchess of Berwick Saint Simon for example calls him so in 1698 38 Honora and James had a son James 1696 1738 who served in the Spanish Army and founded a dynasty in that country 39 Death and timeline editShe died on 16 January 1698 40 41 of consumption 42 38 leaving her husband in great grief She was buried in the Convent of English Benedictines 43 in Pontoise 44 Her burial was attended many prominent Jacobites Henry FitzJames Berwicks s brother Lord Perth Melfort Richard Hamilton James Porter Lord Waldegrave and Dominic Maguire the Primate of all Ireland 45 Her husband married Anne Bulkeley daughter of Henry Bulkeley Master of the Household to James II three years later on 18 April 1700 46 TimelineAs her birth date is uncertain so are all her ages Age Date Event0 1675 about Born at Portumna Castle 1 16 10 1685 6 Feb Accession of King James II succeeding King Charles II 47 12 1687 Oct Father died 12 13 1689 9 Jan Married Sarsfield at Portumna Abbey 19 17 14 1689 13 Feb Accession of William and Mary succeeding King James II 48 14 1689 12 Mar King James II landed at Kinsale 49 15 16 1691 Jan Became Countess of Lucan as Sarsfield is created Earl of Lucan by James II 21 16 1691 12 Jul Brother Ulick slain at the Battle of Aughrim 4 18 1693 Apr Son James Francis Edward born 27 18 1693 29 Jul 1st husband mortally wounded at the Battle of Landen 29 19 1695 9 Jan Married 2ndly Berwick at Saint Germain en Laye and became Duchess of Berwick 36 19 20 1695 2nd husband attainted in England 37 21 1696 21 Oct Son James born 39 22 1698 16 Jan Died at Pezenas Languedoc France 40 38 Notes and references editNotes edit Also see the lists of siblings and children in the text a b c d Lodge by error ignores Clanricarde s second marriage to Helen and lists all the children as born by Lettice Shirley his first wife There probably is some error here as the siege of Buda was in 1686 Citations edit a b c Burke 2005 p 21 line 19 Honora de Burgh was born C 1675 at Portumna Castle Co Galway O Hart 1892 p 122 Cormac MacCarty Mor Prince of Desmond see the MacCarty Mor Stem No 115 had a second son Dermod Mor of Muscry now Muskerry who was the ancestor of MacCarthy lords of Muscry and earls of Clan Carthy Cokayne 1913 p 233 line 2 He Clanricarde m married 2ndly Helen widow of sir John FitzGerald of Dromana co Waterford who d died 1662 da daughter of Donough MacCarty 1st Earl of Clancarty I Ireland by Eleanor a b Lodge 1789 p 138 line 13 Ulick created by privy seal dated at Whitehall 9 May and by patent 2 June 1687 baron of Tyaquin in the co of Galway and Viscount of Galway was a nobleman of true courage and endowed with many good qualities he commanded a regiment of foot in K James s army and in that station was killed at Aghrim 12 July 1691 being not full 22 years old Lodge 1789 p 138 line 27 Margaret born in 1673 and married first in 1689 to Bryan Viscount Magennis of Iveagh who dying in 1692 she remarried in 1696 with Thomas Butler of Kilcash in the co of Tipperary Esq where she died his widow 19 July 1744 Lodge 1789 p 138 line 26 William died in his minority in France Debrett 1828 p 643 Richard 6th earl who also d died without issue and was succeeded by his brother William 7th earl father of Richard 8th earl who died without issue and John 9th earl who d 17 October 1722 leaving issue Cokayne 1913 p 233 8 Richard Bourke Earl of Clanricarde amp I Ireland s son and h heir by 1st wife He conformed to the established Church in or before 1681 Cokayne 1913 p 234 9 John Bourke Earl of Clanricarde amp I Ireland br brother and h heir male by full blood He was born 1642 Lodge 1789 p 138 line 11 Thomas who was killed in 1688 at the siege of Buda in Hungary then possessed by the Turks Burke 1869 p 228 left column line 6 Thomas killed at Buda a b Cokayne 1913 p 233 line 5a He Clanricarde d Oct 1687 Hardy 1913 p 14 the late Earl of Clanricarde bequeathed to his daughter Lady Honor Burke who since married Colonel Sarsfield the sum of 3 500l by his last will and testament which is forfeited to the King by her marriage with the said Patrick Sarsfield Cokayne 1913 p 233 line 5b His Clanricarde s widow m married 3rdly before 1 Feb 1699 1700 Thomas Bourke who died between 29 May 1718 and 5 Dec 1720 https www dib ie biography sarsfield patrick a7924 a b Wauchope 2004 p 994 right column Sarsfield married Lady Honora Bourke a fifteen year old a b c Burke 2005 p 21 line 32 Honora married 1 Patrick Sarsfield at Portumna Abbey 9th Jan 1689 age just 16 years after heir marriage Honora and Patrick went to live at Sarsfield s house in Lucan Dublin Ruvigny 1904 p 81 last line He Sarsfield married Lady Honora second daughter of William Bourke seventh Earl of Clanricarde I by his second wife Lady Ellen daughter of Donough MacCarty first Earl of Clancarty I Ireland a b Lodge 1789 p 138 line 32 Lady Honora first married to Patrick Sarsfield Earl of Lucan who was killed in the battle of Landen 29 July 1693 by whom she had one son who died without issue in Flanders Wauchope 2004 p 965 left column in the early hours of 12 August 1690 he attacked the siege train while it camped at Ballyneety near Cullen co Tipperary some 12 miles from Limerick a b Ruvigny 1904 p 81 line 18 He greatly distinguished him at the first siege of Limerick in August 1690 and in reward was created by King James January 1690 91 Earl of Lucan Wauchope 2004 p 966 left column Lucan left Ireland for the last time on 22 December 1691 having succeeded in getting over 12 000 Irish soldiers transported to France to join King James Wauchope 2004 p 966 right column line 27 had been evacuated to France during the war in Ireland before being joined by her husband in early 1692 at the Jacobite court in exile at St Germain en Laye Petrie 1953 p 101 Her son by her second marriage wrote of her et ce fut elle qui introduisit a la cour de France la mode de danser les contredanses anglaises Wauchope 2004 p 996 right column line 30 Admired for her beauty she is credited with the introduction of the contradanses anglaises to the French Court O Callaghan 1854 p 165 to be commanded under the king by the veteran Marshal de Bellefonds to whom Patrick Sarsfield Earl of Lucan was Marechal de camp or Major General a b Wauchope 2004 p 996 right column line 32 With Lucan she had one child James Francis Edward the Jacobite second earl born in April 1693 three months before she was widowed Todhunter 1895 p 202 line 19 He James Sarsfield died without issue at St Omer May 12th 1719 a b Todhunter 1895 p 202 line 1 It was in the last charge that Sarsfield at the head of the flower of French cavalry no Irish regiment being engaged as he drove the enemy down to the river was struck by a musket ball in the breast and fell Todhunter 1895 p 202 line 9 He was carried from the field to the village of Huy where he died in a few days of the fever induced by his wound Ruvigny 1904 p 82 Lady Sarsfield married about 1718 Baron Theodore de Neuhof sometime King of Corsica Todhunter 1895 p 202 line 23 His daughter married Baron de Neuburg styled King of Corsica Gasper 2013 p 41 Neuhoff s presentation to the king and queen of Spain had an unexpected consequence one of the queen s maids of honour fell in love with him She was Catalina Sarsfield the daughter of David Sarsfield an Irish Catholic exile who fought for Philip in Spain Lyons 2008 p 69 The protection that the widows of the Earl of Tyconnell d 1691 and Patrick Sarsfield d 1692 gave to the Irish at St Germain en Laye was significant but ultimately inadequate Handley 2004 p 882 left column line 32 On 26 March 1695 Berwick married in the royal chapel at St Germain en Laye Honora Sarsfield nee Bourke a b Lodge 1789 p 138 last line Honora secondly was married in the chapel of the Castle of St Germains near Paris in 1695 to James Fitz James Duke of Berwick Marshal Duke and Peer of France eldest natural son of James II by Arabella sister to John Churchill Duke of Marlborough a b Burke 1866 p 208 right column line 43 Marshal Berwick was attainted in 1695 when the dukedom of Berwick and his minor English honours became forfeited a b c Saint Simon 1879 p 24 Le duc de Berwick perdit en meme temps 1698 une tres aimable femme qu il avoit epousee par amour et qui avoit tres bien reussi a la cour et a Saint Germain Elle etait a la premiere fleur de son age belle touchante faite a peindre une nymphe a b FitzJames 1778 p 153 footnote Il m en reste un fils qui naquit le 21 octobre 1696 a b FitzJames 1778 p 153 line 11 Ma femme mourut au mois de Janvier de cette annee 1698 Mulcahy 2003 p 119 She died in the month of January 1698 She was not yet twenty three Handley 2004 p 882 left column last line On 16 January 1698 his wife died of consumption at Pezenas in Languedoc Trou 1841 p 236 line 24 le tombeau en marbre blanc de la princesse Honoree fille de Guillaume Burke paire d Irlande et epouse de Jacques Fitz James duc de Berwick Handley 2004 p 882 right column line 1 she was buried at Pontoise Trou 1841 p 236 237 Handley 2004 p 882 right column line 6 In Paris on 18 April he married Anne c 1675 1751 daughter of Henry Bulkeley master of the household to James II Fryde et al 1986 p 44 line 46 James II acc 6 Feb 1685 Fryde et al 1986 p 45 line 11 William III acc 13 Feb 1689 Witherow 1879 p 55 line 21 On Tuesday the 12th of March King James arrived at Kinsale from France Sources edit Burke Bernard 1866 A Genealogical History of the Dormant Abeyant Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire New ed London Harrison OCLC 11501348 Burke Bernard 1869 A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerage and Baronetage of the British Empire 31st ed London Harrison OCLC 1045624502 for Clanricarde Burke Jim 2005 A History of De Burgo De Burgh De Burca Burke Bourke Ireland Seamus de Burka OCLC 619552006 Jim Burke Cokayne George Edward 1913 Gibbs Vicary ed The complete peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom extant extinct or dormant Vol III 2nd ed London St Catherine Press OCLC 228661424 Canonteign to Cutts for Clancarty and Clanricarde Debrett John 1828 Peerage of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Vol II 17th ed London F C and J Rivington OCLC 54499602 Scotland and Ireland FitzJames James FitzJames the Duke of Berwick 1778 Memoires du Marechal de Berwick in French Vol Tome premier Paris Moutard OCLC 1049657563 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Fryde E B Greenway D E Porter S Roy I eds 1986 Handbook of British Chronology Royal Historical Society Guides and Handbooks No 2 3rd ed London Offices of the Royal Historical Society ISBN 0 86193 106 8 for timeline Gasper Julia 2013 Theodore Von Neuhoff King of Corsica The Man Behind the Legend Newark Delaware University of Delaware Press ISBN 978 1 61149 440 2 Handley Stuart 2004 FitzJames James 1650 51 1712 In Matthew Colin Harrison Brian eds Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 19 New York Oxford University Press pp 881 884 ISBN 0 19 861369 5 Hardy William John 1913 Calendar of the State Papers Domestic Series of the Reign of William III 1 January 31 December 1696 London His Her Majesty s Stationery Office pp 6 v OCLC 878147296 Lodge John 1789 Archdall Mervyn ed The Peerage of Ireland or A Genealogical History of the Present Nobility of that Kingdom Vol I Dublin James Moore OCLC 264906028 Blood royal dukes earls for Clanricarde Lyons Mary Ann 2008 Digne de compassion female dependants of Irish Jacobite soldiers in France c 1692 c 1730 Eighteenth Century Ireland 23 55 75 doi 10 3828 eci 2008 6 JSTOR 27806924 Mulcahy John 2003 Honora Burke the Flower of Portumna Irish Arts Review 20 3 118 119 JSTOR 25502985 O Callaghan John Cornelius 1854 History of the Irish Brigades in the Service of France New York P O Shea Publisher OCLC 1046538374 O Hart John 1892 Irish Pedigrees Or the Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation Vol I 5th ed Dublin James Duffy amp Co OCLC 7239210 Irish stem Petrie Charles 1953 The Marshal Duke of Berwick The Picture of an Age London Eyre and Spottiswoode OCLC 1049657563 Ruvigny Melville Henry Marquis de 1904 Jacobite Peerage Baronetage Knightage and Grants of Honour Edinburgh T C amp E C Jack OCLC 655825906 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Saint Simon Louis de Rouvroy duc de 1879 Boislisle Arthur de ed Memoires du duc de Saint Simon in French Vol Tome cinquieme 2nd ed Paris Hachette OCLC 1068033585 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link 1698 Todhunter John 1895 Life of Patrick Sarsfield Earl of Lucan London T Fisher Unwin OCLC 6152671 Trou M l abbe 1841 Recherches historiques archeologiques et biographiques sur la ville de Pontoise in French Pontoise Dufey OCLC 162335368 Wauchope Piers 2004 Sarsfield Patrick Jacobite first earl of Lucan d 1693 In Matthew Colin Harrison Brian eds Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 48 New York Oxford University Press pp 993 996 ISBN 0 19 861398 9 Witherow Thomas 1879 Derry and Enniskillen in the Year 1689 London amp Belfast William Mallan amp Son OCLC 82779901 for timeline External links edit http indigo ie wildgees honora3 htm Wild Geese Heritage Museum and Library Portumna Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Honora Burke amp oldid 1187804988, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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