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Lady Joan Fitzgerald

Joan Fitzgerald, Countess of Ormond, Countess of Desmond (Irish: Siobhán Nic Gearailt) (died 1565), was an Irish noblewoman and heiress, a member of the Old English FitzGerald family, who were also known as the "Geraldines".

Joan Fitzgerald
  • Countess of Ormond
  • Countess of Desmond
Bornc. 1514
Munster, Ireland
Died2 January 1565
Askeaton, County Limerick
Spouse(s)
Issue
Detail
Thomas, John, Edward, Walter, Edmund, James, Piers
FatherJames, 10th Earl of Desmond
MotherAmy O'Brien

She married three times. Her first husband was James Butler, 9th Earl of Ormond, who had been proposed as a bridegroom for Anne Boleyn in 1522 to settle a dispute over the Ormond title and estates. Her second was Francis Bryan, a courtier and lord justice of Ireland. Her third was Gerald FitzGerald, 14th Earl of Desmond. With her last marriage she brought a period of peace between the FitzGeralds of Desmond and the Butlers, who were hereditary enemies. After her death her widower resumed the old feud by attacking her son Thomas Butler, 10th Earl of Ormond.

During her third marriage she carried on an amicable correspondence with Queen Elizabeth I of England, who recognised Lady Desmond's skill in diplomacy, and relied upon her to restore and keep the precarious peace in southern Ireland.

Family tree
Joan FitzGerald with two of her three husbands, her parents, and other selected relatives.[a]
Thomas
7th Earl

d. 1468
of Drogheda
James
8th Earl

1459–1487
Maurice
9th Earl

d. 1520
the Lame
Thomas
11th Earl

1454–1534
the Bald
John
de facto
12th Earl

d. 1536
James
10th Earl

d. 1529
Amy
O'Brien
Maurice
fitz Thomas

d. 1529
d.v.p.*
James
13th Earl

d. 1558
James
Butler
9th Earl

1496–1546
Joan
FitzGerald

d. 1565
James
12th Earl

d. 1540
Court Page
Gerald
14th Earl

c. 1533 – 1583
Rebel Earl
Thomas
10th Earl

c. 1531 – 1614
Black Tom
John of
Kilcash

d. 1570
Walter
11th Earl

1559 – 1633
'Beads'
Legend
XXXSubject of
the article
XXXEarls of
Desmond
XXXEarls of
Ormond
*d.v.p. = predeceased his father (decessit vita patris).

Birth and origins edit

Joan was probably born in 1514 in Munster, Ireland.[b] She was the only daughter and heiress of James fitz Maurice FitzGerald by his wife Amy O'Brien. Her father was Earl of Desmond. He is here numbered the 10th, following the second edition of the Complete Peerage,[8] but he is also numbered the 11th.[9][10][11][12] Her father's family were the FitzGeralds of Desmond, a noble cadet branch of the Old English Geraldines, of which the FitzGeralds of Kildare were the senior branch.

Her mother was a daughter of Turlough O'Brien,[11][13] a pre-reformation bishop of Killaloe (died 1525 or 1526),[14][15] who had not stayed celibate.[16][c] Her mother's family were the O'Briens of Ara (County Tipperary), a cadet branch of the O'Briens, kings of Thomond.[18]

By her father, Joan had two younger illegitimate half-sisters who are listed in her father's article.

Father's feuds with neighbours edit

In the 1520s her father fought his neighbours, the lords of Muskerry in County Cork and the earls of Ormond in eastern Munster. He also quarrelled with his uncle Thomas fitz Thomas FitzGerald, called "the Bald", who sided with his enemies. In September 1520 or 1521 her father was defeated at the Battle of Mourne Abbey, south of Mallow, County Cork, by the allied forces of Cormac Laidir Oge MacCarthy, 10th Lord of Muskerry, and Thomas the Bald.[19][20]

In December, Muskerry, Thomas the Bald, and Piers Butler, 8th Earl of Ormond, besieged her father unsuccessfully in Dungarvan.[21]

Inheritance edit

Joan FitzGerald's father, the 10th Earl, died on 18 June 1529. According to the Dictionary of Irish Biography he died at Rathkeale, County Limerick,[22] most likely in the Castle Matrix. However, according to older sources he died at Dingle and was buried at Tralee.[23][24] As the only legitimate child, Joan FitzGerald was heir general, but her granduncle Thomas the Bald, her father's enemy, was heir male and succeeded as 11th Earl of Desmond at the age of 75.[25]

First marriage and children edit

Joan FitzGerald's first husband was James Butler. He was the eldest son of Piers Butler, who had been in a dispute with Thomas Boleyn, over the estate and title of Ormond after the 7th Earl had died without a son in 1515. Piers Butler had in 1522 proposed his son as bridegroom for Anne Boleyn to settle the dispute.[26] For reasons unknown, the marriage negotiations came to a halt, and Anne later married King Henry VIII of England as his second wife. In 1528 Henry VIII forced Piers Butler to renounce the title of Earl of Ormond and to become Earl of Ossory instead.[27] Joan FitzGerald's new husband was therefore already in the middle of his thirties when he eventually married her in 1530.[28][d] Her dowry consisted of land in County Tipperary along the boundary between the Desmond and the Ormond possessions, including the manors of Clonmel, Kilfeakle, and Kilsheelan.[30]

James and Joan had seven sons:[31]

  1. Thomas (c. 1532 – 1614), Black Tom, succeeded as the 10th Earl of Ormond,[32] married firstly Elizabeth Berkeley; secondly, Elizabeth Sheffield, by whom he had an only daughter Elizabeth Preston, Countess of Desmond; thirdly, Helen Barry
  2. Edmund of Cloughgrenan (1534–1602), married Eleanor Eustace, by whom he had issue[33]
  3. John of Kilcash (died 1570), married Katherine, daughter of Cormac na Haoine MacCarthy Reagh, 10th Prince of Carbery, by whom he had a son, Walter, 11th Earl of Ormond[34]
  4. Walter of Ballynodagh, became the ancestor of the Butlers of Nodstown[35]
  5. James of Duiske[36]
  6. Edward of Cloughinche, married Mary, second daughter of the Richard Burke, 4th Earl of Clanricarde, by whom he had issue[37]
  7. Piers of Grantstown[38]

After the dramatic fall of the Boleyns, the earldom of Ormond reverted to her father-in-law in February 1538. On 26 August 1539 her husband succeeded as 9th Earl of Ormond and 2nd Earl of Ossory making her a double countess.

On 17 October 1546 Ormond went to dine at Ely House in Holborn, London. He fell victim of a mass poisoning along with his steward and 16 of his servants,[39] possibly at the instigation of Anthony St Leger, who was Lord Deputy of Ireland and a political opponent. Ormond died on 28 October, leaving Lady Ormond a young dowager countess in her thirties. Thomas, the heir, was only 15 and therefore became a ward of the king. She travelled to London to make sure the wardship would be handled gently.[40] As a widow, she could legally act independently and she regained control of her dowry. She administrated her dowry and jointure and played a major role in the affairs of house Ormond.[41]

Second marriage edit

In August 1548, she was persuaded to marry the English courtier and diplomat Francis Bryan.[42][43] It is believed the marriage was a political maneuver to prevent Joan marrying her cousin, Gerald FitzGerald, heir to the Earldom of Desmond.[44] Like her, Bryan had already been married once. His first wife had died childless in 1542.[45] The union was not a happy one.[46]

Nonetheless, Lady Ormond claimed the customary right to keep a private army of gallowglasses in Kilkenny, which greatly annoyed Edward Bellingham, who had replaced St Leger as lord deputy of Ireland on 22 April 1548.[47]

The couple returned to Ireland in November 1549 and Bryan was appointed Lord Justice of Ireland on 27 December 1549 replacing Bellingham.[48]

Due to his reputation as a rake and libertine at the English court, Sir Francis Bryan earned the nickname "Vicar of Hell". Joan is quoted as saying,

While I was a widow and not married [to] an Englishman, I defended and kept my own, or at the least, no man went about to defeat me of my right. Well is the woman unmarried; I am bade to hold my peace, and my husband shall have answer made unto him."[49]

Bryan died suddenly on 2 February 1550, at Clonmel while travelling.[50] Apparently he died at table after heavy drinking.[51] Poisoning was suspected by some and a postmortem examination was held. While Bryan lay dying at Clonmel, Joan was allegedly out on a hunting expedition with her second cousin, Gerald FitzGerald.[52] Lady Joan was prevailed upon to wait a year before marrying Gerald.

Third marriage edit

The precise date of her third marriage does not seem to be known. She did not wait long. Her third husband was her second cousin Gerald FitzGerald. The common ancestor was Thomas FitzGerald, 7th Earl of Desmond, great-grandfather to both. Gerald was the heir apparent of James FitzGerald, the reigning Earl of Desmond, numbered the 13th. She was about 41 while he was about 17. In 1551 her son Thomas was given livery of the Ormond estate.[53]

The marriage brought about a temporary peace in Ireland between the rival families of Butler and FitzGerald.[54] On 14 October 1558 Gerald succeeded to the earldom[55] becoming the 14th, 15th, or 16th Earl of Desmond depending on the numbering.[e] This made Joan Countess of Desmond. She used her considerable talent for diplomacy to act as a "peacemaker" between her eldest son and her third husband.

Desmond–Ormond feud edit

Joan maintained a friendly correspondence with Queen Elizabeth,[61][62] who recognised her ability, and relied on her to restore and keep the precarious peace in Munster after her husband, allegedly tired of Joan's domination over him, broke the truce with her eldest son, Thomas, who had succeeded his father as Earl of Ormond. After the two factions began making raids against one another, Joan spent nearly two weeks journeying back and forth on horseback to arbitrate between the two enemy camps, before a tenuous peace was finally re-established in 1560.[63] In 1562, her husband was sent to the Tower of London for his allegedly "insolent" behaviour before the Privy Council. Joan worked hard to persuade the queen to release him. She was eventually successful and her husband returned to Ireland in November 1563.[64]

In 1560 her intervention secured a peaceful outcome to a stand-off near Tipperary, known as "the battle that never was".[65]

Death and timeline edit

Lady Desmond died on 2 January 1565 at Askeaton, County Limerick.[66] She was buried at the Franciscan Friary of Askeaton.[67] After her death the relationship between Dermond and Ormond deteriorated rapidly. On 8 February 1565 they fought the Battle of Affane where her Butler son took her widower captive.[68][69] The ensuing Desmond rebellions earned her widower the sobriquet of "rebel earl" and ended with his forfeiture and killing in 1583.

Timeline
As her birth date is uncertain, so are all her ages.
Age Date Event
0 1514, estimate Born[b]
5–6 1520, Sep Father lost the Battle of Mourne against Cormac Laidir Oge MacCarthy, 10th Lord of Muskerry
14–15 1529, 18 Jun Father died.[22] Her granduncle Thomas FitzGerald succeeded as 11th Earl of Desmond.
15–16 1530 Married James Butler, her 1st husband[28]
21–22 1536, 23 Feb Leonard Grey, 1st Viscount Grane, appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland [70]
24–25 1539, 26 Aug Became countess of Ormond as her husband succeeded as 9th Earl of Ormond
25–26 1540, 7 Jul Anthony St Leger, appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland (1st term)[71]
31–32 1546, 28 Oct 1st husband died at Ely House, London.[39]
32–33 1547, 28 Jan Accession of Edward VI, succeeding Henry VIII of England[72]
33–34 1548 Married Francis Bryan, her 2nd husband[43]
33–34 1548, 22 Apr Edward Bellingham, appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland[73]
34–35 1549, 27 Dec 2nd husband appointed Lord Justice of Ireland.[48]
35–36 1550, 2 Feb 2nd husband died at Clonmel.[50]
35–36 1509, 2 Feb William Brabazon, appointed Lord Justice of Ireland.[74]
35–36 1550, 4 Aug Anthony St Leger, appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland (2nd term)[75]
35–36 1550 Married Gerald FitzGerald, her third husband
36–37 1551, 27 Oct Son given livery of the Ormond estate.[76]
38–39 1553, 6 Jul Accession of Queen Mary I, succeeding Edward VI of England[77]
38–39 1553, 1 Sep Anthony St Leger, appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland (3rd term)[78]
43–44 1558, 14 Oct Became countess of Desmond as her husband succeeded as 14th Earl of Desmond[55]
43–44 1558, 17 Nov Accession of Queen Elizabeth I, succeeding Queen Mary I[79]
45–46 1560 Prevented a battle at the standoff between Desmond and Ormond forces near Tipperary.[65]
50–51 1565, 2 Jan Died[66]

Notes and references edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ This family tree is based on graphic trees of the earls of Desmond[1] and Ormond[2] as well as on written genealogies of these families.[3][4] Also see the lists of children in the text.
  2. ^ a b She might have been born in 1509,[5] or in 1514.[6] The later date is preferred because it agrees better with her father's approximate age, who is known to have been between 30 and 40 years old in 1629,[7] and therefore about 15 in 1509, probably too young.
  3. ^ Joan's maternal grandfather must not be confused with his son, also called Turlough O'Brien, who was bishop of Killaloe 1554–1569, appointed during Queen Mary's reign.[17]
  4. ^ George Edward Cokayne in error gives a marriage date of 1520,[29] which clashes with the date of 1522 given for his proposed marriage to Anne Boleyn.
  5. ^ Cokayne numbers Gerald as the 14th earl of Desmond,[56] whereas Burke just like McCormack (Dictionary of Irish Biography) numbers him as the 15th,[57][58] whereas Bagwell and James Wills call him the 16th.[59][60]

Citations edit

  1. ^ Moody, Martin & Byrne 1984, p. 168. "Fitzgeralds Earls of Desmond ..."
  2. ^ Moody, Martin & Byrne 1984, p. 169. "Butlers Earls of Ormond ..."
  3. ^ Burke 1866, pp. 205–206Genealogy of the earls of Desmond
  4. ^ Burke & Burke 1915, pp. 1548–1552Genealogy of the earls of Ormond
  5. ^ Eckerle & McAreavey 2019, p. 270, above. "Lady Joan Fitzgerald, Countess of Ormonde, Ossory, and Desmond (1509?–65) The daughter of the Eleventh Earl of Desmond and the wife of three powerful men ..."
  6. ^ Holland 1996, abstract, line 4. "... Joan FitzGerald, countess of Desmond and Ormond (c. 1514 – 1565)."
  7. ^ Wilson 1912, p. 57. "The Earl himself is from thirty to forty years old, and is rather above the middle height."
  8. ^ Cokayne 1916, p. 249, line 5. "10. James FitzJames (FitzGerald), Earl of Desmond [I. [Ireland ], only surv. s. [surviving son] and h. [heir]."]
  9. ^ Cokayne 1890, p. 86. "11. James Fitz Maurice (FitzGerald), Earl of Desmond [I. [Ireland] ], only surviv. s. [surviving son] and h. [heir]."
  10. ^ Wills 1840a, p. 452. "James, the 11th Earl of Desmond"
  11. ^ a b Burke 1866, p. 205, left column, line 53. "James FitzMaurice FitzGerald, 11th Earl of Desmond, who m. [married] Amy, dau. [daughter] of Turlogh Mac I.Brien Ara, bishop of Killaloe ..."
  12. ^ Beresford 2009b, only paragraph, 1st sentence. "FitzGerald, James fitz Maurice (a.1500–1529), 11th earl of Desmond ..."
  13. ^ Cokayne 1916, p. 249, line 10. "He [James FitzGerald] m. [married] Amy, da. [daughter] of Turlogh Mac-1-Brien-Ara, Bishop of Killaloe."
  14. ^ Beresford 2009b, only paragraph, last sentence. "... from his marriage to the daughter of Toirdhealbhach Ó Briain (d. 1525), bishop of Killaloe ..."
  15. ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 361, line 30. "Toirdhealbagh mac Mathghamhna Ó Briain (Theodoricus Thaddaeus) / prov. [provided] 19 Sept. 1483 / a. [ante] August 1526"
  16. ^ Ellis 2014, p. 195. "... was the son of bishop Turlough O'Brien of Killaloe (1483–1526) but this prompts two further observations. Clerical celibacy was widely ignored ..."
  17. ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 396. "Turlough (Terence) O'Brien / prov. [provided] June 1554 / 1569"
  18. ^ O'Brien 1949, p. 181. "Brian Ruahd, forty-first king of Thomond was the progenitor of this [Ara] line."
  19. ^ Burke 1866, p. 344, left column. "He [Muskerry] defeated the Earl of Desmond in the battle of Cluhar and Morne Abbey, in 1521."
  20. ^ McCormack 2009c, 1st paragraph. "In September 1520, at the battle of Mourne, co. Cork, Cormac [Muskerry] assisting Thomas fitz Thomas [the Bald] in his bid for the earldom of Desmond, helped to inflict a heavy defeat on James fitz Maurice, now the 11th earl."
  21. ^ McCormack 2009b, 1st paragraph. "... in December Thomas, again with the help of Cormac Óg Láidir, joined with Piers Butler, earl of Ossory, in besieging him in Dungarvan, co. Waterford."
  22. ^ a b Beresford 2009b, only paragraph, penultimate sentence. "Desmond died suddenly on 18 June 1529 at Rathkeale."
  23. ^ Burke 1866, p. 205, left column. "The earl d. [died] at Dingle 18 June, 1529, and was buried at Tralee."
  24. ^ Cokayne 1916, p. 249. "He d. [died] s.p.m. [without male issue], at Dingle (or Rathkeale), 18 June 1529, and was bur. [buried] (with his father) at Tralee.
  25. ^ Wills 1840a, p. 453. "He [James FitzGerald] was succeeded in the earldom by an uncle, who had been his enemy."
  26. ^ Fraser 1994, p. 121. "It was a question of solving a tricky dispute over the Butler-Ormonde inheritance by promoting the marriage of young Montague to young Capulet instead of banning it ..."
  27. ^ Cokayne 1895, p. 146, line 8. "By agreement 17 Feb. 1527/8, above mentioned, he (as heir male) and his cousins, the daughters and co-heirs of the 7th Earl (as heirs general), resigned any rights to the Earldom of Ormond to the King, who accordingly bestowed the same on one of the descendants of the said daughters (as above stated) and who cr. [created] Sir Piers Butler Earl of Ossory ..."
  28. ^ a b Wright 2004, p. 151, right column, line 28. "... in 1530 he married Joan (d. [died] 1565), sole daughter and heir of James Fitzgerald, the late earl of Desmond (d. 1529)."
  29. ^ Cokayne 1895, p. 148, line 5. "He [James Butler] m. [married] about 1520 Joan, da. [daughter] and h. [heir] of James (Fitz Maurice FitzGerald), 11th Earl of Desmond [I. [Ireland] ] by Amy da. of Turlough Mac-I-Brien-Ara."
  30. ^ Duffy 2021, p. 156. "Some of these lands included the manors of Clonmel, Kilfeakle, and Kilsheelan "
  31. ^ Butler 1929, p. 29. "... seven sons were born by his wife, Joan, daughter and heiress of James, eleventh Earl of Desmond."
  32. ^ Burke & Burke 1915, p. 1549, right column, line 41. "1. Thomas, 10th earl."
  33. ^ Burke & Burke 1915, p. 1549, right column, line 42. "2. Edmund (Sir), Knt. of Roscrea and Cloughgrenan ..."
  34. ^ Burke & Burke 1915, p. 1549, right column, line 57. "John, of Kilcash, to whom his father granted lands ..."
  35. ^ Burke & Burke 1915, p. 1549, right column, line 64. "4. Walter, of Ballynodagh, m. [married] Jane, dau. [daughter] of O'Brien Goragh, and was ancestor of Butler of Nodstown."
  36. ^ Burke & Burke 1915, p. 1549, right column, line 66. "5. James, of Duisk, m. [married] Margaret, dau. [daughter] of James Tobin, of Comsinnagh, and had one son, James, who had a grant in fee farm, 10 Aug. 1557, of the Monastery of Duisk, and d.s.p. [died childless]."
  37. ^ Burke & Burke 1915, p. 1549, right column, line 70. "6 Edward, of Cloughinche, m. [married] 1st, Lady Eleanor FitzGerald, dau. [daughter] of James FitzJohn, 14th Earl of Desmond; and 2ndly Lady Margaret Burke, dau. of Richard, 4th Earl of Clanricarde, and had one son."
  38. ^ Burke & Burke 1915, p. 1549, right column, line 75. "7. Piers, of Grantstown, m. [married] Hon. Katherine LePoer, dau. [daughter] of John, 2nd Lord Power of Curraghmore ..."
  39. ^ a b Burke & Burke 1915, p. 1549, right column. "The earl d. [died] 28 Oct. 1546, from the effects of poison, administered at a supper at Ely House, Holborn, on the 17th."
  40. ^ Bagwell 1885, p. 325. "There was such a tendency to depress the Ormonde interest that the widowed countess thought it wise to go to London, where she pleaded her own cause with much success."
  41. ^ Holland 1996, abstract, last two sentences. "Joan, in her roles as landowner, household manager, and parent, wielded a powerful influence upon the lives of her tenants, retainers, and children. As a countess, she participated significantly in the world of Irish politics and the British royal Tudor court."
  42. ^ Holland 1995, p. x. "The countess was remarried at the Crown's insistence, to an Englishman, Sir Francis Bryan who, in 1549, became lord justice of Ireland."
  43. ^ a b Brigden 2004, p. 382. "Accordingly, in 1548, in order to achieve political security, Bryan married the most powerful widow in Ireland ..."
  44. ^ Beresford 2009a, only paragraph, 3rd-last sentence. "The purpose of this political marriage was to prevent the dowager countess marrying Gerald Fitzgerald, heir of the earl of Desmond."
  45. ^ Brigden 2004, p. 380. "By March 1522, Bryan was married to Philippa (d. 1542), daughter and heir to Humphrey Spice ..."
  46. ^ Edwards 1998, p. 85, line 6. "Within a few months the couple were completely estranged."
  47. ^ Bagwell 1885, p. 339. "She claimed the right to keep gallowglasses in Kilkenny, and the Lord Deputy infinitely disliked this practice, which had prevailed for centuries."
  48. ^ a b Fryde et al. 1986, p. 168, line 2. "1549, 27 Dec. / 29 Dec. / Francis Bryan L.J. [Lord Justice] (by council)"
  49. ^ Kirwan 2000, p. 297.
  50. ^ a b Burke 1866, p. 205, left column, line 66. "and 2ndly, Sir Francis Bryan, lord Justice, who d.s.p. [died childless] 2 Feb 1549;"
  51. ^ Duffy 2021, p. 165. "By February 1550 Bryan was dead. His excessive drinking led to his demise and he died 'sitting at table leaning on his elbow'."
  52. ^ Berleth 1994, p. 81. "Now, while Bryan lay on his deathbed, his wife went hunting with Gerald ..."
  53. ^ Edwards 1998, p. 85, line 21. "Thomas was made the recipient of a very unusual crown grant, being given livery of his estates a year early while only twenty years of age."
  54. ^ Bagwell 1885, p. 346. "Her marriage took place in the end with beneficial results: for Lady Ormonde was able to keep some sort of peace between her husband and her son, and thus saved much misery and bloodshed."
  55. ^ a b Cokayne 1916, p. 252. "he d. [died] 14 Oct. and was bur. [buried] 1 Nov. 1558 at the Franciscan friary at Askeaton."
  56. ^ Cokayne 1916, p. 252. "14. Gerald FitzJames (FitzGerald), Earl of Desmond, called the Rebel Earl ..."
  57. ^ Burke 1866, p. 206, left column, line 12. "Gerald Fitz-James, 15th Earl of Desmond, called by English writers, 'the Rebel Earl' ..."
  58. ^ McCormack 2009a, 1st paragraph, 1st sentence. "Fitzgerald, Gerald fitz James (c.1530–1583), 15th earl of Desmond and reluctant rebel leader ..."
  59. ^ Bagwell 1885, p. 377. "Gerald Fitzgerald, sixteen Earl ..."
  60. ^ Wills 1840b, p. 11. "Gerald 16th Earl of Desmond"
  61. ^ Eckerle & McAreavey 2019, p. 270, below. "She maintained a correspondance with Elizabeth I."
  62. ^ Holland 1996, abstract. "Even Queen Elizabeth recognized Joan's skill and called upon her to maintain "the quiet" in Munster while Gerald was sequestered in England."
  63. ^ Kathy Lynn Emerson, A Who's Who of Tudor Women retrieved 13 January 2010
  64. ^ McCormack 2009a, 3rd paragraph, 8th sentence. "Negotiations continued with senior officials, however, and it was not until November 1563 that he was able to return to Ireland."
  65. ^ a b McCormack 2009a, 3rd paragraph. "The following year the conflict seemed set for a dramatic climax when the two earls gathered their forces, each reputed to have been approximately 5,000 men, near Tipperary town. A bloody battle was prevented by the timely intervention of Gerald's wife, who was also Ormond's mother ..."
  66. ^ a b McGurk 2004, p. 809, left column, line 44. "The death of Desmond's wife [Joan FitzGerald] on 2 January 1565 ..."
  67. ^ Cokayne 1895, p. 148, line 12. "... [Joan] d. [died] 1564, being bur. [buried] at Askeaton."
  68. ^ McGurk 2004, p. 809, left column, line 49. "On 8 February 1565 the two rival armies met at the ford of Affane on the Blackwater in co. Waterford. Desmond was wounded in the thigh and taken prisone ..."
  69. ^ Joyce 1903, p. 146. "Desmond, taken unawares, was defeated in a battle fought in 1666 at Affane in the county Waterford, beside the Blackwater, and he himself was wounded and taken prisoner."
  70. ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 167, line 42. "1536, 23 Feb / - / Leonard, Lord Grey, L.D. [Lord Deputy] (left Ireland Apr. 1540, exec. 28 July 1541)"
  71. ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 167, bottom. "1540, 7 July / c. 12 Aug. / Anthony St Leger, L.D. [Lord Deputy]"
  72. ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 43, line 15. "Edward VI ... acc. 28 Jan. 1547;"
  73. ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 168, line 1. "1548, 22 Apr. / 21 May / Edward Bellingham, L.D. [Lord Deputy]"
  74. ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 168, line 3. "1550, 2 Feb. / - / William Brabazon, L.J. [Lord Justice] (by council)"
  75. ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 168, line 4. "1550, 4 Aug. / 10 Sep. / Anthony St Leger, L.D. [Lord Deputy]"
  76. ^ Edwards 1998, p. 85. "Thomas was made the recipient of a very unusual crown grant, being given livery of his estates a year early while only twenty years of age."
  77. ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 43, line 27. "Mary I … acc. 6 Jul. 1553;"
  78. ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 168, line 8. "1553, 1 Sept. / 19 Nov. / Anthony St Leger, L.D. [Lord Deputy]"
  79. ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 43, line 41. "Elizabeth I … acc. 17 Nov. 1558;"

Sources edit

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lady, joan, fitzgerald, other, people, named, joan, fitzgerald, joan, fitzgerald, disambiguation, joan, fitzgerald, countess, ormond, countess, desmond, irish, siobhán, gearailt, died, 1565, irish, noblewoman, heiress, member, english, fitzgerald, family, were. For other people named Joan Fitzgerald see Joan Fitzgerald disambiguation Joan Fitzgerald Countess of Ormond Countess of Desmond Irish Siobhan Nic Gearailt died 1565 was an Irish noblewoman and heiress a member of the Old English FitzGerald family who were also known as the Geraldines Joan FitzgeraldCountess of OrmondCountess of DesmondBornc 1514 Munster IrelandDied2 January 1565Askeaton County LimerickSpouse s 1 James 9th Earl of Ormond2 Francis Bryan3 Gerald 14th Earl of DesmondIssueDetailThomas John Edward Walter Edmund James PiersFatherJames 10th Earl of DesmondMotherAmy O BrienShe married three times Her first husband was James Butler 9th Earl of Ormond who had been proposed as a bridegroom for Anne Boleyn in 1522 to settle a dispute over the Ormond title and estates Her second was Francis Bryan a courtier and lord justice of Ireland Her third was Gerald FitzGerald 14th Earl of Desmond With her last marriage she brought a period of peace between the FitzGeralds of Desmond and the Butlers who were hereditary enemies After her death her widower resumed the old feud by attacking her son Thomas Butler 10th Earl of Ormond During her third marriage she carried on an amicable correspondence with Queen Elizabeth I of England who recognised Lady Desmond s skill in diplomacy and relied upon her to restore and keep the precarious peace in southern Ireland Family treeJoan FitzGerald with two of her three husbands her parents and other selected relatives a Thomas7th Earld 1468of DroghedaJames8th Earl1459 1487Maurice9th Earld 1520the LameThomas11th Earl1454 1534the BaldJohnde facto12th Earld 1536James10th Earld 1529AmyO BrienMauricefitz Thomasd 1529d v p James13th Earld 1558JamesButler9th Earl1496 1546JoanFitzGeraldd 1565James12th Earld 1540Court PageGerald14th Earlc 1533 1583Rebel EarlThomas10th Earlc 1531 1614Black TomJohn ofKilcashd 1570Walter11th Earl1559 1633 Beads LegendXXXSubject ofthe articleXXXEarls ofDesmondXXXEarls ofOrmond d v p predeceased his father decessit vita patris Contents 1 Birth and origins 2 Father s feuds with neighbours 3 Inheritance 4 First marriage and children 5 Second marriage 6 Third marriage 7 Desmond Ormond feud 8 Death and timeline 9 Notes and references 9 1 Notes 9 2 Citations 9 3 SourcesBirth and origins editJoan was probably born in 1514 in Munster Ireland b She was the only daughter and heiress of James fitz Maurice FitzGerald by his wife Amy O Brien Her father was Earl of Desmond He is here numbered the 10th following the second edition of the Complete Peerage 8 but he is also numbered the 11th 9 10 11 12 Her father s family were the FitzGeralds of Desmond a noble cadet branch of the Old English Geraldines of which the FitzGeralds of Kildare were the senior branch Her mother was a daughter of Turlough O Brien 11 13 a pre reformation bishop of Killaloe died 1525 or 1526 14 15 who had not stayed celibate 16 c Her mother s family were the O Briens of Ara County Tipperary a cadet branch of the O Briens kings of Thomond 18 By her father Joan had two younger illegitimate half sisters who are listed in her father s article Father s feuds with neighbours editIn the 1520s her father fought his neighbours the lords of Muskerry in County Cork and the earls of Ormond in eastern Munster He also quarrelled with his uncle Thomas fitz Thomas FitzGerald called the Bald who sided with his enemies In September 1520 or 1521 her father was defeated at the Battle of Mourne Abbey south of Mallow County Cork by the allied forces of Cormac Laidir Oge MacCarthy 10th Lord of Muskerry and Thomas the Bald 19 20 In December Muskerry Thomas the Bald and Piers Butler 8th Earl of Ormond besieged her father unsuccessfully in Dungarvan 21 Inheritance editJoan FitzGerald s father the 10th Earl died on 18 June 1529 According to the Dictionary of Irish Biography he died at Rathkeale County Limerick 22 most likely in the Castle Matrix However according to older sources he died at Dingle and was buried at Tralee 23 24 As the only legitimate child Joan FitzGerald was heir general but her granduncle Thomas the Bald her father s enemy was heir male and succeeded as 11th Earl of Desmond at the age of 75 25 First marriage and children editJoan FitzGerald s first husband was James Butler He was the eldest son of Piers Butler who had been in a dispute with Thomas Boleyn over the estate and title of Ormond after the 7th Earl had died without a son in 1515 Piers Butler had in 1522 proposed his son as bridegroom for Anne Boleyn to settle the dispute 26 For reasons unknown the marriage negotiations came to a halt and Anne later married King Henry VIII of England as his second wife In 1528 Henry VIII forced Piers Butler to renounce the title of Earl of Ormond and to become Earl of Ossory instead 27 Joan FitzGerald s new husband was therefore already in the middle of his thirties when he eventually married her in 1530 28 d Her dowry consisted of land in County Tipperary along the boundary between the Desmond and the Ormond possessions including the manors of Clonmel Kilfeakle and Kilsheelan 30 James and Joan had seven sons 31 Thomas c 1532 1614 Black Tom succeeded as the 10th Earl of Ormond 32 married firstly Elizabeth Berkeley secondly Elizabeth Sheffield by whom he had an only daughter Elizabeth Preston Countess of Desmond thirdly Helen Barry Edmund of Cloughgrenan 1534 1602 married Eleanor Eustace by whom he had issue 33 John of Kilcash died 1570 married Katherine daughter of Cormac na Haoine MacCarthy Reagh 10th Prince of Carbery by whom he had a son Walter 11th Earl of Ormond 34 Walter of Ballynodagh became the ancestor of the Butlers of Nodstown 35 James of Duiske 36 Edward of Cloughinche married Mary second daughter of the Richard Burke 4th Earl of Clanricarde by whom he had issue 37 Piers of Grantstown 38 After the dramatic fall of the Boleyns the earldom of Ormond reverted to her father in law in February 1538 On 26 August 1539 her husband succeeded as 9th Earl of Ormond and 2nd Earl of Ossory making her a double countess On 17 October 1546 Ormond went to dine at Ely House in Holborn London He fell victim of a mass poisoning along with his steward and 16 of his servants 39 possibly at the instigation of Anthony St Leger who was Lord Deputy of Ireland and a political opponent Ormond died on 28 October leaving Lady Ormond a young dowager countess in her thirties Thomas the heir was only 15 and therefore became a ward of the king She travelled to London to make sure the wardship would be handled gently 40 As a widow she could legally act independently and she regained control of her dowry She administrated her dowry and jointure and played a major role in the affairs of house Ormond 41 Second marriage editIn August 1548 she was persuaded to marry the English courtier and diplomat Francis Bryan 42 43 It is believed the marriage was a political maneuver to prevent Joan marrying her cousin Gerald FitzGerald heir to the Earldom of Desmond 44 Like her Bryan had already been married once His first wife had died childless in 1542 45 The union was not a happy one 46 Nonetheless Lady Ormond claimed the customary right to keep a private army of gallowglasses in Kilkenny which greatly annoyed Edward Bellingham who had replaced St Leger as lord deputy of Ireland on 22 April 1548 47 The couple returned to Ireland in November 1549 and Bryan was appointed Lord Justice of Ireland on 27 December 1549 replacing Bellingham 48 Due to his reputation as a rake and libertine at the English court Sir Francis Bryan earned the nickname Vicar of Hell Joan is quoted as saying While I was a widow and not married to an Englishman I defended and kept my own or at the least no man went about to defeat me of my right Well is the woman unmarried I am bade to hold my peace and my husband shall have answer made unto him 49 Bryan died suddenly on 2 February 1550 at Clonmel while travelling 50 Apparently he died at table after heavy drinking 51 Poisoning was suspected by some and a postmortem examination was held While Bryan lay dying at Clonmel Joan was allegedly out on a hunting expedition with her second cousin Gerald FitzGerald 52 Lady Joan was prevailed upon to wait a year before marrying Gerald Third marriage editThe precise date of her third marriage does not seem to be known She did not wait long Her third husband was her second cousin Gerald FitzGerald The common ancestor was Thomas FitzGerald 7th Earl of Desmond great grandfather to both Gerald was the heir apparent of James FitzGerald the reigning Earl of Desmond numbered the 13th She was about 41 while he was about 17 In 1551 her son Thomas was given livery of the Ormond estate 53 The marriage brought about a temporary peace in Ireland between the rival families of Butler and FitzGerald 54 On 14 October 1558 Gerald succeeded to the earldom 55 becoming the 14th 15th or 16th Earl of Desmond depending on the numbering e This made Joan Countess of Desmond She used her considerable talent for diplomacy to act as a peacemaker between her eldest son and her third husband Desmond Ormond feud editJoan maintained a friendly correspondence with Queen Elizabeth 61 62 who recognised her ability and relied on her to restore and keep the precarious peace in Munster after her husband allegedly tired of Joan s domination over him broke the truce with her eldest son Thomas who had succeeded his father as Earl of Ormond After the two factions began making raids against one another Joan spent nearly two weeks journeying back and forth on horseback to arbitrate between the two enemy camps before a tenuous peace was finally re established in 1560 63 In 1562 her husband was sent to the Tower of London for his allegedly insolent behaviour before the Privy Council Joan worked hard to persuade the queen to release him She was eventually successful and her husband returned to Ireland in November 1563 64 In 1560 her intervention secured a peaceful outcome to a stand off near Tipperary known as the battle that never was 65 Death and timeline editLady Desmond died on 2 January 1565 at Askeaton County Limerick 66 She was buried at the Franciscan Friary of Askeaton 67 After her death the relationship between Dermond and Ormond deteriorated rapidly On 8 February 1565 they fought the Battle of Affane where her Butler son took her widower captive 68 69 The ensuing Desmond rebellions earned her widower the sobriquet of rebel earl and ended with his forfeiture and killing in 1583 TimelineAs her birth date is uncertain so are all her ages Age Date Event0 1514 estimate Born b 5 6 1520 Sep Father lost the Battle of Mourne against Cormac Laidir Oge MacCarthy 10th Lord of Muskerry14 15 1529 18 Jun Father died 22 Her granduncle Thomas FitzGerald succeeded as 11th Earl of Desmond 15 16 1530 Married James Butler her 1st husband 28 21 22 1536 23 Feb Leonard Grey 1st Viscount Grane appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland 70 24 25 1539 26 Aug Became countess of Ormond as her husband succeeded as 9th Earl of Ormond25 26 1540 7 Jul Anthony St Leger appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland 1st term 71 31 32 1546 28 Oct 1st husband died at Ely House London 39 32 33 1547 28 Jan Accession of Edward VI succeeding Henry VIII of England 72 33 34 1548 Married Francis Bryan her 2nd husband 43 33 34 1548 22 Apr Edward Bellingham appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland 73 34 35 1549 27 Dec 2nd husband appointed Lord Justice of Ireland 48 35 36 1550 2 Feb 2nd husband died at Clonmel 50 35 36 1509 2 Feb William Brabazon appointed Lord Justice of Ireland 74 35 36 1550 4 Aug Anthony St Leger appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland 2nd term 75 35 36 1550 Married Gerald FitzGerald her third husband36 37 1551 27 Oct Son given livery of the Ormond estate 76 38 39 1553 6 Jul Accession of Queen Mary I succeeding Edward VI of England 77 38 39 1553 1 Sep Anthony St Leger appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland 3rd term 78 43 44 1558 14 Oct Became countess of Desmond as her husband succeeded as 14th Earl of Desmond 55 43 44 1558 17 Nov Accession of Queen Elizabeth I succeeding Queen Mary I 79 45 46 1560 Prevented a battle at the standoff between Desmond and Ormond forces near Tipperary 65 50 51 1565 2 Jan Died 66 Notes and references editNotes edit This family tree is based on graphic trees of the earls of Desmond 1 and Ormond 2 as well as on written genealogies of these families 3 4 Also see the lists of children in the text a b She might have been born in 1509 5 or in 1514 6 The later date is preferred because it agrees better with her father s approximate age who is known to have been between 30 and 40 years old in 1629 7 and therefore about 15 in 1509 probably too young Joan s maternal grandfather must not be confused with his son also called Turlough O Brien who was bishop of Killaloe 1554 1569 appointed during Queen Mary s reign 17 George Edward Cokayne in error gives a marriage date of 1520 29 which clashes with the date of 1522 given for his proposed marriage to Anne Boleyn Cokayne numbers Gerald as the 14th earl of Desmond 56 whereas Burke just like McCormack Dictionary of Irish Biography numbers him as the 15th 57 58 whereas Bagwell and James Wills call him the 16th 59 60 Citations edit Moody Martin amp Byrne 1984 p 168 Fitzgeralds Earls of Desmond Moody Martin amp Byrne 1984 p 169 Butlers Earls of Ormond Burke 1866 pp 205 206Genealogy of the earls of Desmond Burke amp Burke 1915 pp 1548 1552Genealogy of the earls of Ormond Eckerle amp McAreavey 2019 p 270 above Lady Joan Fitzgerald Countess of Ormonde Ossory and Desmond 1509 65 The daughter of the Eleventh Earl of Desmond and the wife of three powerful men Holland 1996 abstract line 4 Joan FitzGerald countess of Desmond and Ormond c 1514 1565 Wilson 1912 p 57 The Earl himself is from thirty to forty years old and is rather above the middle height Cokayne 1916 p 249 line 5 10 James FitzJames FitzGerald Earl of Desmond I Ireland only surv s surviving son and h heir Cokayne 1890 p 86 11 James Fitz Maurice FitzGerald Earl of Desmond I Ireland only surviv s surviving son and h heir Wills 1840a p 452 James the 11th Earl of Desmond a b Burke 1866 p 205 left column line 53 James FitzMaurice FitzGerald 11th Earl of Desmond who m married Amy dau daughter of Turlogh Mac I Brien Ara bishop of Killaloe Beresford 2009b only paragraph 1st sentence FitzGerald James fitz Maurice a 1500 1529 11th earl of Desmond Cokayne 1916 p 249 line 10 He James FitzGerald m married Amy da daughter of Turlogh Mac 1 Brien Ara Bishop of Killaloe Beresford 2009b only paragraph last sentence from his marriage to the daughter of Toirdhealbhach o Briain d 1525 bishop of Killaloe Fryde et al 1986 p 361 line 30 Toirdhealbagh mac Mathghamhna o Briain Theodoricus Thaddaeus prov provided 19 Sept 1483 a ante August 1526 Ellis 2014 p 195 was the son of bishop Turlough O Brien of Killaloe 1483 1526 but this prompts two further observations Clerical celibacy was widely ignored Fryde et al 1986 p 396 Turlough Terence O Brien prov provided June 1554 1569 O Brien 1949 p 181 Brian Ruahd forty first king of Thomond was the progenitor of this Ara line Burke 1866 p 344 left column He Muskerry defeated the Earl of Desmond in the battle of Cluhar and Morne Abbey in 1521 McCormack 2009c 1st paragraph In September 1520 at the battle of Mourne co Cork Cormac Muskerry assisting Thomas fitz Thomas the Bald in his bid for the earldom of Desmond helped to inflict a heavy defeat on James fitz Maurice now the 11th earl McCormack 2009b 1st paragraph in December Thomas again with the help of Cormac og Laidir joined with Piers Butler earl of Ossory in besieging him in Dungarvan co Waterford a b Beresford 2009b only paragraph penultimate sentence Desmond died suddenly on 18 June 1529 at Rathkeale Burke 1866 p 205 left column The earl d died at Dingle 18 June 1529 and was buried at Tralee Cokayne 1916 p 249 He d died s p m without male issue at Dingle or Rathkeale 18 June 1529 and was bur buried with his father at Tralee Wills 1840a p 453 He James FitzGerald was succeeded in the earldom by an uncle who had been his enemy Fraser 1994 p 121 It was a question of solving a tricky dispute over the Butler Ormonde inheritance by promoting the marriage of young Montague to young Capulet instead of banning it Cokayne 1895 p 146 line 8 By agreement 17 Feb 1527 8 above mentioned he as heir male and his cousins the daughters and co heirs of the 7th Earl as heirs general resigned any rights to the Earldom of Ormond to the King who accordingly bestowed the same on one of the descendants of the said daughters as above stated and who cr created Sir Piers Butler Earl of Ossory a b Wright 2004 p 151 right column line 28 in 1530 he married Joan d died 1565 sole daughter and heir of James Fitzgerald the late earl of Desmond d 1529 Cokayne 1895 p 148 line 5 He James Butler m married about 1520 Joan da daughter and h heir of James Fitz Maurice FitzGerald 11th Earl of Desmond I Ireland by Amy da of Turlough Mac I Brien Ara Duffy 2021 p 156 Some of these lands included the manors of Clonmel Kilfeakle and Kilsheelan Butler 1929 p 29 seven sons were born by his wife Joan daughter and heiress of James eleventh Earl of Desmond Burke amp Burke 1915 p 1549 right column line 41 1 Thomas 10th earl Burke amp Burke 1915 p 1549 right column line 42 2 Edmund Sir Knt of Roscrea and Cloughgrenan Burke amp Burke 1915 p 1549 right column line 57 John of Kilcash to whom his father granted lands Burke amp Burke 1915 p 1549 right column line 64 4 Walter of Ballynodagh m married Jane dau daughter of O Brien Goragh and was ancestor of Butler of Nodstown Burke amp Burke 1915 p 1549 right column line 66 5 James of Duisk m married Margaret dau daughter of James Tobin of Comsinnagh and had one son James who had a grant in fee farm 10 Aug 1557 of the Monastery of Duisk and d s p died childless Burke amp Burke 1915 p 1549 right column line 70 6 Edward of Cloughinche m married 1st Lady Eleanor FitzGerald dau daughter of James FitzJohn 14th Earl of Desmond and 2ndly Lady Margaret Burke dau of Richard 4th Earl of Clanricarde and had one son Burke amp Burke 1915 p 1549 right column line 75 7 Piers of Grantstown m married Hon Katherine LePoer dau daughter of John 2nd Lord Power of Curraghmore a b Burke amp Burke 1915 p 1549 right column The earl d died 28 Oct 1546 from the effects of poison administered at a supper at Ely House Holborn on the 17th Bagwell 1885 p 325 There was such a tendency to depress the Ormonde interest that the widowed countess thought it wise to go to London where she pleaded her own cause with much success Holland 1996 abstract last two sentences Joan in her roles as landowner household manager and parent wielded a powerful influence upon the lives of her tenants retainers and children As a countess she participated significantly in the world of Irish politics and the British royal Tudor court Holland 1995 p x The countess was remarried at the Crown s insistence to an Englishman Sir Francis Bryan who in 1549 became lord justice of Ireland a b Brigden 2004 p 382 Accordingly in 1548 in order to achieve political security Bryan married the most powerful widow in Ireland Beresford 2009a only paragraph 3rd last sentence The purpose of this political marriage was to prevent the dowager countess marrying Gerald Fitzgerald heir of the earl of Desmond Brigden 2004 p 380 By March 1522 Bryan was married to Philippa d 1542 daughter and heir to Humphrey Spice Edwards 1998 p 85 line 6 Within a few months the couple were completely estranged Bagwell 1885 p 339 She claimed the right to keep gallowglasses in Kilkenny and the Lord Deputy infinitely disliked this practice which had prevailed for centuries a b Fryde et al 1986 p 168 line 2 1549 27 Dec 29 Dec Francis Bryan L J Lord Justice by council Kirwan 2000 p 297 a b Burke 1866 p 205 left column line 66 and 2ndly Sir Francis Bryan lord Justice who d s p died childless 2 Feb 1549 Duffy 2021 p 165 By February 1550 Bryan was dead His excessive drinking led to his demise and he died sitting at table leaning on his elbow Berleth 1994 p 81 Now while Bryan lay on his deathbed his wife went hunting with Gerald Edwards 1998 p 85 line 21 Thomas was made the recipient of a very unusual crown grant being given livery of his estates a year early while only twenty years of age Bagwell 1885 p 346 Her marriage took place in the end with beneficial results for Lady Ormonde was able to keep some sort of peace between her husband and her son and thus saved much misery and bloodshed a b Cokayne 1916 p 252 he d died 14 Oct and was bur buried 1 Nov 1558 at the Franciscan friary at Askeaton Cokayne 1916 p 252 14 Gerald FitzJames FitzGerald Earl of Desmond called the Rebel Earl Burke 1866 p 206 left column line 12 Gerald Fitz James 15th Earl of Desmond called by English writers the Rebel Earl McCormack 2009a 1st paragraph 1st sentence Fitzgerald Gerald fitz James c 1530 1583 15th earl of Desmond and reluctant rebel leader Bagwell 1885 p 377 Gerald Fitzgerald sixteen Earl Wills 1840b p 11 Gerald 16th Earl of Desmond Eckerle amp McAreavey 2019 p 270 below She maintained a correspondance with Elizabeth I Holland 1996 abstract Even Queen Elizabeth recognized Joan s skill and called upon her to maintain the quiet in Munster while Gerald was sequestered in England Kathy Lynn Emerson A Who s Who of Tudor Women retrieved 13 January 2010 McCormack 2009a 3rd paragraph 8th sentence Negotiations continued with senior officials however and it was not until November 1563 that he was able to return to Ireland a b McCormack 2009a 3rd paragraph The following year the conflict seemed set for a dramatic climax when the two earls gathered their forces each reputed to have been approximately 5 000 men near Tipperary town A bloody battle was prevented by the timely intervention of Gerald s wife who was also Ormond s mother a b McGurk 2004 p 809 left column line 44 The death of Desmond s wife Joan FitzGerald on 2 January 1565 Cokayne 1895 p 148 line 12 Joan d died 1564 being bur buried at Askeaton McGurk 2004 p 809 left column line 49 On 8 February 1565 the two rival armies met at the ford of Affane on the Blackwater in co Waterford Desmond was wounded in the thigh and taken prisone Joyce 1903 p 146 Desmond taken unawares was defeated in a battle fought in 1666 at Affane in the county Waterford beside the Blackwater and he himself was wounded and taken prisoner Fryde et al 1986 p 167 line 42 1536 23 Feb Leonard Lord Grey L D Lord Deputy left Ireland Apr 1540 exec 28 July 1541 Fryde et al 1986 p 167 bottom 1540 7 July c 12 Aug Anthony St Leger L D Lord Deputy Fryde et al 1986 p 43 line 15 Edward VI acc 28 Jan 1547 Fryde et al 1986 p 168 line 1 1548 22 Apr 21 May Edward Bellingham L D Lord Deputy Fryde et al 1986 p 168 line 3 1550 2 Feb William Brabazon L J Lord Justice by council Fryde et al 1986 p 168 line 4 1550 4 Aug 10 Sep Anthony St Leger L D Lord Deputy Edwards 1998 p 85 Thomas was made the recipient of a very unusual crown grant being given livery of his estates a year early while only twenty years of age Fryde et al 1986 p 43 line 27 Mary I acc 6 Jul 1553 Fryde et al 1986 p 168 line 8 1553 1 Sept 19 Nov Anthony St Leger L D Lord Deputy Fryde et al 1986 p 43 line 41 Elizabeth I acc 17 Nov 1558 Sources edit Bagwell Richard 1885 Ireland under the Tudors Vol I London Longmans Green and Co OCLC 761857292 1534 to 1558 Beresford David October 2009a McGuire James Quinn James eds Bryan Francis Dictionary of Irish Biography Retrieved 9 May 2022 Beresford David October 2009b McGuire James Quinn James eds FitzGerald James fitz Maurice Dictionary of Irish Biography Retrieved 5 May 2022 Berleth Richard 1994 The Twilight Lords London Allen Lane ISBN 978 0 7139 1186 2 Brigden Susan 2004 Bryan Sir Francis called the Vicar of Hell d 1550 In Matthew Henry Colin Gray Harrison Brian eds Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 8 New York Oxford University Press pp 379 380 ISBN 0 19 861411 X 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 Burke Ashworth Peter 1915 A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Peerage and Baronetage the Privy Council Knightage and Companionage 77th ed London Harrison OCLC 1155471554 Butler William F T 1929 The Descendants of James Ninth Earl of Ormond The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland 6th 19 1 29 44 JSTOR 25513504 Cokayne George Edward 1890 Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom Extant Extinct or Dormant Vol III 1st ed London George Bell and Sons OCLC 1180838776 D to F Cokayne George Edward 1895 Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom Extant Extinct or Dormant Vol VI 1st ed London George Bell and Sons OCLC 1180818801 N to R Cokayne George Edward 1916 Gibbs Vicary ed The complete peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom extant extinct or dormant Vol IV 2nd ed London St Catherine Press OCLC 228661424 Dacre to Dysart for Desmond Duffy Damien 2021 Aristocratic Women in Ireland 1450 1660 The Ormond Family Power and Politics Woodbridge Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 978 1 78327 593 9 Eckerle Julie A McAreavey Naomi eds 2019 Women s Life Writing and Early Modern Ireland Lincoln University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 9997 9 Preview Edwards David 1998 The Ormond Lordship in County Kilkenny 1515 1642 Ph D Dublin Trinity College hdl 2262 77139 PDF downloadable from given URL Ellis Steven G 2014 Ireland in the Age of the Tudors 1447 1603 2nd ed Abingdon Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 90143 3 Preview Fraser Antonia 1994 1st pub 1992 The Wives of Henry VIII New York Vintage Books ISBN 978 0 679 73001 9 Fryde Edmund Boleslaw 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 Holland Karen Ann July 1995 Joan Desmond Ormond and Ossory The world of a countess in sixteenth century Ireland Ph D Providence RI Providence College OCLC 37313336 ProQuest 304325204 Document Preview Holland Karen Ann 1996 Joan Desmond Ormond and Ossory The world of a countess in sixteenth century Ireland Ph D Providence RI Providence College OCLC 37313336 Online abstract Joyce Patrick Weston 1903 A Concise History of Ireland from the Earliest Times to 1837 12th ed Dublin M H Gill amp Son OCLC 815623752 Kirwan John 2000 Lady Joan FitzGerald countess of Ormond Ossory and Desmond Journal of the Butler Society 4 292 302 McCormack Anthony M October 2009a McGuire James Quinn James eds FitzGerald Gerald fitz James Dictionary of Irish Biography Retrieved 4 August 2021 McCormack Anthony M October 2009b McGuire James Quinn James eds FitzGerald Thomas Dictionary of Irish Biography Retrieved 5 December 2021 The bald earl of Desmond McCormack Anthony M October 2009c MacCarthy Mac Carthaigh Cormac og Laidir Dictionary of Irish Biography Retrieved 14 November 2021 McGurk J J N 2004 FitzGerald Gerald fitz James fourteenth earl of Desmond c 1533 1583 In Matthew Colin Harrison Brian eds Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 19 New York Oxford University Press pp 809 811 ISBN 0 19 861369 5 Moody Theodore William Martin F X Byrne Francis John eds 1984 A New History of Ireland Vol IX Maps Genealogies Lists Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 821745 5 O Brien Donough 1949 History of the O Briens from Boroimhe Batsford self published OCLC 1157152182 Wills Rev James 1840a James 11th Earl of Desmond Lives of illustrious and distinguished Irishmen from the earliest times to the present period Vol I Dublin MacGregor Polson amp Co pp 452 453 Wills Rev James 1840b Gerald Sixteenth Earl of Desmond Lives of illustrious and distinguished Irishmen from the earliest times to the present period Vol II Dublin MacGregor Polson amp Co pp 11 40 Wilson Philip 1912 The Beginnings of Modern Ireland Dublin Maunsel and Company Ltd OCLC 1041051033 Wright Stephen 2004 Butler James ninth earl of Ormond and second earl of Ossory b in or after 1496 d 1546 In Matthew Henry Colin Gray Harrison Brian eds Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 9 New York Oxford University Press pp 151 153 ISBN 0 19 861359 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lady Joan Fitzgerald amp oldid 1168740116, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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