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Thomas Dillon, 4th Viscount Dillon

Thomas Dillon, 4th Viscount Dillon PC (Ire) (1615–1673) held his title for 42 years that saw Strafford's administration, the Irish Rebellion of 1641, the Irish Confederate Wars and the Cromwellian Conquest of Ireland. He was a royalist and supported Strafford and Ormond. He sided with the Confederates for a while but was a moderate who opposed Rinuccini, the papal nuncio. Lord Dillon fled the field of the Battle of Dungan's Hill (1647) and did not rescue Ormond at the Battle of Rathmines (1649). However, he defended Athlone successfully against Ireton in 1650.

Thomas Dillon
Viscount Dillon
Tenure1630–1673
PredecessorTheobald, 3rd Viscount Dillon
SuccessorThomas, 5th Viscount Dillon
BornMarch 1615
Died1673
Spouse(s)Frances White
Issue
Detail
Thomas & others
FatherChristopher Dillon
MotherJane Dillon

Birth and origins

Thomas was born in March 1615[a] in Ireland. He was the second son of Christopher Dillon and his wife Jane Dillon. His father was the eldest son and heir apparent of Theobald Dillon, 1st Viscount Dillon. Christopher predeceased his father and therefore never succeeded as viscount. He was a member of the landed gentry and known as Christopher Dillon of Ballylaghan in County Mayo. Thomas's mother was the eldest daughter of James Dillon, 1st Earl of Roscommon. His father's and his mother's family were branches of the same widespread Old English family, established in Ireland in 1185 when Sir Henry Dillon accompanied Prince John to Ireland.[4] His parents married in 1604 and had seven sons and five daughters.[5]

Family tree
Thomas Dillon with wife, parents, and other selected relatives.[b]
Theobald
1st
Viscount

d. 1624
Eleanor
Tuite

d. 1638
Christopher
Dillon

of Ballylaghan
d. 1624
d.v.p.*
Janet
Dillon

m. 1604
Lucas
Dillon

1579–1656
of Loughglynn
James
Dillon

c. 1600 –
aft. 1669
Lucas
2nd
Viscount

1610–1629
Thomas
4th
Viscount

1615–1673
Frances
White

d. 1664
Theobald
Dillon
Robert
Dillon of
Loughglynn
Theobald
3rd
Viscount

1629–1630
Thomas
5th
Viscount

d. 1674
Lucas
6th
Viscount

d. 1682
Theobald
7th
Viscount

d. 1691
Jacobite
Henry
8th
Viscount

d. 1714
Frances
Hamilton

d. 1751
Arthur
1670–1733
French
General
Christina
Sheldon

1684–1757
Richard
9th
Viscount

1688–1737
Charles
10th
Viscount

1701–1741
Henry
11th
Viscount

1705–1787
Charlotte
Lee

d. 1794
Legend
XXXThomas
Dillon
XXXViscounts
Dillon
*d.v.p. = predeceased his father (decessit vita patris)
Thomas listed among his brothers
He appears below among his brothers as the second son:
  1. Lucas (1610–1629), who was the 2nd Viscount Dillon[7]
  2. Thomas (1615–1673)
  3. Theobald, the father of the 6th Viscount[8]
  4. James, never married[9]
  5. John, married Bingham's widow[10]
  6. Christopher, died young[11]
  7. Francis, who died young[11]
Thomas's sisters
  1. Joan, married John O'Madden, chief of his sept in the barony of Longford, Count Galway[12]
  2. Elizabeth, became a nun in the Order of St. Clare[13]
  3. Mary, became a nun in the Order of St. Clare[13]
  4. Eleanora, died young[14]
  5. Mary, died young[14]

Viscount

His father died on 28 February 1624 when Thomas was eight years old.[15] His grandfather, the 1st Viscount, followed him into the grave two weeks later on 15 March 1624.[16] His elder brother Lucas succeeded his grandfather as the 2nd Viscount Dillon. This Lucas stayed viscount for about five years and died in 1629,[17] leaving a three months old child, Theobald,[18] who became the 3rd Viscount and a ward of the King but lasted only about a year dying on 13 May 1630 in his infancy.[19] Thomas, being his uncle, succeeded as the 4th Viscount Dillon of Costello-Gallen. As he was 15 at the time, he became a ward and the estate was seized by the King, who sold the wardship to Thomas's uncle Lucas Dillon of Loughglynn.[20] (see Family tree). Lord Dillon, as he was now, in that same year converted to Protestantism and was received into the Church of Ireland.[21]

Marriage and children

In 1635 Lord Dillon, aged about 20, married Frances White, daughter of Nicholas White, esquire, of Leixlip, a Protestant,[22][23] and granddaughter of Garret Moore, 1st Viscount Moore by her mother Ursula Moore.[24] She brought him a dowry of £3000 (about £500,000 in 2021[25]). Her sister Mary married Theobald Taaffe, the 2nd Viscount Taaffe (later 1st Earl of Carlingford), who thus became his brother-in-law.[26]

Lucas and Frances had six sons and several daughters, who seem not to be known by name. The sons were:

  1. Charles (born 1636), became a general in French and Spanish service;[27]
  2. Christopher (died 1663), never married;[28]
  3. Rupert, died while being a page to Charles II, during his exile;[29]
  4. Thomas (died 1674), became the 5th Viscount;[30][31]
  5. Ormond, died young;[32]
  6. Nicholas, died young.[32]

Strafford's administration

Thomas Wentworth, Viscount Wentworth, later the 1st Earl of Strafford, was appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland by Charles I on 12 April 1632.[33] About 1636 Wentworth's sister Elizabeth married James Dillon, 3rd Earl of Roscommon, a first cousin on his mother's side.[34] In January 1640 Wentworth was raised to Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.[35] On 12 January 1640 Wentworth was created 1st Earl of Strafford.[36]

Lord Strafford, as he now was, summoned an Irish Parliament in 1640. This was the second Irish parliament of King Charles I. On 16 March of that year, Lord Dillon took his seat in the House of Lords,[37] which comprised all Irish peers and had a Catholic majority. The purpose of the parliament was to raise subsidies for an Irish army of 9000[38] for Charles I to fight the Scots in the Bishops' Wars. The Parliament unanimously voted four subsidies of £45,000.[39] On 31 March 1640 parliament was prorogued until the first week of June.[40][41]

On 3 April 1640 Strafford left Ireland,[42] called elsewhere by the King, having appointed Christopher Wandesford as Lord Deputy.[c] Wandesford opened the second parliamentary session on 1 June 1640.[44][45] News from England was that the Short Parliament had refused subsidies to the King.[46] The Irish MPs regretted having voted for subsidies and wanted to change how they would be evaluated and collected.[47] After two weeks of inconclusive discussions, Wandesford prorogued parliament on 17 June.[48]

When Parliament met again on 1 October, its mood had turned entirely against Strafford. The Commons sent a committee to England with a remonstrance that listed Strafford's excesses. Dillon together with Gormanston, Kilmallock and Muskerry were sent to London by the House of Lords to report grievances.[49] Sometime in 1640 before the 23 October Lord Dillon was appointed a member of the Irish Privy council.[50] Wandesford died on 3 December 1640 and was succeeded by Lord Leicester with the title of Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. Lord Leicester, however, never set foot on Irish soil.[51]

Irish wars

In October 1641 the Irish Rebellion broke out. In February 1642, the Irish Parliament sent Lord Dillon and his brother-in-law Lord Taaffe to England to submit grievances to Charles I. However, they were intercepted at Ware by order of the English House of Commons.[52] They escaped a few months later and met the King at York.[53] Upon Lord Dillon's return to Ireland, he was promoted Lieutenant-General.[54]

On 15 September 1643 the Cessation, a ceasefire for one year was signed between the royalists and the Confederation.[55] This cessation was renewed in September 1644.

In 1644 Lord Dillon was appointed joint President of Connaught together with Henry Wilmot, 2nd Viscount Wilmot,[56] who had inherited his half of the presidency from his father, Charles Wilmot, 1st Viscount Wilmot in April 1644.[57] Dillon replaced Roger Jones, 1st Viscount Ranelagh, who had died in 1643.[58]

With the arrival of the papal nuncio, Giovanni Battista Rinuccini, in Ireland on 21 October 1645[59] Lord Dillon's Protestant religion caused him problems. He decided to convert back to Catholicism and on 6 December 1646 Lord Dillon was received back into the Roman Catholic Church by the Nuncio at St Mary's Church,[d] Kilkenny.[60] He had left Athlone under the command of Captain MacGawly, who betrayed him and handed the town over to Owen Roe O'Neill. After his conversion, the Confederate Council ordered O'Neill to give the town back to Lord Dillon, but O'Neill refused.[61]

In August 1647, the Confederate Leinster army under Thomas Preston was severely beaten in the Battle of Dungan's Hill by Parliamentarian troops under Michael Jones. On this occasion Lord Dillon commanded the Confederate cavalry, which fled in the early stages of the battle.[62][63]

Lord Dillon is mentioned several times in the Peace Treaty of 17 January 1649 between the Irish Confederates and Ormond, acting for Charles I, as "Thomas lord viscount Dillon of Costologh" (i.e. Costello-Gallen)". John Milton called him an "archrebel".[64] He was one of the 12 commissioners of trust.[65][66]

In 1649 Lord Dillon took part in Ormond's unsuccessful Siege of Dublin. He blockaded the Northside of the town with 2500 men[67] and did not intervene, when General Michael Jones sallied in the south-east side of the town and defeated Ormond in the Battle of Rathmines on 2 August 1649.[68] After the battle Ormond and Dillon retreated northwards to Trim.[69] Some of his troops went to reinforce the garrison of Drogheda and were caught in the ensuing Siege of Drogheda by Cromwell, 3–11 September 1649.[70]

In 1650 Lord Dillon successfully defended Athlone against a Parliamentarian army under Henry Ireton, skilfully holding him off by protracted parleys until Ireton decided to leave and rather reinforce Hardress Waller at the siege of Limerick. However, too much time had been lost and the parliamentarians took neither of these towns in the campaign of 1650.[71] On 18 June 1651 Lord Dillon surrendered Athlone to Coote.[72]

Lord Dillon's estates were confiscated by the Cromwellian Settlement of 1652, and he and his family lived in exile on the continent until the Restoration.[73]

Restoration, later life, death, and timeline

In 1662 he resigned the presidency of Connaught to Charles II for a payment of money.[74] In 1663 most of his extensive lands were restored by the Act of Settlement 1662, and several high offices in the state were conferred upon him, including that of Custos Rotulorum of Westmeath. However, Dudley Costello, who was from a family of Gaelic freeholders that had been cheated out of their land by the 1st Viscount, resisted by organising rapparee actions. He was eventually shot in a skirmish in eastern County Mayo in 1667.[75]

After 1669 Lord Dillon inherited an estate of 2,500 acres (10 km2) in County Mayo and County Roscommon from his uncle, Sir James Dillon, youngest son of the 1st Viscount.[76]

Lord Dillon died in 1673[77][78][79] and was succeeded by Thomas, his only surviving son, as the 5th Viscount.[31] When the 5th Viscount died childless, the title passed to his first cousin Lucas, the 6th Viscount, and thereafter to the Loughglynn branch of the family, which descended from the 1st Viscount through his second son, Lucas Dillon of Loughglynn.[80]

Most likely, Frances, his wife, outlived him and died in 1674, being buried in St. Mary's Chapel in Christ Church Cathedral.[81] However, John Lodge thought that Frances was the Lady Dillon who has been recorded as dying in 1664 in Dillon's house in Winetavern Street, Dublin, and was buried at St James's.[82]

Timeline
Age Date Event
0 1615, Mar Born.[1]
8 1624, 28 Feb Father, Christopher Dillon, died.[15]
9 1624, 15 Mar Grandfather, Theobald Dillon, the 1st Viscount, died[16] and was succeeded by his eldest son, Lucas Dillon.
10 1625, 27 Mar Accession of King Charles I, succeeding King James I[83]
14 1629, 13 Apr Eldest brother, Lucas, the 2nd Viscount, died and was succeeded by his posthumous infant son Theobald.[17]
15 1630, 13 May Succeeded as the 4th Viscount Dillon' as his nephew Theobald, the 3rd Viscount, died.[19]
15 1630, about Became a Protestant.[21]
15 1630, 8 Dec His wardship bought by his uncle Lucas Dillon of Loughglynn[20]
16 1632, 12 Jan Wentworth (later Lord Strafford) appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland.[33]
20 1635 Married Frances White.[22][23]
21 1636 His eldest son, Charles, is born.[27]
25 1640, 16 Mar Took his seat in the House of Lords of the Irish Parliament.[37]
26 1641, 12 May Strafford beheaded.[84]
26 1642, Feb Sent with Taaffe by the Irish Parliament to England to submit grievances to Charles I.[53]
28 1643, Sep Loses Athlone to William Dillon and James Dillon.
28 1643, 15 Sep Ormond's Cessation.[55]
31 1646, 6 Dec Converted back to Catholicism.[60]
32 1647, Aug Commanded the Confederate cavalry at the Battle of Dungan's Hill.[62]
33 1649, 30 Jan King Charles I beheaded.[85]
34 1649, Aug Blockaded the northern side of the Liffey during Ormond's Siege of Dublin.[67]
35 1650 Defended Athlone successfully against a parliamentarian army under Henry Ireton.
36 1651, 18 Jun Surrendered Athlone to Coote.[72]
37 1652 Estates confiscated by the Cromwellian Settlement Act.
45 1660, 29 May Restoration of King Charles II[86]
47 1662 Resigned the presidency of Connaught.
48 1663 Recovered his lands by the Act of Settlement.
52 1667, 3 May The rapparee Dudley Costello, his enemy, is shot dead in Coolcarney.[75]
58 1673, about Died[77][78] and was succeeded by his son, also called Thomas Dillon, as the 5th Viscount.

Notes and references

Notes

  1. ^ Thomas is said to have been born in 'March 1615'[1] but also 'in 1614'.[2] Both are probably right as Ireland (like England) at the time used the Julian Calendar with a start of year on 25 March. Dates between 1 January and 25 March can be either adjusted to a start of the year on 1 January, as most modern historians do, or be reported in strict OS. That interpretation also agrees with Cokayne, who states that the 4th Viscount succeeded his father at the age of 15.[3]
  2. ^ This family tree is partly derived from the Dillon family tree pictured in La Tour du Pin.[6] Also see the lists of siblings and children in the text.
  3. ^ Strafford had been elevated from Lord Deputy to Lord Lieutenant[43] and therefore could now appoint a deputy under him.
  4. ^ This is the old parish church in the centre of the town, not St Mary's Cathedral, built in the 19th century.

Citations

  1. ^ a b Burke 1949, p. 603. "... [the 4th Viscount] b. March 1615" ..."
  2. ^ Webb 1878b, p. 149, line 42. "... was born about 1614 ..."
  3. ^ Cokayne 1916, p. 358, line 9. "1630 4.Thomas ... uncle and h. [heir], being next br. [brother] to the 2nd Viscount and then aged 15."
  4. ^ Webb 1878a, p. 149, line 7. "... [Sir Henry Dillon] came to Ireland in 1185 as secretary to Prince John ..."
  5. ^ Burke & Burke 1915, p. 645, right column, line 79. "Christopher (Sir), of Bealalahin, Mayo, m. [married] Nov. 1604, Lady Jane Dillon, eldest daughter of James, 1st Earl of Roscommon; and d.v.p. 28 Feb. 1624, leaving issue: [7 sons and 5 daughters listed]."
  6. ^ La Tour du Pin 1913, pp. 14–15. "Note généalogique sur la Maison des Lords Dillon"
  7. ^ Lodge 1789b, p. 185, line 19. "Lucas, the eldest son, and second Viscount Dillon, was 14 years and 6 months old when he succeeded his grandfather ..."
  8. ^ Lodge 1789b, p. 185, line 11. "Theobald, the father of Lucas, the 6th Viscount;"
  9. ^ Lodge 1789b, p. 185, line 12a. "James, who died without issue;"
  10. ^ Lodge 1789b, p. 185, line 12b. "...  as did John, who married the widow of ___ Bingham, esq.;"
  11. ^ a b Lodge 1789b, p. 185, line 14a. "... Christopher, and Francis, died young;"
  12. ^ Lodge 1789b, p. 185, line 14b. "... daughter Joan, married to John O'Madden, chief of his sept in the barony of Longford, in county of Galway ..."
  13. ^ a b Lodge 1789b, p. 185, line 17. "... Elizabeth, and Mary, nuns of the Order of St. Clare; "
  14. ^ a b Lodge 1789b, p. 185, line 18. "... Eleanora, and Mary, both died young."
  15. ^ a b Cokayne 1916, p. 357, line 33. "Christopher was s. [son] and h. ap. [heir apparent] of the last Viscount but d. v.p. [predeceased his father], 28 Feb 1623/4."
  16. ^ a b Debrett 1828, p. 748, line 9. "... and [the 1st Viscount] d. 15 March 1624 ..."
  17. ^ a b Cokayne 1916, p. 358, line 2. "He [the 2nd Viscount] d. [died] at Killenfagny, co. Westmeath, 13 Apr. and was bur. [buried] 14 Sept. 1629 in the Friary of Athlone."
  18. ^ Lodge 1789b, p. 185, line 30. "Theobald, the third Viscount, at the death of his father ..."
  19. ^ a b Cokayne 1916, p. 358, line 8. "He [the 3rd Viscount] d. [died] an infant, 13 May 1630."
  20. ^ a b Lodge 1789b, p. 185, line 33. "Thomas, the 4th Viscount, who being within age, viz. 15 years old at the accession to the honour ; K. Charles I by indenture, bearing date of 8 December same year [1630] demised and to farm set, the estates then very considerable ... to Lucas Dillon of Lough-Glyn "
  21. ^ a b Henderson 1888, p. 86, right column. "... he [the 4th Viscount] declared himself a protestant."
  22. ^ a b Cokayne 1916, p. 358, line 21. "He m. [married], before 1636, Frances da. [daughter] of Sir Nicholas White of Leixlip, by Ursula, 1st da. of Garrett (Moore) 1st Viscount Moore of Drogheda.
  23. ^ a b Burke1949, p. 603, left column, line 42. "... m. 1635, Frances, dau. of Nicholas White of Leixlip ..."
  24. ^ Lodge 1789a, p. 100, line 10. "Daughter Ursula was married to Sir Nicholas White of Leixlip, in the county of Kildare ..."
  25. ^ UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 11 June 2022.
  26. ^ Cokayne 1913, p. 28, line 19. "He [Taaffe] m. [married], 1stly, Mary, 1st da. [daughter] of Sir Nicholas White of Leixlip, co. Kildare, by Ursula, 1st da. of Garrett, 1st Viscount Moore of Drogheda."
  27. ^ a b Burke 1949, p. 603, left column, line 44. "Charles, Gen in the French and Spanish services, Gov. of Tournay, b. [born] 1636, d.s.p. [died without issue], before his father."
  28. ^ Lodge 1789b, p. 189, line 26. "Christopher who died in Winetavern-Street unmarried and was buried by his mother 20 June 1663."
  29. ^ Burke 1949, p. 603, left column, line 46. "Rupert, page to Charles II, k. on service."
  30. ^ Lodge 1789b, p. 189, line 36. "Thomas, the 5th Viscount Dillon married Elizabeth, eldest daughter of Sir John Bourke of Derymaclagtny in the county of Galway ... and his Lordship deceasing 1674, the honour devolved on Lucas Dillon, eldest son of Theobald, third son of Sir Christopher Dillon, eldest son of Theobald, the first Viscount."
  31. ^ a b Burke 1949, p. 603, left column, line 47. "Thomas, 5th Viscount. His only surviving son."
  32. ^ a b Lodge 1789b, p. 189, line 34. "Ormond, and Nicholas, died young."
  33. ^ a b Asch 2004, p. 146, right column, line 23. "Wentworth was appointed lord deputy on 12 January 1632 ..."
  34. ^ Lodge 1789b, p. 164. "He [the 3rd Earl Roscommon] married Elizabeth, third and youngest daughter of Sir William Wentworth, of Wentworth-Woodhouse, in the county of York, Bart. sister to Thomas Earl of Strafford ..."
  35. ^ Asch 2004, p. 152, left column, line 46. "In January 1640 Wentworth was elevated to the position of lord lieutenant of Ireland, which allowed him to govern the country during his absence through a deputy."
  36. ^ Asch 2004, p. 152, left column, line 49. "... on 12 January 1640 he [Wentworth] was created an earl, taking the title of Strafford."
  37. ^ a b Cokayne 1916, p. 358, line 12. "... having declared himself a Protestant, took his seat in the House of Lords [I.] 16 March 1639/40."
  38. ^ Wedgwood 1961, p. 277, line 8. "The Irish Parliament had agreed on the provision of a force of eight thousand foot and a thousand horse."
  39. ^ Wedgwood 1961, p. 276, line 4. "... they voted four subsidies of £45,000 each without a single negative ..."
  40. ^ Asch 2004, p. 152, right column, line 43. "The Irish parliament was prorogued on 31 March [1640] ..."
  41. ^ Wedgwood 1961, p. 277, line 4. "... he [Wentworth] prorogued Parliament until the first week in June ..."
  42. ^ Wedgwood 1961, p. 278. "On the evening of Good Friday, April 3rd, he [Wentworth] took leave of his wife and his friend, Wandesford, not knowing ..."
  43. ^ Cokayne 1896, p. 263, line 6. "Viceroy of Ireland, as L. Deputy and (1640) L. Lieut., 1632/33–1641."
  44. ^ Gardiner 1904, p. 155, line 3. "The Parliament of Ireland met for its second session on June 1."
  45. ^ Wedgwood 1961, p. 291, line 12. "... Christopher Wandesford, now Lord Deputy, opened the second session of Parliament in June."
  46. ^ Gardiner 1904, p. 120. "... the refusal of the House of Commons to support him."
  47. ^ Wedgwood 1961, p. 291. "... protests about the subsidies — so vociferously voted three months before. The Commons were resolved first to reorganize the basis of assessment and undo the work ..."
  48. ^ Wedgwood 1961, p. 291, penultimate line. "After an unprofitable fortnight, Wandesford prorogued Parliament until October."
  49. ^ Bagwell 1909a, p. 303. "... deputed Gormanston, Dillon, and Kilmallock ... Muskerry ..."
  50. ^ Lodge 1789b, p. 183, last line. "... and 23 October 1640 we find him a Lord of the Privy Council ..."
  51. ^ McNeill 1911, p. 392. "... in 1643 he [Leicester] was compelled to resign the office without having set foot in Ireland."
  52. ^ Warner 1768a, p. 130. "What the private instructions were that Lord Dillon was entrusted with are not particularly known; because ... when he and Lord Taafe who accompanied him were got to Ware, their persons and papers were seized by order of the English House of Commons;"
  53. ^ a b Webb 1878b, p. 149, line 48. "Being on a mission to King Charles in February 1641-'2, he was, with Lord Taaffe, seized at Ware by order of the House of Commons. After some months' imprisonment, they escaped and joined the King at York."
  54. ^ Webb 1878b, p. 49, right column, line 53. "Upon Dillon's return to Ireland, he was made Lieutenant-General ..."
  55. ^ a b Bagwell 1909b, p. 50. "... the terms of the cessation were agreed to on September 15 [1643] ..."
  56. ^ Warner 1768b, p. 46. "Lord Wilmot and Lord Dillon made pretensions to this post, though neither of them had a twentieth part of the merit of Lord Clanricarde, and in order to satisfy them both, they were made joint Presidents of Connaught]."
  57. ^ Firth 1900, p. 62, right column, line 12. "He also lost [8 Aug 1644] his joint presidency of Connaught to which he had been appointed in April 1644 succeeding his father in that office ..."
  58. ^ Cokayne 1895, p. 324, line 18. "He [Roger Jones] d. [died] while attending the king at Oxford, his burial being recorded 1 July 1643 ..."
  59. ^ Coffey 1914, p. 152, line 16. "... landed at Kenmare October, 21st [1645]."
  60. ^ a b Lodge 1789b, p. 187, line 12. "... where 6 December 1646, he was reconciled by the nuncio to the Church of Rome, according to the Roman Pontifical in St. Mary's Church before a vast concourse of people;"
  61. ^ Coffey 1914, p. 191. "O'Neill still held Athlone, though ordered to give it back to Lord Costello by the Council"
  62. ^ a b Lenihan 2004, p. 226, left column, line 10. "Dillon joined the Leinster confederate Catholic army and led the cavalry contingent at the catastrophic defeat at Dungan's Hill in August 1647."
  63. ^ Meehan 1882, p. 311. "... wheronto is to be added the Lord Costologh's party of about 300 horse ..."
  64. ^ Milton 1649, p. 263. "... a standing army of papists at the beck and command of Dillon, Muskerry, and other archrebels ..."
  65. ^ Bagwell 1909b, p. 175, note. "The Commissioners of Trust were Viscounts Dillon and Muskerry, Lord Athenry, Alexander MacDonnell, Sirs Lucas Dillon, Nicholas Plunket, and Richard Barnewall, Geoffrey Browne, Donough O'Callaghan, Turlagh O'Neill, Miles O'Reilly, and Gerald Fennell Esquires."
  66. ^ Godwin 1827, p. 138. "... it recognized a body of twelve commissioners with the Lords Dillon of Costello and Muskerry at their head ..."
  67. ^ a b Hayes-McCoy 1990, p. 206, line 30. "He left 2,500 men under Lord Dillon on the north side of the river Liffey ..."
  68. ^ Lenihan 2004, p. 226, left column, line 26. "On 2 August a surprise attack overran Ormond's camp; at some point in the battle Ormond sent a message ordering Dillon to march south and attack the rear of the parliamentary army. Dillon refused, probably because it seemed to him to be too late to prevent a rout."
  69. ^ D'Alton 1910, p. 303, line 24. "Lord Taaffe escaped across the Liffey and begged Lord Dillon to attack the enemy while disordered by their victory, but his men refused and were with difficulty persuaded to go, half to Trim and half to Drogheda to strengthen these garrisons. Ormond himself with the broken remains of his army made his way to Trim.
  70. ^ Hayes-McCoy 1990, p. 212, line 1. "Lord Dillon, the royalist leader on the north bank, fell back, on hearing the news of Ormond's defeat, into Trim and Drogheda and many of his men perished at Cromwell's hands in the latter place in the following month."
  71. ^ Warner 1768b, p. 228, line 8. "... Ireton, joining his army to Sr C. Coote's, advanced to Athlone in order to take in that garrison, but finding the bridge broken and the town on that side burned, Coote was left to block it up and Ireton ... joined his army before Limerick."
  72. ^ a b Henderson 1888, p. 87, left column, line 30. "He maintained Athlone till 18 June 1651, when articles of agreement were arranged between him and Sir Charles Coote."
  73. ^ Webb 1878b, p. 150, left column, line 2. "... he and his family lived in exile on the continent until the Restoration."
  74. ^ Henderson 1888, p. 87, left column. "In consideration of a sum of money he resigned in 1662 the presidency of Connaught to Charles II ..."
  75. ^ a b Carte 1851, p. 256. "Costellogh ventured in the night to attack one of them, commanded by Captain Theobald Dillon, supposing them to be raw men, and easily frighted; but met with so warm a reception, that he was shot dead on the spot ..."
  76. ^ Murtagh 2004, p. 211, left column. "Much of his [James Dillon's] estate seems eventually to have reverted to his nephew Thomas, fourth Viscount Dillon, who was presumably his heir."
  77. ^ a b Cokayne 1916, p. 358, line 25. "He d. in 1673 or 1674.
  78. ^ a b Burke1949, p. 603, left column, line 43. "... and d. [died] 1672-3 ..."
  79. ^ Webb 1878b, p. 150, line 7. "He died about 1672 ..."
  80. ^ Debrett 1828, p. 748, line 11. "He [1st Viscount] had issue 8 sons and 11 das.; of the sons, Christopher, the eldest, who d. in his father's lifetime, was ancestor of the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th viscounts and Lucas, the 2nd was ancestor of the present viscount."
  81. ^ Cokayne 1916, p. 358, line 23. "She [Frances], who brought him £3000 fortune, d. 20 and was bur. 23 Dec 1674, in St. Mary's Chapel in Christchurch.
  82. ^ Lodge 1789b, p. 189, line 16. "... who died in Winetavern-street and was buried in St. James's, 9 January 1664."
  83. ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 44, line 16. "Charles I. ... acc. 27 Mar. 1625 ..."
  84. ^ Burke 1866, p. 577, left column, line 3. "He [Strafford] suffered death with characteristic firmness on Tower Hill, 12 May 1641."
  85. ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 44, line 17. "Charles I. ... exec. 30 Jan. 1649 ..."
  86. ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 44, line 39. "Charles II. ... acc. 29 May 1660 ..."

Sources

Peerage of Ireland
Preceded by
Theobald Dillon
Viscount Dillon
1630–1673
Succeeded by
Thomas Dillon

thomas, dillon, viscount, dillon, 1615, 1673, held, title, years, that, strafford, administration, irish, rebellion, 1641, irish, confederate, wars, cromwellian, conquest, ireland, royalist, supported, strafford, ormond, sided, with, confederates, while, moder. Thomas Dillon 4th Viscount Dillon PC Ire 1615 1673 held his title for 42 years that saw Strafford s administration the Irish Rebellion of 1641 the Irish Confederate Wars and the Cromwellian Conquest of Ireland He was a royalist and supported Strafford and Ormond He sided with the Confederates for a while but was a moderate who opposed Rinuccini the papal nuncio Lord Dillon fled the field of the Battle of Dungan s Hill 1647 and did not rescue Ormond at the Battle of Rathmines 1649 However he defended Athlone successfully against Ireton in 1650 Thomas DillonViscount DillonTenure1630 1673PredecessorTheobald 3rd Viscount DillonSuccessorThomas 5th Viscount DillonBornMarch 1615Died1673Spouse s Frances WhiteIssueDetailThomas amp othersFatherChristopher DillonMotherJane Dillon Contents 1 Birth and origins 2 Viscount 3 Marriage and children 4 Strafford s administration 5 Irish wars 6 Restoration later life death and timeline 7 Notes and references 7 1 Notes 7 2 Citations 7 3 SourcesBirth and origins EditThomas was born in March 1615 a in Ireland He was the second son of Christopher Dillon and his wife Jane Dillon His father was the eldest son and heir apparent of Theobald Dillon 1st Viscount Dillon Christopher predeceased his father and therefore never succeeded as viscount He was a member of the landed gentry and known as Christopher Dillon of Ballylaghan in County Mayo Thomas s mother was the eldest daughter of James Dillon 1st Earl of Roscommon His father s and his mother s family were branches of the same widespread Old English family established in Ireland in 1185 when Sir Henry Dillon accompanied Prince John to Ireland 4 His parents married in 1604 and had seven sons and five daughters 5 Family treeThomas Dillon with wife parents and other selected relatives b Theobald1stViscountd 1624EleanorTuited 1638ChristopherDillonof Ballylaghan d 1624d v p JanetDillonm 1604LucasDillon1579 1656of LoughglynnJamesDillonc 1600 aft 1669Lucas2ndViscount1610 1629Thomas4thViscount1615 1673FrancesWhited 1664TheobaldDillonRobertDillon ofLoughglynnTheobald3rdViscount1629 1630Thomas5thViscountd 1674Lucas6thViscountd 1682Theobald7thViscountd 1691JacobiteHenry8thViscountd 1714FrancesHamiltond 1751Arthur1670 1733FrenchGeneralChristinaSheldon1684 1757Richard9thViscount1688 1737Charles10thViscount1701 1741Henry11thViscount1705 1787CharlotteLeed 1794LegendXXXThomasDillonXXXViscountsDillon d v p predeceased his father decessit vita patris Thomas listed among his brothersHe appears below among his brothers as the second son Lucas 1610 1629 who was the 2nd Viscount Dillon 7 Thomas 1615 1673 Theobald the father of the 6th Viscount 8 James never married 9 John married Bingham s widow 10 Christopher died young 11 Francis who died young 11 Thomas s sistersJoan married John O Madden chief of his sept in the barony of Longford Count Galway 12 Elizabeth became a nun in the Order of St Clare 13 Mary became a nun in the Order of St Clare 13 Eleanora died young 14 Mary died young 14 Viscount EditHis father died on 28 February 1624 when Thomas was eight years old 15 His grandfather the 1st Viscount followed him into the grave two weeks later on 15 March 1624 16 His elder brother Lucas succeeded his grandfather as the 2nd Viscount Dillon This Lucas stayed viscount for about five years and died in 1629 17 leaving a three months old child Theobald 18 who became the 3rd Viscount and a ward of the King but lasted only about a year dying on 13 May 1630 in his infancy 19 Thomas being his uncle succeeded as the 4th Viscount Dillon of Costello Gallen As he was 15 at the time he became a ward and the estate was seized by the King who sold the wardship to Thomas s uncle Lucas Dillon of Loughglynn 20 see Family tree Lord Dillon as he was now in that same year converted to Protestantism and was received into the Church of Ireland 21 Marriage and children EditIn 1635 Lord Dillon aged about 20 married Frances White daughter of Nicholas White esquire of Leixlip a Protestant 22 23 and granddaughter of Garret Moore 1st Viscount Moore by her mother Ursula Moore 24 She brought him a dowry of 3000 about 500 000 in 2021 25 Her sister Mary married Theobald Taaffe the 2nd Viscount Taaffe later 1st Earl of Carlingford who thus became his brother in law 26 Lucas and Frances had six sons and several daughters who seem not to be known by name The sons were Charles born 1636 became a general in French and Spanish service 27 Christopher died 1663 never married 28 Rupert died while being a page to Charles II during his exile 29 Thomas died 1674 became the 5th Viscount 30 31 Ormond died young 32 Nicholas died young 32 Strafford s administration EditThomas Wentworth Viscount Wentworth later the 1st Earl of Strafford was appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland by Charles I on 12 April 1632 33 About 1636 Wentworth s sister Elizabeth married James Dillon 3rd Earl of Roscommon a first cousin on his mother s side 34 In January 1640 Wentworth was raised to Lord Lieutenant of Ireland 35 On 12 January 1640 Wentworth was created 1st Earl of Strafford 36 Lord Strafford as he now was summoned an Irish Parliament in 1640 This was the second Irish parliament of King Charles I On 16 March of that year Lord Dillon took his seat in the House of Lords 37 which comprised all Irish peers and had a Catholic majority The purpose of the parliament was to raise subsidies for an Irish army of 9000 38 for Charles I to fight the Scots in the Bishops Wars The Parliament unanimously voted four subsidies of 45 000 39 On 31 March 1640 parliament was prorogued until the first week of June 40 41 On 3 April 1640 Strafford left Ireland 42 called elsewhere by the King having appointed Christopher Wandesford as Lord Deputy c Wandesford opened the second parliamentary session on 1 June 1640 44 45 News from England was that the Short Parliament had refused subsidies to the King 46 The Irish MPs regretted having voted for subsidies and wanted to change how they would be evaluated and collected 47 After two weeks of inconclusive discussions Wandesford prorogued parliament on 17 June 48 When Parliament met again on 1 October its mood had turned entirely against Strafford The Commons sent a committee to England with a remonstrance that listed Strafford s excesses Dillon together with Gormanston Kilmallock and Muskerry were sent to London by the House of Lords to report grievances 49 Sometime in 1640 before the 23 October Lord Dillon was appointed a member of the Irish Privy council 50 Wandesford died on 3 December 1640 and was succeeded by Lord Leicester with the title of Lord Lieutenant of Ireland Lord Leicester however never set foot on Irish soil 51 Irish wars EditIn October 1641 the Irish Rebellion broke out In February 1642 the Irish Parliament sent Lord Dillon and his brother in law Lord Taaffe to England to submit grievances to Charles I However they were intercepted at Ware by order of the English House of Commons 52 They escaped a few months later and met the King at York 53 Upon Lord Dillon s return to Ireland he was promoted Lieutenant General 54 On 15 September 1643 the Cessation a ceasefire for one year was signed between the royalists and the Confederation 55 This cessation was renewed in September 1644 In 1644 Lord Dillon was appointed joint President of Connaught together with Henry Wilmot 2nd Viscount Wilmot 56 who had inherited his half of the presidency from his father Charles Wilmot 1st Viscount Wilmot in April 1644 57 Dillon replaced Roger Jones 1st Viscount Ranelagh who had died in 1643 58 With the arrival of the papal nuncio Giovanni Battista Rinuccini in Ireland on 21 October 1645 59 Lord Dillon s Protestant religion caused him problems He decided to convert back to Catholicism and on 6 December 1646 Lord Dillon was received back into the Roman Catholic Church by the Nuncio at St Mary s Church d Kilkenny 60 He had left Athlone under the command of Captain MacGawly who betrayed him and handed the town over to Owen Roe O Neill After his conversion the Confederate Council ordered O Neill to give the town back to Lord Dillon but O Neill refused 61 In August 1647 the Confederate Leinster army under Thomas Preston was severely beaten in the Battle of Dungan s Hill by Parliamentarian troops under Michael Jones On this occasion Lord Dillon commanded the Confederate cavalry which fled in the early stages of the battle 62 63 Lord Dillon is mentioned several times in the Peace Treaty of 17 January 1649 between the Irish Confederates and Ormond acting for Charles I as Thomas lord viscount Dillon of Costologh i e Costello Gallen John Milton called him an archrebel 64 He was one of the 12 commissioners of trust 65 66 In 1649 Lord Dillon took part in Ormond s unsuccessful Siege of Dublin He blockaded the Northside of the town with 2500 men 67 and did not intervene when General Michael Jones sallied in the south east side of the town and defeated Ormond in the Battle of Rathmines on 2 August 1649 68 After the battle Ormond and Dillon retreated northwards to Trim 69 Some of his troops went to reinforce the garrison of Drogheda and were caught in the ensuing Siege of Drogheda by Cromwell 3 11 September 1649 70 In 1650 Lord Dillon successfully defended Athlone against a Parliamentarian army under Henry Ireton skilfully holding him off by protracted parleys until Ireton decided to leave and rather reinforce Hardress Waller at the siege of Limerick However too much time had been lost and the parliamentarians took neither of these towns in the campaign of 1650 71 On 18 June 1651 Lord Dillon surrendered Athlone to Coote 72 Lord Dillon s estates were confiscated by the Cromwellian Settlement of 1652 and he and his family lived in exile on the continent until the Restoration 73 Restoration later life death and timeline EditIn 1662 he resigned the presidency of Connaught to Charles II for a payment of money 74 In 1663 most of his extensive lands were restored by the Act of Settlement 1662 and several high offices in the state were conferred upon him including that of Custos Rotulorum of Westmeath However Dudley Costello who was from a family of Gaelic freeholders that had been cheated out of their land by the 1st Viscount resisted by organising rapparee actions He was eventually shot in a skirmish in eastern County Mayo in 1667 75 After 1669 Lord Dillon inherited an estate of 2 500 acres 10 km2 in County Mayo and County Roscommon from his uncle Sir James Dillon youngest son of the 1st Viscount 76 Lord Dillon died in 1673 77 78 79 and was succeeded by Thomas his only surviving son as the 5th Viscount 31 When the 5th Viscount died childless the title passed to his first cousin Lucas the 6th Viscount and thereafter to the Loughglynn branch of the family which descended from the 1st Viscount through his second son Lucas Dillon of Loughglynn 80 Most likely Frances his wife outlived him and died in 1674 being buried in St Mary s Chapel in Christ Church Cathedral 81 However John Lodge thought that Frances was the Lady Dillon who has been recorded as dying in 1664 in Dillon s house in Winetavern Street Dublin and was buried at St James s 82 TimelineAge Date Event0 1615 Mar Born 1 8 1624 28 Feb Father Christopher Dillon died 15 9 1624 15 Mar Grandfather Theobald Dillon the 1st Viscount died 16 and was succeeded by his eldest son Lucas Dillon 10 1625 27 Mar Accession of King Charles I succeeding King James I 83 14 1629 13 Apr Eldest brother Lucas the 2nd Viscount died and was succeeded by his posthumous infant son Theobald 17 15 1630 13 May Succeeded as the 4th Viscount Dillon as his nephew Theobald the 3rd Viscount died 19 15 1630 about Became a Protestant 21 15 1630 8 Dec His wardship bought by his uncle Lucas Dillon of Loughglynn 20 16 1632 12 Jan Wentworth later Lord Strafford appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland 33 20 1635 Married Frances White 22 23 21 1636 His eldest son Charles is born 27 25 1640 16 Mar Took his seat in the House of Lords of the Irish Parliament 37 26 1641 12 May Strafford beheaded 84 26 1642 Feb Sent with Taaffe by the Irish Parliament to England to submit grievances to Charles I 53 28 1643 Sep Loses Athlone to William Dillon and James Dillon 28 1643 15 Sep Ormond s Cessation 55 31 1646 6 Dec Converted back to Catholicism 60 32 1647 Aug Commanded the Confederate cavalry at the Battle of Dungan s Hill 62 33 1649 30 Jan King Charles I beheaded 85 34 1649 Aug Blockaded the northern side of the Liffey during Ormond s Siege of Dublin 67 35 1650 Defended Athlone successfully against a parliamentarian army under Henry Ireton 36 1651 18 Jun Surrendered Athlone to Coote 72 37 1652 Estates confiscated by the Cromwellian Settlement Act 45 1660 29 May Restoration of King Charles II 86 47 1662 Resigned the presidency of Connaught 48 1663 Recovered his lands by the Act of Settlement 52 1667 3 May The rapparee Dudley Costello his enemy is shot dead in Coolcarney 75 58 1673 about Died 77 78 and was succeeded by his son also called Thomas Dillon as the 5th Viscount Notes and references EditNotes Edit Thomas is said to have been born in March 1615 1 but also in 1614 2 Both are probably right as Ireland like England at the time used the Julian Calendar with a start of year on 25 March Dates between 1 January and 25 March can be either adjusted to a start of the year on 1 January as most modern historians do or be reported in strict OS That interpretation also agrees with Cokayne who states that the 4th Viscount succeeded his father at the age of 15 3 This family tree is partly derived from the Dillon family tree pictured in La Tour du Pin 6 Also see the lists of siblings and children in the text Strafford had been elevated from Lord Deputy to Lord Lieutenant 43 and therefore could now appoint a deputy under him This is the old parish church in the centre of the town not St Mary s Cathedral built in the 19th century Citations Edit a b Burke 1949 p 603 the 4th Viscount b March 1615 Webb 1878b p 149 line 42 was born about 1614 Cokayne 1916 p 358 line 9 1630 4 Thomas uncle and h heir being next br brother to the 2nd Viscount and then aged 15 Webb 1878a p 149 line 7 Sir Henry Dillon came to Ireland in 1185 as secretary to Prince John Burke amp Burke 1915 p 645 right column line 79 Christopher Sir of Bealalahin Mayo m married Nov 1604 Lady Jane Dillon eldest daughter of James 1st Earl of Roscommon and d v p 28 Feb 1624 leaving issue 7 sons and 5 daughters listed La Tour du Pin 1913 pp 14 15 Note genealogique sur la Maison des Lords Dillon Lodge 1789b p 185 line 19 Lucas the eldest son and second Viscount Dillon was 14 years and 6 months old when he succeeded his grandfather Lodge 1789b p 185 line 11 Theobald the father of Lucas the 6th Viscount Lodge 1789b p 185 line 12a James who died without issue Lodge 1789b p 185 line 12b as did John who married the widow of Bingham esq a b Lodge 1789b p 185 line 14a Christopher and Francis died young Lodge 1789b p 185 line 14b daughter Joan married to John O Madden chief of his sept in the barony of Longford in county of Galway a b Lodge 1789b p 185 line 17 Elizabeth and Mary nuns of the Order of St Clare a b Lodge 1789b p 185 line 18 Eleanora and Mary both died young a b Cokayne 1916 p 357 line 33 Christopher was s son and h ap heir apparent of the last Viscount but d v p predeceased his father 28 Feb 1623 4 a b Debrett 1828 p 748 line 9 and the 1st Viscount d 15 March 1624 a b Cokayne 1916 p 358 line 2 He the 2nd Viscount d died at Killenfagny co Westmeath 13 Apr and was bur buried 14 Sept 1629 in the Friary of Athlone Lodge 1789b p 185 line 30 Theobald the third Viscount at the death of his father a b Cokayne 1916 p 358 line 8 He the 3rd Viscount d died an infant 13 May 1630 a b Lodge 1789b p 185 line 33 Thomas the 4th Viscount who being within age viz 15 years old at the accession to the honour K Charles I by indenture bearing date of 8 December same year 1630 demised and to farm set the estates then very considerable to Lucas Dillon of Lough Glyn a b Henderson 1888 p 86 right column he the 4th Viscount declared himself a protestant a b Cokayne 1916 p 358 line 21 He m married before 1636 Frances da daughter of Sir Nicholas White of Leixlip by Ursula 1st da of Garrett Moore 1st Viscount Moore of Drogheda a b Burke1949 p 603 left column line 42 m 1635 Frances dau of Nicholas White of Leixlip Lodge 1789a p 100 line 10 Daughter Ursula was married to Sir Nicholas White of Leixlip in the county of Kildare UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 11 June 2022 Cokayne 1913 p 28 line 19 He Taaffe m married 1stly Mary 1st da daughter of Sir Nicholas White of Leixlip co Kildare by Ursula 1st da of Garrett 1st Viscount Moore of Drogheda a b Burke 1949 p 603 left column line 44 Charles Gen in the French and Spanish services Gov of Tournay b born 1636 d s p died without issue before his father Lodge 1789b p 189 line 26 Christopher who died in Winetavern Street unmarried and was buried by his mother 20 June 1663 Burke 1949 p 603 left column line 46 Rupert page to Charles II k on service Lodge 1789b p 189 line 36 Thomas the 5th Viscount Dillon married Elizabeth eldest daughter of Sir John Bourke of Derymaclagtny in the county of Galway and his Lordship deceasing 1674 the honour devolved on Lucas Dillon eldest son of Theobald third son of Sir Christopher Dillon eldest son of Theobald the first Viscount a b Burke 1949 p 603 left column line 47 Thomas 5th Viscount His only surviving son a b Lodge 1789b p 189 line 34 Ormond and Nicholas died young a b Asch 2004 p 146 right column line 23 Wentworth was appointed lord deputy on 12 January 1632 Lodge 1789b p 164 He the 3rd Earl Roscommon married Elizabeth third and youngest daughter of Sir William Wentworth of Wentworth Woodhouse in the county of York Bart sister to Thomas Earl of Strafford Asch 2004 p 152 left column line 46 In January 1640 Wentworth was elevated to the position of lord lieutenant of Ireland which allowed him to govern the country during his absence through a deputy Asch 2004 p 152 left column line 49 on 12 January 1640 he Wentworth was created an earl taking the title of Strafford a b Cokayne 1916 p 358 line 12 having declared himself a Protestant took his seat in the House of Lords I 16 March 1639 40 Wedgwood 1961 p 277 line 8 The Irish Parliament had agreed on the provision of a force of eight thousand foot and a thousand horse Wedgwood 1961 p 276 line 4 they voted four subsidies of 45 000 each without a single negative Asch 2004 p 152 right column line 43 The Irish parliament was prorogued on 31 March 1640 Wedgwood 1961 p 277 line 4 he Wentworth prorogued Parliament until the first week in June Wedgwood 1961 p 278 On the evening of Good Friday April 3rd he Wentworth took leave of his wife and his friend Wandesford not knowing Cokayne 1896 p 263 line 6 Viceroy of Ireland as L Deputy and 1640 L Lieut 1632 33 1641 Gardiner 1904 p 155 line 3 The Parliament of Ireland met for its second session on June 1 Wedgwood 1961 p 291 line 12 Christopher Wandesford now Lord Deputy opened the second session of Parliament in June Gardiner 1904 p 120 the refusal of the House of Commons to support him Wedgwood 1961 p 291 protests about the subsidies so vociferously voted three months before The Commons were resolved first to reorganize the basis of assessment and undo the work Wedgwood 1961 p 291 penultimate line After an unprofitable fortnight Wandesford prorogued Parliament until October Bagwell 1909a p 303 deputed Gormanston Dillon and Kilmallock Muskerry Lodge 1789b p 183 last line and 23 October 1640 we find him a Lord of the Privy Council McNeill 1911 p 392 in 1643 he Leicester was compelled to resign the office without having set foot in Ireland Warner 1768a p 130 What the private instructions were that Lord Dillon was entrusted with are not particularly known because when he and Lord Taafe who accompanied him were got to Ware their persons and papers were seized by order of the English House of Commons a b Webb 1878b p 149 line 48 Being on a mission to King Charles in February 1641 2 he was with Lord Taaffe seized at Ware by order of the House of Commons After some months imprisonment they escaped and joined the King at York Webb 1878b p 49 right column line 53 Upon Dillon s return to Ireland he was made Lieutenant General a b Bagwell 1909b p 50 the terms of the cessation were agreed to on September 15 1643 Warner 1768b p 46 Lord Wilmot and Lord Dillon made pretensions to this post though neither of them had a twentieth part of the merit of Lord Clanricarde and in order to satisfy them both they were made joint Presidents of Connaught Firth 1900 p 62 right column line 12 He also lost 8 Aug 1644 his joint presidency of Connaught to which he had been appointed in April 1644 succeeding his father in that office Cokayne 1895 p 324 line 18 He Roger Jones d died while attending the king at Oxford his burial being recorded 1 July 1643 Coffey 1914 p 152 line 16 landed at Kenmare October 21st 1645 a b Lodge 1789b p 187 line 12 where 6 December 1646 he was reconciled by the nuncio to the Church of Rome according to the Roman Pontifical in St Mary s Church before a vast concourse of people Coffey 1914 p 191 O Neill still held Athlone though ordered to give it back to Lord Costello by the Council a b Lenihan 2004 p 226 left column line 10 Dillon joined the Leinster confederate Catholic army and led the cavalry contingent at the catastrophic defeat at Dungan s Hill in August 1647 Meehan 1882 p 311 wheronto is to be added the Lord Costologh s party of about 300 horse Milton 1649 p 263 a standing army of papists at the beck and command of Dillon Muskerry and other archrebels Bagwell 1909b p 175 note The Commissioners of Trust were Viscounts Dillon and Muskerry Lord Athenry Alexander MacDonnell Sirs Lucas Dillon Nicholas Plunket and Richard Barnewall Geoffrey Browne Donough O Callaghan Turlagh O Neill Miles O Reilly and Gerald Fennell Esquires Godwin 1827 p 138 it recognized a body of twelve commissioners with the Lords Dillon of Costello and Muskerry at their head a b Hayes McCoy 1990 p 206 line 30 He left 2 500 men under Lord Dillon on the north side of the river Liffey Lenihan 2004 p 226 left column line 26 On 2 August a surprise attack overran Ormond s camp at some point in the battle Ormond sent a message ordering Dillon to march south and attack the rear of the parliamentary army Dillon refused probably because it seemed to him to be too late to prevent a rout D Alton 1910 p 303 line 24 Lord Taaffe escaped across the Liffey and begged Lord Dillon to attack the enemy while disordered by their victory but his men refused and were with difficulty persuaded to go half to Trim and half to Drogheda to strengthen these garrisons Ormond himself with the broken remains of his army made his way to Trim Hayes McCoy 1990 p 212 line 1 Lord Dillon the royalist leader on the north bank fell back on hearing the news of Ormond s defeat into Trim and Drogheda and many of his men perished at Cromwell s hands in the latter place in the following month Warner 1768b p 228 line 8 Ireton joining his army to Sr C Coote s advanced to Athlone in order to take in that garrison but finding the bridge broken and the town on that side burned Coote was left to block it up and Ireton joined his army before Limerick a b Henderson 1888 p 87 left column line 30 He maintained Athlone till 18 June 1651 when articles of agreement were arranged between him and Sir Charles Coote Webb 1878b p 150 left column line 2 he and his family lived in exile on the continent until the Restoration Henderson 1888 p 87 left column In consideration of a sum of money he resigned in 1662 the presidency of Connaught to Charles II a b Carte 1851 p 256 Costellogh ventured in the night to attack one of them commanded by Captain Theobald Dillon supposing them to be raw men and easily frighted but met with so warm a reception that he was shot dead on the spot Murtagh 2004 p 211 left column Much of his James Dillon s estate seems eventually to have reverted to his nephew Thomas fourth Viscount Dillon who was presumably his heir a b Cokayne 1916 p 358 line 25 He d in 1673 or 1674 a b Burke1949 p 603 left column line 43 and d died 1672 3 Webb 1878b p 150 line 7 He died about 1672 Debrett 1828 p 748 line 11 He 1st Viscount had issue 8 sons and 11 das of the sons Christopher the eldest who d in his father s lifetime was ancestor of the 2nd 3rd 4th 5th and 6th viscounts and Lucas the 2nd was ancestor of the present viscount Cokayne 1916 p 358 line 23 She Frances who brought him 3000 fortune d 20 and was bur 23 Dec 1674 in St Mary s Chapel in Christchurch Lodge 1789b p 189 line 16 who died in Winetavern street and was buried in St James s 9 January 1664 Fryde et al 1986 p 44 line 16 Charles I acc 27 Mar 1625 Burke 1866 p 577 left column line 3 He Strafford suffered death with characteristic firmness on Tower Hill 12 May 1641 Fryde et al 1986 p 44 line 17 Charles I exec 30 Jan 1649 Fryde et al 1986 p 44 line 39 Charles II acc 29 May 1660 Sources Edit Asch Ronald G 2004 Wentworth Thomas first earl of Strafford 1593 1641 In Matthew Colin Harrison Brian eds Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 56 New York Oxford University Press pp 142 157 ISBN 0 19 861408 X Bagwell Richard 1909a Ireland under the Stuarts and under the Interregnum Vol I London Longmans Green and Co OCLC 458582656 1603 to 1642 Bagwell Richard 1909b Ireland under the Stuarts and under the Interregnum Vol II London Longmans Green and Co OCLC 458582656 1642 to 1660 for Scarrisholis and Charlemont Burke Bernard 1866 A Genealogical History of the Dormant Abeyant Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire New ed London Harrison OCLC 11501348 for Strafford 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 Burke Bernard 1949 A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerage and Baronetage of the British Empire 99th ed London Burke s Peerage Ltd for Dillon Carte Thomas 1851 1st pub 1736 The Life of James Duke of Ormond Vol IV New ed Oxford Oxford University Press OCLC 1086656347 1660 to 1688 for Dudley Costellogh Coffey Diarmid 1914 O Neill and Ormond A Chapter of Irish History Dublin Maunsel amp Company OCLC 906164979 Cokayne George Edward 1896 Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom Extant Extinct or Dormant Vol VII 1st ed London George Bell and Sons OCLC 1180891114 S to T 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 Carlingford 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 Dillon 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 for Ranelagh D Alton Rev Edward Alfred 1910 History of Ireland from the Earliest Times to the Present Day Vol Half volume IV London The Gresham Publishing Company OCLC 749686820 1649 to 1782 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 Firth Charles Harding 1900 Wilmot Henry first Earl of Rochester 1612 1658 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol LXII Williamson Worden New York The Macmillan Company pp 61 63 OCLC 8544105 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 Gardiner Samuel Rawson 1904 History of England from the Accession of James I to the Outbreak of the Civil War Vol IX London Longmans Green amp Co OCLC 559091724 1639 to 1641 Godwin William 1827 History of the Commonwealth of England Vol The Third London Henry Colburn OCLC 310477851 1649 to 1653 Hayes McCoy Gerard Anthony 1990 1st pub 1969 Irish Battles A Military History of Ireland Belfast The Appletree Press ISBN 0 86281 250 X for the Battle of Rathmines Henderson Thomas Finlayson 1888 Dillon Thomas fourth Viscount 1615 1672 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol XV New York MacMillan and Co pp 86 87 OCLC 8544105 La Tour du Pin Henriette Lucy Marquise de 1913 Journal d une femme de cinquante ans Diary of a Woman in her Fifties in French Vol I 7th ed Paris Librairie Chapelot OCLC 1047408815 Lenihan Padraig 2004 Dillon Thomas fourth Viscount Dillon In Matthew Colin Harrison Brian eds Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 16 New York Oxford University Press pp 225 226 ISBN 0 19 861366 0 Lodge John 1789a Archdall Mervyn ed The Peerage of Ireland or A Genealogical History of the Present Nobility of that Kingdom Vol II Dublin James Moore OCLC 264906028 Earls for Drogheda Lodge John 1789b Archdall Mervyn ed The Peerage of Ireland or A Genealogical History of the Present Nobility of that Kingdom Vol IV Dublin James Moore OCLC 264906028 Viscounts for Dillon McNeill Ronald John 1911 Leicester Robert Sidney Earl of In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 16 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 392 Meehan Rev Charles Patrick 1882 The Confederation of Kilkenny New revised and enlarged ed Dublin James Duffy OCLC 224157081 Milton John 1834 1649 Observations on the Articles of Peace between James Earl of Ormond for King Charles the First on the one Hand and the Irish Rebels and Papists on the other Hand In Fletcher Robert ed The Prose Works of John Milton London Westley and Davis Stationers Court pp 247 270 OCLC 1051736587 Murtagh Harman 2004 Dillon Sir James In Matthew Colin Harrison Brian eds Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 16 New York Oxford University Press pp 210 211 ISBN 0 19 861366 0 Warner Ferdinand 1768a History of the Rebellion and Civil War in Ireland Vol I Dublin James William OCLC 82770539 1641 to 1643 Warner Ferdinand 1768b History of the Rebellion and Civil War in Ireland Vol II Dublin James William OCLC 82770539 1643 to 1660 and index Webb Alfred 1878a Dillon Theobald Viscount Compendium of Irish Biography Dublin M H Gill amp Son p 149 OCLC 122693688 Webb Alfred 1878b Dillon Thomas 4th Viscount Compendium of Irish Biography Dublin M H Gill amp Son pp 149 150 OCLC 122693688 Wedgwood Cicely Veronica 1961 Thomas Wentworth First Earl of Strafford 1593 1641 A Revaluation London Jonathan Cape OCLC 1068569885 Peerage of IrelandPreceded byTheobald Dillon Viscount Dillon1630 1673 Succeeded byThomas Dillon Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thomas Dillon 4th Viscount Dillon amp oldid 1130677479, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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