Shirer Family Genealogy Project
Person Page 65243
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Mother | Mor O'Brien2 b. 1160, d. 1194 | |
Father | William de Burgh3 b. circa 1160, d. between 1205 and 1206 | |
Pop-up Pedigree |
Biography* | Richard Mór de Burgh, 1st Lord of Connacht (c. 1194–1242, or 1243), was a Hiberno-Norman aristocrat and Justiciar of Ireland. Richard Mór de Burgh, was born towards the end of the year in 1193 (and came of age in 1214). He was the eldest son and heir of William de Burgh and his wife (daughter of Domnall Mór Ua Briain, King of Thomond). Richard's principal estate was in the barony of Loughrea where he built a castle in 1236 and a town was founded. He also founded Galway town and Ballinasloe. The islands on Lough Mask and Lough Orben were also part of his demesne. From the death of his father (1206) until he reached his majority and received his inheritance (1214), Richard was a ward of the crown of England. In 1215 he briefly served in the household of his uncle, Hubert de Burgh, Earl of Kent. In 1223 (and again in 1225) he was appointed Seneschal of Munster and keeper of Limerick Castle. In 1224, Richard claimed Connacht (which had been granted to his father but never, in fact, conquered by him): he asserted that the grant to the Gaelic king Cathal Crobdearg Ua Conchobair (after William de Burgh's death in 1206), had been on condition of faithful service and that the king's son, Aedh mac Cathal Crobdearg Ua Conchobair (who succeeded that year) had forfeited it. Richard had the favour of his uncle, Hubert, justiciar of England, and was later awarded Connacht (May 1227). Having been given custody of the counties of Cork and Waterford and all the crown lands of Decies and Desmond, he was appointed Justiciar of Ireland (1228–32). When, in 1232, his uncle Hubert's fall from grace, Richard was able to distance himself and avoid being campaigned against by Henry III. It was only in 1235, when he summoned the whole feudal host of the English lords and magnates to aid him, that he finally expelled the Gaelic king, Felim mac Cathal Crobderg Ua Conchobair, from Connacht. Richard and his lieutenants received great shares of land, while Felim was obliged to pay homage and was allowed to hold only five cantreds (in Roscommon), while Richard held the remaining 25 cantreds of Connacht in chief of the crown of England. De Burgh took the title of "Lord of Connacht". Before 21 April 1225, he married Egidia de Lacy (daughter of Walter de Lacy and his wife Margaret de Braose), with which alliance he acquired the cantred of Eóghanacht Caisil with the castle of Ardmayle in Tipperary. Richard and Egidia had three sons and four daughters: Sir Richard de Burgh (d.1248), Lord of Connaught, Constable of Montgomery Castle married a relative of Eleanor of Provence, and died (without issue) in Poitou. Walter de Burgh, 1st Earl of Ulster (d.1271), Lord of Connaught. William Óg de Burgh (d.1270), the ancestor of the Earls of Clanricarde and Mac William family. Alice de Burgh married Muirchertach O Briain. Margery de Burgh (d. after March 1253) married Theobald Butler, 3rd Chief Butler of Ireland. Matilda de Burgh married Sir Gerald de Prendergast of Beauvoir; they had a daughter, Maud. Daughter de Burgh who married Hamon de Valoynes; they had a daughter, Mabel de Valoynes. Richard de Burgh died shortly before 17 February 1243.4 | |
Marriage* | Principal=Egidia de Lacy2 | |
Birth* | circa 1194 | Connaught, Ireland2 |
Death* | 17 February 1243 | Aquitaine, France2 |
Family | Egidia de Lacy | |
Child | 1. | Matilda de Burgh |
Last Edited | 2 Feb 2021 |
Citations |
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