Earl of Kenmare

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The title of Earl of Kenmare was created in the Peerage of Ireland in 1801. It became extinct upon the death of the 7th Earl in 1952.

All of the Earls bore the subsidiary titles of Viscount Castlerosse (1801), Viscount Kenmare (1798), and Baron Castlerosse (1798) in the Peerage of Ireland. The 2nd Earl was created Baron Kenmare in the Peerage of the United Kingdom in 1841, but this title became extinct upon his death. His brother and successor, the third earl, was again created Baron Kenmare in the Peerage of the UK in 1856, and this title survived until the extinction of the earldom in 1952.

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[edit] The Browne Line

[edit] Baronets Browne of Molahiffe, County Kerry (1622)

[edit] Viscounts Kenmare, Barons Castlerosse (1689)

The Third Baronet Browne was created First Viscount Kenmare (Ireland) on 20 May 1689, by King James II, after his disposition by the English Parliament, but while he still possessed his rights as King of Ireland. The peerage remained on the Irish patent roll in a constitutionally ambiguous position, but was not formally recognized by the protestant political establishment.[4]

[edit] Earls of Kenmare (1801)

The Seventh Baronet Browne was created First Baron Castlerosse and First Viscount Kenmare on 12 February 1798, with the earlier peerages not being recognised. He was created First Earl of Kenmare on 3 January 1801.[9]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ (ca. 1900 reprinted 1983) George Edward Cokayne: The Complete Baronetage. Gloucester: Alan Sutton Publishing, i:227.
  2. ^ Ibid, i:236
  3. ^ Ibid, i:237
  4. ^ (2004) “"Browne, Thomas, fourth Viscount Kenmare"”, H. C. G. Matthew and Brian Harrison: The Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-861411-X.
  5. ^ (ca. 1900 reprinted 1983) George Edward Cokayne: The Complete Baronetage. Gloucester: Alan Sutton Publishing, i:237.
  6. ^ Idem
  7. ^ Ibid, i:238
  8. ^ Idem
  9. ^ Idem
  10. ^ Idem

[edit] External links