Earl of Tyrone

The Earl of Tyrone is a title created three times in the Peerage of Ireland.

It was first created as part of the Tudor attempt to establish a uniform social structure in Ireland by converting the Gaelic kings and chiefs into hereditary nobles of the Kingdom of Ireland. Under brehon law, clans were effectively independent, and chose their chiefs from the members of a bloodline – normally, but not always, a close relative of the previous chief; the clan as a whole generally had a voice in the chief's decisions. Also, acknowledged sons of a clan member were members of the bloodline, even when not begotten in lawful marriage. The holder of a title, on the other hand, was subject to the Crown, but held his lands by hereditary right, which the Crown would help to enforce; the rest of the clan were usually now his tenants. Illegitimate sons had no right of succession under the new system unless expressly granted.

The title in the Peerage of Ireland was created again in 1673 for Richard Power, 6th Baron Power, the Anglo-Norman peer and Restoration politician, along with a large grant of land in County Waterford, at the other end of Ireland. He was also given the subordinate title of Viscount Decies; both titles became extinct upon the death of his younger son, the third earl, in 1704; he left an only daughter, Lady Katherine Power, but both titles descended by patent to male heirs only.

It was created a final time in 1746 for Marcus Beresford, 1st Viscount Tyrone, son-in-law of the last Power earl. His son was created Marquess of Waterford in 1789, and the title has since been a subsidiary title of the Waterford title.[1]

Contents

Earls of Tyrone, first Creation (1542)

The king or chief of the O'Neills of Tyrone, Conn Bacach O'Neill, went to Greenwich and submitted to Henry VIII of England and of Ireland in 1542; he renounced his chieftainship, the style of "the O'Neill" and his independence. In exchange, he was created Earl of Tyrone, which was by the charter to descend to his illegitimate son Matthew or Ferdoragh O'Neill, who was also created Baron of Dungannon, which was always to be held by the heir to the Earldom; this was a substantive title, which gave Ferdoragh a seat in the Irish House of Lords, not a courtesy title. This adaptive process, known as "surrender and regrant", was taken up by other Irish clan chiefs.

This passed over Conn's legitimate sons; the eldest, Shane O'Neill, was only about twelve at the time. When he grew up, Shane (who is remembered as an Diomais, "the Proud") claimed to be The O'Neill (in Irish: Uí Neíll), and there was civil strife among the Cenell Eoghain; Shane was victorious, Ferdoragh was killed, Conn was driven out of Tyrone, and died in the Irish Pale, the area of Ireland directly governed by the English.

In English law, Ferdoragh's eldest son, Brien O'Neill, then succeeded to the Earldom; in practice he continued to be called Lord Dungannon. Queen Elizabeth, newly come to the throne, proposed to recognize Shane as Earl, since he actually ruled Tyrone and was eldest legitimate son; but the negotiations collapsed.[2] Brien was killed young and unmarried, in 1562, by Turlough O'Neill, tanist of his uncle Shane (and a grandson of the brother of Conn Bacagh, the first Earl). Shane died in 1568; the English generally supported Brien's younger brother, Hugh O'Neill, against Turlough; Turlough, as effective leader of the clan, was the greater threat. In 1585, Hugh was recognized as Earl of Tyrone; in 1593, Turlough surrendered to him the position of "The O'Neill".

Hugh O'Neill's career as unquestioned leader of the O'Neills became a series of quarrels with the English government: like many great feudal lords, he rebelled in the Nine Years' War, was proclaimed a traitor, and ultimately submitted to the Crown at the Treaty of Mellifont in 1603. Despite the Anglo-Spanish peace treaty of 1604, in 1607 he left with his brother-in-law, the Earl of Tyrconnell and several of their followers fled to Europe, expecting the Spanish to invade Ireland with an army. He was attainted the year after this Flight of the Earls, and the attainder was confirmed by the Parliament of Ireland in 1614; at which point the Earldom became forfeit under the common law.

Earl Hugh, followed by his sons, however, continued to claim to be Earl of Tyrone, until the last legitimate son died unmarried, some time between 1641 and 1660. (It is not entirely clear which of his sons were legitimate: he was married four times, not always legally divorced, and it is not clear who were the parents of Conn O'Neill, chief of the O'Neills around 1650.) At this point the Irish title became extinct, as well as forfeit, but the descendants of Earl Hugh's illegitimate brothers acted as the O'Neill, and called themselves Earl of Tyrone by Spanish grant, for the rest of the century.

Heirs who did not live to succeed are indented.

Baron Dungannon

The Barony of Dungannon created for Matthew or Ferdoragh O'Neill was limited, by the terms of the patent, to his descendants who were heirs apparent to the Earldom of Tyrone. This provision would have meant that it acted like a courtesy title: when an Earl of Tyrone had an eldest son, or an eldest grandson by a deceased eldest son, that heir would be Baron Dungannon; when there was no heir apparent, the Barony of Dungannon lapsed until there was.

So when Matthew died, his son Brien became Baron Dungannon. However, when Conn Bacach died the next year, Brien was not recognized as Earl of Tyrone, but continued to be called Baron Dungannon until he was killed by Turlough Luineach O'Neill, Shane the Proud's tanist.

His younger brother Hugh O'Neill was called Baron of Dungannon until 1585, when he received a charter confirming him as Earl of Tyrone. The same charter confirmed his son Hugh, the eldest son of his second wife, as Baron Dungannon; Earl Hugh's first marriage was invalid, and his children by that marriage illegitimate.

The following men were known as Baron Dungannon:

Since the younger Hugh O'Neill was attainted with father in 1608, the title is forfeit, and is now extinct. Young Hugh went to Rome with his father, and died there in the summer of 1609.

Exiles

Earl Hugh and his family continued to lead the O'Neills of Tyrone from abroad; they also had the title of Earl of Tyrone recognized in Spain in the form of Conde de Tyrone. "Though no longer recognized in England, it was granted by Spanish kings to a line of O'Neills in rightful succession to the of the seventeenth century".[5]

By 1660, therefore, the Earldom of Tyrone was extinct as well as forfeit.[9] None the less, the last collateral O'Neill descendants of Mathew "Ferdocha" O'Neill, continued to use the title in Spain until 1692.[10]

Later claimants

By this point, the claim to the Earldom of Tyrone became intertwined both with the position of the O'Neill of Tyrone and the wider position of chief of all the O'Neills of Ulster. Not all the claimants to the Gaelic offices claimed the Earldom: the descendants of Shane the Proud were inaugurated as the O'Neill by the ancient ritual, by which the O'Hagan put golden shoes on their feet on May Eve, without calling themselves Earls.[14]

The leadership of the O'Neills as a whole had usually been held by the O'Neills of Tyrone; but their distant cousins the O'Neills of Clanaboy or Clandeboye in Antrim had also sometimes held it, most recently Art mac Aodha O'Neill, from 1509 to 1514, when the first Earl was young. They, like the O'Neills of Tyrone, spent much of the seventeenth century fighting for the Catholic powers; in 1740 they relocated permanently to Portugal.

Don Jorge O'Neill of Clanaboy and Lisbon submitted his pedigree to the Ulster office of Heralds; in 1896, he received a letter from Sir Henry Farnham Burke, Somerset Herald, acknowledging that he had proved his descent from the royal descent from the Kings of Ireland, and his collateral descent from Hugh O'Neill. Although collateral descent from the grantee does not confer a peerage, he assumed the style of Conde de Tyrone, but his descendants use the title Prince of Clandeboye.

Barons Power (13 September 1535)

Earls of Tyrone, second creation (1673)

with subsidiaries Viscount Decies (1673) and Baron Power (1535)

Earls of Tyrone, third creation (1746)

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Complete Peerage, Vol. XII, Part II, "Tyrone".
  2. ^ Christopher Maginn, ‘O'Neill, Shane (c.1530–1567)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 , accessed 25 April 2011; her deputy, Thomas Radclyffe, 3rd Earl of Sussex did not trust Shane, who, in turn, did not want the English deciding the quarrels between him and his subordinate chiefs.
  3. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica, Conn Bacach O'Neill, King and Earl of Tyrone
  4. ^ Destruction of the Peace, Micheline Kearney Walsh, R&S Printers, Monaghan, Ireland, 1986
  5. ^ as translated in Micheline Kearny Walsh The Will of John O'Neill, Third Earl of Tyrone, dated September 18th, 1640. pg. 320 Seanchas Ard Mhacha
  6. ^ Henry O'Neill and the Formation of the irish Regiment in the Netherlands, 1605, by Jerrold Casway, Irish Historical Studies, Vol. XVIII, No. 72, Sept. 1973, pg. 481-489
  7. ^ Micheline Kearny Walsh The Will of John O'Neill, Third Earl of Tyrone, dated September 18th, 1640. If he died, the Earldom was to pass first to Shane's cousin Conn, then to his illegitimate cousins, the sons of Art mac Baron, then to the descendant of Shane the Proud who should be nearest in blood.
  8. ^ Micheline Kearney Walsh: "The Will of John O'Neill" (1976); before the will was published, there were theories than this Conn was an elder brother of Owen Roe O'Neill; or a son of one of Owen Roe's elder brothers; and so descended from Owen Roe's father, Art McBaron O'Neill, an illegitimate half-brother of Earl Hugh (Art's epithet arises from his being the son of Ferdoragh (Matthew), Baron Dungannon). This would not bar him or Owen from being leader of the O'Neills; but it would mean they were not heirs to the Earldom.
  9. ^ Complete Peerage, "Tyrone, Earldom of", Vol XII, part II, pp. 138–141; quotation about Conn O'Neill from p. 140, note (j).
  10. ^ Spanish Knights of Irish Origin, Vol. III, & Don Bernardo O'Neill of Aughnacloy, Co. Tyrone, pg. 327-328, translated by Micheline Walsh Kearney and published in Seanchas Ard Mhacha
  11. ^ Complete Peerage Vol XII, part II, Appendix C, suppl. pages 12–13; noting that the older opinion that this Owen is grandson of Owen Roe has been corrected.
  12. ^ Don Bernardo O'Neill of Aughnacloy, Co. Tyrone, pg. 327-328, translated by Micheline Walsh Kearney and published in Seanchas Ard Mhacha
  13. ^ Don Bernardo O'Neill of Aughnacloy, Co. Tyrone, pg. 328, translated by Micheline Walsh Kearney and published in Seanchas Ard Mhacha
  14. ^ John O'Hart: Irish pedigrees, Part III, Chapter iv, section 2. In the Dublin edition of 1892, these are pp.717, 727–9

References