Walter Wellesley (c.1470-1539) was a sixteenth-century Irish cleric and judge. He was Prior of Great Connell Priory, Bishop of Kildare 1529-39, and Master of the Rolls in Ireland.
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He was born about 1470, second son of Sir William Wellesley (c.1443-1502) of Dangan, County Meath and Ismay, daughter of Sir Thomas Plunkett.[1] His brother Garrett ( died 1538 ) was ancestor of the Duke of Wellington.
Walter was educated at the University of Oxford, and was said to be one of the outstanding scholars of his time.[2] He became an Augustinian friar, and before 1520 became prior of their house at Great Connell near Newbridge, County Kildare. For the rest of his life he showed great concern for the welfare of the priory.
Walter " had a singular mind" towards the maintenance of English rule, and had the trust of Henry VIII. Henry proposed him as Bishop of Limerick, but the choice was rejected by the Pope. In 1520 the Earl of Surrey, the Lord Deputy of Ireland suggested him for Bishop of Cork, but Wellesley himself rejected the proposal when told he could not remain Prior of Great Connell. Finally in 1529 he became Bishop of KIldare, on condition he could also retain the priory. He was Master of the Rolls 1521-2.[3]
Though he had the trust of the Crown, Wellesley is not thought to have had any enthusiasm for the Reformation. At the Dissolution of the Monasteries, his great concern was to save Great Connell. In 1537 he asked for it to be exempt from confiscation on the grounds that it was part of the Diocese of Kildare. His famous plea to Thomas Cromwell that " no brother is elected unless he be of the English nation" should not be taken as anti-Irish prejudice, since monasteries within the Pale were not permitted to admit Irish monks, and he may simply have been stressing that Great Connell observed the rules strictly.
Wellesley's influence with the King was enough to ensure the survival of Great Connell for a few years, but two years after his death the last Prior surrendered it. The lands were granted to Nicholas White and the priory allowed to fall into ruins.
Wellesley died in October 1539 and was buried in Great Connell where an impressive effigy to him was erected.[4] After the dissolution of the priory the tomb was lost and was finally rediscovered by the Kildare Archaeological Society in 1971. The restored tomb is now in Kildare Cathedral.
Bishop Wellesley was described as a man of gravity and virtuous conversation, the most famous scholar in Ireland, and a firm upholder of English authority.[5]