The Most Reverend The Earl of Normanton | |
---|---|
Archbishop of Dublin Bishop of Glendalough Primate of Ireland | |
![]() Portrait by George Romney | |
Church | Church of Ireland |
Diocese | Dublin and Glendalough |
Appointed | 7 December 1801 |
In office | 1801-1809 |
Predecessor | Robert Fowler |
Successor | Euseby Cleaver |
Orders | |
Consecration | 20 March 1768 by Arthur Smyth |
Personal details | |
Born | |
Died | 14 July 1809 72) London, England | (aged
Buried | Westminster Abbey |
Nationality | Irish |
Denomination | Anglican |
Parents | Henry Agar and Anne Ellis |
Spouse | Jane Benson |
Children | 4 |
Previous post(s) | Bishop of Cloyne (1768-1779) Archbishop of Cashel (1779-1801) |
Education | Westminster School |
Alma mater | Christ Church, Oxford |
Charles Agar, 1st Earl of Normanton (22 December 1736 – 14 July 1809), was an Anglo-Irish clergyman of the Church of Ireland. He served as Dean of Kilmore, as Bishop of Cloyne, as Archbishop of Cashel, and finally as Archbishop of Dublin from 1801 until his death.
Agar was the third son of Henry Agar of Gowran in County Kilkenny and his wife Anne Ellis, daughter of the Most Reverend Welbore Ellis, Bishop of Meath. His brothers included James Agar, 1st Viscount Clifden, and Welbore Ellis Agar, a notable art collector. [1]
Welbore Ellis, 1st Baron Mendip, was his maternal uncle.
Agar was educated at Westminster School [2] and Christ Church, Oxford, where he matriculated on 31 May 1755, aged 18. He graduated BA in 1759, promoted by seniority to MA in 1762. On 31 December 1765, he was created a Doctor of Civil Law. [3]
Agar is known to have held particularly marked Calvinistic positions. He served as Dean of Kilmore from 1765 to 1768, [4] and then as Bishop of Cloyne until 1779. [5] [6]
In 1776 he married Jane Benson, a daughter of William Benson, of Downpatrick, County Down. [7] In 1779 he was appointed as Archbishop of Cashel and also joined the Irish Privy Council. [8] [9] In 1784, while he was in office, the new St. John's Cathedral, Cashel, was completed, and two years later its important Samuel Green organ was built. [10]
In 1794 Agar was raised to the Peerage of Ireland as Baron Somerton. [11] In 1801, he was translated to become Archbishop of Dublin [12] [13] and was created Viscount Somerton. [11] In 1806 he was further honoured when he was made Earl of Normanton. [14] These titles were all in the Peerage of Ireland. He remained as archbishop of Dublin until his death in 1809, [12] and from the beginning of 1801 onwards sat in the House of Lords as one of the twenty-eight original Irish Representative Peers, following the Acts of Union 1800 which united Ireland and Great Britain. [15]
Archbishop Normanton died in July 1809, aged 72, and was succeeded in his secular titles by his son Welbore Ellis Agar. He is buried in the north transept of Westminster Abbey; his widow Jane, Countess of Normanton, was buried alongside him following her death in 1826. [2] His tomb dates from 1815 and was created by John Bacon. [16]
Earl of Normanton is a title in the Peerage of Ireland. It was created in 1806 for Charles Agar, 1st Viscount Somerton, Archbishop of Dublin. He had already been created Baron Somerton, of Somerton in the County of Kilkenny, in 1795 and Viscount Somerton, of Somerton in the County of Kilkenny, in 1800, also in the Peerage of Ireland. Lord Normanton sat in the House of Lords from 1800 to 1809 as one of the 28 original Irish Representative Peers.
Malcolm Hamilton was a Scotsman who was the Church of Ireland Archbishop of Cashel from 1623 to 1629.
The Rt. Rev. and Hon. Richard Ponsonby (1772–1853) was an Irish clergyman who held high office in the Church of Ireland.
The Bishop of Waterford was a medieval prelate, governing the Diocese of Waterford from its creation in the 11th century until it was absorbed into the new Roman Catholic Diocese of Waterford and Lismore in the 14th century. After the creation of four archdioceses for Ireland in the middle of the 12th century, Waterford fell under the Archbishop of Cashel.
The Archbishop of Armagh is an archiepiscopal title which takes its name from the city of Armagh in Northern Ireland. Since the Reformation, there have been parallel apostolic successions to the title: one in the Roman Catholic Church and the other in the Church of Ireland. The archbishop of each denomination also holds the title of Primate of All Ireland.
The Bishop of Cashel and Waterford was the Ordinary of the Church of Ireland diocese of Cashel and Waterford; comprising all of County Waterford, the southern part of County Tipperary and a small part of County Limerick, Ireland.
Thomas Barnard was an Anglican clergyman who served in the Church of Ireland as Bishop of Killaloe and Kilfenora (1780–1794) and Bishop of Limerick, Ardfert and Aghadoe (1794–1806).
Thomas Lindsay, D.D., B.D., M.A (1656–1724) was an Anglican clergyman who served in the Church of Ireland as the Dean of St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, Bishop of Killaloe, Bishop of Raphoe and finally Archbishop of Armagh.
Joseph Deane Bourke, 3rd Earl of Mayo was an Irish peer and cleric who held several high offices in the Church of Ireland including Bishop of Ferns and Leighlin (1772–82) and Archbishop of Tuam (1782–94).
The Dean of Cashel is the head of the Chapter of the Cathedral Church of St John the Baptist and St Patrick's Rock, Cashel, one of the Church of Ireland cathedrals of the united Diocese of Cashel, Ferns and Ossory.
Sir John Hotham, 9th Baronet, DD (1734–1795) was an English baronet and Anglican clergyman. He served in the Church of Ireland as the Bishop of Ossory from 1779 to 1782 and Bishop of Clogher from 1782 to 1795.
Events from the year 1623 in Ireland.
Randolph Barlow, was made Pembroke College fellow at Cambridge University in 1593; attained Master of Arts in 1594; awarded Doctor of Divinity in 1600; took holy orders and later served in the Church of Ireland as the Archbishop of Tuam from 1629 to 1638.
Robert Howard, D.D. was an Anglican prelate who served in the Church of Ireland as the Bishop of Killala and Achonry (1727–1730) and Bishop of Elphin (1730–1740).
Thomas Fulwar (Fuller) was an Irish Anglican priest in the seventeenth century.
Thomas Wetherhead was Archdeacon of Cork and of Cloyne then Bishop of Waterford and Lismore from 1589 until 1592.
John Eveleigh, Rector of Killane and then Precentor of Cloyne, was the Dean of Ross, Ireland from 1639 until 1664.
Anthony Cope was a seventeenth-century Irish Anglican priest.
Edward Goldmith (1662–1722) was an Irish Anglican priest in the 17th century.
Welbore Ellis Agar, 2nd Earl of Normanton was an Irish peer and landowner, of Anglo-Irish origins, who spent most of his life in England, where he acquired the Somerley estate in 1825.