Edmond Butler of Killoshulan

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Edmond Butler of Killoshulan, Duiske, County Kilkenny (died 12 July 1691) was the youngest son of Piers Butler of Duiske and Margaret Netterville, daughter of Nicholas Netterville, 1st Viscount Netterville. His grandfather was Edward Butler, 1st Viscount Galmoye. [1] Killoshulan is a townland in the barony of Crannagh, County Kilkenny.

Contents

Marriage and issue

He married Catherine Crispe, daughter of Nicholas Crispe, circa 1657. [2] Their children were:

Career and succession

Butler gained the rank of Major in 1689 in the service of the Colonel Edward Butler's Regiment of Horse which was in the army of King James II of England. He fought in the Battle of Aughrim and was killed in action.

Edmond's elder brother Edward succeeded their grandfather as Viscount Galmoye in 1653. Edward's son, the 3rd Viscount, was attainted in 1697 as a Jacobite. In 1826, when Edward's male line became extinct, Edmond's great-great-great-grandson, Garret Butler, petitioned for the viscountcy and the reversal of the attainder. The Attorney-General for Ireland and Solicitor-General for Ireland (Henry Joy and John Doherty) issued an opinion in 1828 that he would be entitled as senior male heir to the viscountcy if the attainder were reversed, but that would require an Act of Parliament. [3] [4] Garret Butler adopted the style Viscount Galmoy despite the lack of such an act. [5]

See also

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Piers Butler of Duiske, Barrowmount, County Kilkenny was the son of Edward Butler, 1st Viscount Galmoye and Hon. Anne Butler, daughter of Edmund Butler, 2nd Viscount Mountgarret. He gained the rank of Colonel of Dragoons. After the Battle of Lambstown, County Wexford, he was taken prisoner, and was "killed, it is said after quarter being given" by the Cromwellian Captain William Bolton.

Nicholas Netterville of Dowth, County Meath, Ireland, was born in 1581, and succeeded his father, John Netterville, in the family estate on 20 September 1601. Although an enemy accused them of being "but a mean family" the Nettervilles had in fact been in Ireland since before 1280 and had been established at Dowth for centuries; they were related to many of the leading families of The Pale including the Earl of Kildare, Lord Slane, Lord Howth and the Luttrells of Luttrellstown Castle. Nicholas was the grandson of Luke Netterville, judge of the Court of King's Bench (Ireland) and nephew of the leading barrister and statesman Richard Netterville. His mother was Eleanor Gernon, daughter of Sir James Gernon of Castleton, County Louth. Being "a person of many good qualities" he was created, 3 April 1622, Viscount Netterville, of Dowth in the County Meath, taking his seat, 14 July 1634. He died in 1654 and was buried at Mountown, County Dublin.

Theobald Butler, 1st Viscount Butler of Tulleophelim, was an Irish peer.

Sir John Dongan, 2nd Baronet (1603–1650) was a member of the Irish Parliament.

References

  1. Burke, John, A general and heraldic dictionary of the peerage and baronetage of the British Empire., Vol 1, pg 502.
  2. The Peerage.
  3. Burke, Bernard (1866). "Butler—Viscount Galmoye". A Genealogical History of the Dormant: Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire. London: Harrison. pp. 97–98.
  4. Lynch, Esq William (1830). "Chapter X : Decisions, Reports, and Legal Opinions on Claims to Peerages. Attainders. Construction of Statute 9th Will. III. Writs of Error, Reversals of Attainders, &c.". A View of the Legal Institutions, Honorary Hereditary Offices, and Feudal Baronies, Established in Ireland During the Reign of Henry the Second: Deduced from Court Rolls, Inquisitions, and Other Original Records. London: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, & Green. pp. 278–287.
  5. Sixsmith, Lorna (30 May 2018). "Garrendenny : A History". Till the Cows Come Home: Memories of an Irish farming childhood. Edinburgh: Black & White Publishing. ISBN   978-1-78530-205-3.