Arthur Annesley, 10th Viscount Valentia explained

Arthur Annesley, 10th Viscount Valentia (30 November 1785 – 30 December 1863) was an English-born land-owner, an Irish peer and the Premier Baronet of Ireland.

Family

Arthur Annesley was born on 30 November 1785, the eldest son of Arthur Annesley, MP for Oxford between 1790 and 1796, and his wife, Catherine Hardy, a daughter of Admiral Sir Charles Hardy. He was a male-line, paternal descendant of the first Viscount Valentia.[1]

He married, on 12 August 1808, Eleanor O'Brien, the daughter of Henry O'Brien (later Stafford-O'Brien) of Blatherwycke park, Northamptonshire and his wife Margaret Flenary.[2] Together, they had thirteen children, four sons and nine daughters:

Titles

On the death of the ninth Viscount Valentia, who had no immediate relatives, Annesley, being a very distant cousin, assumed the peerage, which had been created in 1642,[19] without attempting to establish this right in the House of Lords. Cokayne points out that he was "probably correct" in assuming the peerage.[20] He also assumed the title of Baron Mountnorris, another Irish peerage, which was also held by the ninth Viscount,[21] and was the Premier Baronet of Ireland, inheriting also the Annesley Baronetcy, of Newport Pagnell.[22]

Later life

Lord Valentia died on 30 December 1863 at Bletchingdon park, aged 78. His wife had predeceased him, having died on 10 June 1843.[23]

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Cokayne (1898), p. 16; the descent being thus: this Arthur Annesley, born 1785, was the son of Arthur Annesley, son of Francis Annesley, Rector of Winwick, son of Francis Annesley, son of the Francis Annesley, sixth son of Arthur Annesley, first Viscount Valentia.
  2. Cokayne (1898), p. 16; Lodge (1861), p. 575; Cokayne notes that Miss O'Brien was a "da. (or reputed da.)", implying illegitimacy.
  3. Lodge (1861), p. 575
  4. Lodge (1861), p. 575 ; Ruvigny (1907), p. 239
  5. Lodge (1861), p. 575 ; Ruvigny (1907), p. 239
  6. Lodge (1861), p. 575 ; Who Was Who, 1929 (St Martin's Press), p. 1066
  7. Lodge (1861), p. 575
  8. Lodge (1861), p. 575
  9. Lodge (1861), p. 575; Ruvigny (1907), p. 239
  10. Lodge (1861), p. 575
  11. Lodge (1861), p. 575
  12. Lodge (1861), p. 575
  13. Lodge (1861), p. 575 ; Ruvigny (1907), p. 238
  14. Lodge (1861), p. 575 ; Ruvigny (1907), p. 239
  15. Lodge (1861), p. 575 ; Ruvigny (1907), p. 239
  16. Lodge (1861), p. 575 ; Ruvigny (1907), p. 239
  17. Lodge (1861), p. 575
  18. Lodge (1861), p. 575
  19. Cokayne (1898), p. 13; this was the second creation, the first, to Sir Henry Power became extinct upon his death in 1642, as Cokayne shows.
  20. Cokayne (1898), p. 16
  21. Cokayne (1898), p. 16
  22. Lodge (1861), p. 575
  23. Cokayne (1898), p. 16