Gylle de Burgh explained

Gylle de Burgh
Native Name:Gylle de BĂșrca
Native Name Lang:Irish
Birth Place:Galway, Ireland
Spouse:Richard de Manderville
Father:William Liath de Burgh
Noble Family:de Burgh

Gylle de Burgh (; ; fl. 1332) was an Anglo-Irish noblewoman and wife of Richard de Manderville.

De Burgh was the only daughter of Sir William Liath de Burgh (died 1323) and a sister of Sir Walter Liath de Burgh. Walter was captured and starved to death by his cousin, the Earl of Ulster, in 1332.

Gylle, married to Richard de Manderville, had her husband and his family kill the earl at Carrickfergus on 6 June 1333 in revenge. This murder was directly responsible for the destruction of the great de Burgh lordship of Connacht, and the loss of Ulster to the Gaelic-Irish till the Ulster Plantations of 1610.[1] [2]

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Notes and References

  1. Book: Knox, Hubert T. . Hubert Thomas Knox . The History of the County of Mayo to the Close of the Sixteenth Century . Hodges, Figgis & Company . Dublin . 1908 . en.
  2. Book: Dictionary of Irish Biography ... to the Year 2002. 14, 18.