Kildare Digby, 2nd Baron Digby (c. 1627 – 11 July 1661), was an Irish nobleman.
Kildare was a minor when he succeeded his father, Robert Digby, 1st Baron Digby, in 1642. Upon the English Restoration, he sat in the Irish House of Lords in the Parliament of 1661, and was appointed Governor of Kings County, like his father. However, he died at Dublin in July. By his wife Mary (d. 23 December 1692), the daughter of Robert Gardiner of London, he had four sons and three daughters:[1]
He was buried at St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, and his widow and children afterwards lived at the Digby estate of Coleshill, Warwickshire, where she erected a monument to him.
Escutcheon: | Azure, a fleur-de-lis argent |
Crest: | An ostrich, holding in the beak a horse-shoe all proper. |
Supporters: | On either side a monkey proper environed about the middle and lined or. |
Motto: | DEO NON FORTUNA (From God not chance) [2] |