Baron Dunboyne Explained

Barony of Dunboyne
Creation Date:11 Jun 1541
Creation:Second
First Holder:Edmond Butler, 1st Baron Dunboyne
Present Holder:Richard Pierce Theobald Butler, 20th Baron Dunboyne
Heir Apparent:the Hon. Caspian Fitzwalter Butler
Status:Extant
Family Seat:Argos Hill House
Motto:TIMOR DOMINI FONS VITAE
The fear of the Lord is the fountain of life

Baron Dunboyne was a title first held by the Petit family some time after the Norman invasion of Ireland.

History

Dunboyne was part of the Lordship of Meath. The Petit family also had land holdings in Mullingar. In 1227, Ralph Petit became Bishop of Meath. In that capacity, he founded a priory of the Blessed Virgin in Mullingar and he endowed this establishment with the townland of Kilbraynan (or Kilbrena) in Dunboyne, along with the rectory of Dunboyne, its tithes and other ecclesiastical revenues.[1] A century later, Thomas Butler, son of Theobald Butler, 4th Chief Butler of Ireland, married Sinolda, heiress of William le Petit. In 1324, Butler was created Baron Dunboyne by prescription. In this way, the Dunboyne properties and titles passed to the Butlers. In 1541, the barony was created by patent in the Peerage of Ireland.[2] The barons are alternately numbered from the early 14th century by numbers ten greater than the number dating to the patent (e.g. the 28th/18th Baron Dunboyne died May 19, 2004). The first baron of this sequence in turn married the heiress to an earlier line of Barons Dunboyne.

The family seat is Argo Hill House, near Rotherfield, East Sussex.

Barons Dunboyne (1324)

Kiltinan Castle, Fethard, County Tipperary, was the seat of the barons until the Reformation in Ireland.

Barons Dunboyne (1541)

The heir apparent is the present holder's son Hon. Caspian Fitzwalter Butler.

Note As a Roman Catholic bishop, when the 12th/22nd baron inherited the titles, he feared that his vows of celibacy would lead to the extinguishment of the titles altogether. Following the refusal of the Pope to release him from his vows, he Apostatised, embraced the Church of Ireland and married late in life in the hope of fathering an heir. Following the death of a son in infancy, it looked like the title would indeed become extinct. However, a distant relative of the 2nd/12th baron was found in County Clare who succeeded to the title. His ancestry is as follows:

James Butler, 2nd/12th Baron Dunboyne married Margaret O'Brien. Their son,

See also

References

Attribution

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Parish history. dead. 13 February 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150213211051/http://www.port64.com/parish/index.php/parish-history.
  2. Mosley, ed. Burke's Peerage 10th Edition 2003 Vol.1 p.1212
  3. Web site: Knockelly castle Fethard. fehard.com. 18 March 2021.
  4. Burke's Peerage, p.1212
  5. Edmund Lodge, "The peerage of the British empire as at present existing.", London 1832, p145