Katherine Fitzgerald, Lady of Hy-Carbery
Katherine FitzGerald | |
---|---|
Born | c.1452 |
Died |
1506 Castle Salem |
Title | Lady of Hy-Carbery |
Tenure | 1477–1506 |
Known for | Black Lady |
Nationality | Hiberno-Norman |
Predecessor | Ellen MacCarthy of Muskerry |
Successor | Ellen MacCarthy Muskerry, daughter of Cormac Laidir MacCarthy, 4th Lord of Muscry |
Spouse(s) | Finghin MacCarthy Reagh |
Issue |
Donal MacCarthy Reagh Donogh MacCarthy Reagh Dermod MacCarthy Reagh Cormac MacCarthy Reagh Ellen MacCarthy Reagh |
Parents |
Thomas FitzGerald Ellice de Barry |
Katherine[1] Fitzgerald (c.1452-1506) was the Anglo-Irish Noblewoman of the Geraldine's dynasty, during the XVth century. At the time of her birth, her family is one of the most influential houses of Ireland. By her husband, her married name was Mac Carthaigh Riabhach and she becames the princess of Carbery from 1477 to 1506.
For her own pleasure, she erected two castles.
She was the ancestor of many political people[2] including Lyndon Baines Johnson, 36th president of the United States; Winston Leonard Spencer-Churchill, 63rd Prime Minister of the United Kingdom; Prince Albert II of Monaco; Princess Diana and Prince Charles.
Family
Katherine was probably born in 1452,[3] in the one of the Fitzgerald castles. Katherine is the eldest of their daughters and their third child of the 7th Earl of Desmond by his wife. Her father, Thomas FitzGerald, the one of the most powerful men in Ireland, was Viceroy of Ireland in the reign of Edward IV ; after being the victim of the malice of the Queen Elizabeth Woodville, accordingly to have had an unfortunate speech in reference to her low birth, he was executed at Drogheda, in 15 February 1468. Her mother, Ellice Barry, had issus from the noble house of the Lord of Buttevant (Co. Cork). She has seven brothers and one sister, four of which have acceded to the Earldom of Desmond :
- James FitzThomas FitzGerald. c.1449-1487, probably murdered by his brother, John.
- Maurice FitzThomas FitzGerald. c.1450-1520.
- Thomas FitzThomas FitzGerald. 1454-1534.
- Unnamed boy #1,[4] c.1456-1468 who murdered by John Tiptoft, 1st Earl of Worcester.
- Unnamed boy #2,[5] c.1458-1468 who murdered by John Tiptoft, 1st Earl of Worcester.
- John FitzGerald, de facto 12th Earl of Desmond, c.1460-1536 which male descendants extinct in 1632.
- Ellen Fitzgerald , c.1462 who married with Tagd O’Brien of Killaloe.
- Gerald Oge Fitzgerald, c.1464 which male descendants extinct in 1743.
Charactere
The Annals of the Kingdom of Ireland by the Four Masters described her as "a charitable and truly hospitable woman". It is also mentioned her liking for castles and military strategy that a probable fosterage in McCarthy Muskerry's household may have favored.
Marriage
Probably between her fifteenth and twentieth year old, probably between 1467 and 1472, after obtaining a plausible papal dispensation because her husband's sister married to her maternal uncle, Katherine becames Finghin MacCarthy Reagh's wife, who was her maternal uncle-by-the marriage. She had mothered four sons and one daughter:
- Donal MacFineere MacCarthy Reagh, 9th Prince of Carbery;
- Donogh MacFineere MacCarthy Reagh;
- Dermod MacFineere MacCarthy Reagh;
- Cormac MacFineere MacCarthy Reagh,
- Ellen MacCarthy Reagh, married to James de Barry, Lord of Ibane.
Lady of Hy-Carbery
By her husband, her married name was Mac Carthaigh Riabhach and she becames the princess of Carbery from 1477 to 1506. Through her Native Irish marriage, Katherine could bring her own moveable property to her marriage. And she could acquire more, often spend it without her husband's permission and reclaim it on her widowhood.
Builder of castles
Benduff Castle,[6] was built by Katherine Fitzgerald, in 1470, probably before her marriage to Finghin Mac Carthy Regh. It passed on to Carbery's ruling family on Katherine's marriage.[7] After the rebellion of 1641, the Mac Carthy Reagh were dispossessed and the castle fell into the hands of a Quaker by the name of Apollo Morris.
This beautiful Castle situated about a mile to the north-east of Rosscarbery (Co. Cork), in the bosom of a secluded valley shut in by hills and at one time by a dense plantation of trees. It thus differed from the generality of the feudal strongholds which were either perched on a rocky eminence or surmounted the summit of some rising' ground. But the sheltered and isolated position of this castle probably protected it from external danger.
Originally a strong structure, Benduff Castle was built in the usual style of the Norman fortresses which studded Ireland during the Middle Ages, distinguished for their square central keep or tower, with thick massive walls and loop holes for the use of arms as well as the admission of light, to which were generally attached side buildings furnished with bastions, and strong outer walls enclosing the entire foundation — these latter being sometimes provided with covered ways. Benduff Castle has three internal arches; its walls 11 feet thick, with passages and recesses, and the usual stone stairway. It was originally about 70 feet high till old William Morris took the top off, and put on it a slated roof.
Dun-na-m-beann is a fort, near from Dunmanway, a small town from twelve miles west of Bandon (Co. Cork). Dr. Smith gives no account of the erection of this castle in its Natural and Civil History of Cork, where he treats with the origins of the city. This castle belonged to the clan of Mac Carthy Gleann-Chrudim, until about the year 1690 when the Morris bought back.
Book of Lismore
Like her father, she supported Irish literature and music.
Leabhar Mhic Cárthaigh Riabhaigh was probably compiled to commemorate the marriage[8] of Finghin Mac Carthy Reagh to Katherine, daughter of the 7th Earl of Desmond. The book was written in Irish, but no Irish version of spoken today. The book contains several important texts, including the new Ever-Tongue, a cosmological work, with a very important to the lives of saints including St. Bridget, St. Patrick and St. Columba, a translation of travels of Marco Polo and one of the greatest compositions of the Fenian Cycle, the Acallam na Senórach or the Conversation Old Man. Everything is embellished with illuminations. The Book of Lismore was discovered in a wall of the castle of Lismore, in 1811.
Her death
The Annals of the Four Masters say that Katherine died in 1506 at 54 of the age, one year after the death of her husband. Her eldest son, Donnell, seized the throne of Hy-Carbery after his uncle's death, some times before Katherine was dead.
" M1506.14 - Catherine, daughter of Earl of Desmond, that is to say, Thomas, son of James, Lady of Hy-Carbury, a charitable and truly hospitable woman, died. "
Notes
- ↑ In most pedigrees of Fitzgerald, her name is mentioned under her French form "Catherine" while in the Irish version, her name is Caitilin especially in the Annals of the Kingdom of Ireland.
- ↑ According by the Pedrigree of Katherine Fitzgerald, Lady of Hy-Carbery
- ↑ According by John Ashdown-Hill in his article "The Execution of Earl of Desmond", Essays & Articles, Richard III Society p.5.
- ↑ According by John Ashdown-Hill in his article "The Execution of Earl of Desmond", Essays & Articles, Richard III Society p.7.
- ↑ According by John Ashdown-Hill in his article "The Execution of Earl of Desmond", Essays & Articles, Richard III Society p.7.
- ↑ From the Irish Bean dubh that meaning "black peak", now called Castle Salem.
- ↑ According by the websites "Ireland Now ruins of Irish castles" and "Discover Ireland
- ↑ According by the Illustrated Guide of The Blackwater and Ardmore, on the p.35, Finghin Mac Carthy Reag married Katherine Fitzgerald, daughter of Thomas, Earl of Kildare by his wife, Joan Fitzgerald. But the author made a mistake about the Earl because the Earl of Kildare never had got a daughter, named Katherine.
References
- Annals of the Kingdom of Ireland by the Four Masters : Volume 5, p. 1289.
- Completed peerage of Cockayne ; Volume III, p. 85.
- The Execution of the Earl of Desmond, Essays & Articles, Richard III Society, by John Ashdown-Hill and Annette Carson. 2005, p. 5.
- The Illustrated Guide of The Blackwater and Ardmore, by William Spencer, Sixth Duke of Devonshire. 1898, p. 35.
External links
- (en) Pedrigree of Katherine Fitzgerald, Lady of Hy-Carbery.
- (en) Builder of Benduff Castle.
- (en) Irish Pedigrees: MacCarthy Reagh, Prince of Carbery (#118).
- (en) Castle Salem.
- (en) Castle Salem.