Historical records matching Theobald Taaffe, 1st Earl of Carlingford
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About Theobald Taaffe, 1st Earl of Carlingford
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theobald_Taaffe_1st_Earl_of_Carlingford
Theobald Taaffe, 1st Earl of Carlingford (c. 1603 – 31 December 1677), known as 2nd Viscount Taaffe, of Corren and 2nd Baron of Ballymote between 1642 and 1661, was a Royalist officer who played a prominent part in the Wars of the Three Kingdoms, and accompanied Charles II in exile. Following the Restoration, he was created 1st Earl of Carlingford.
Biography
Sir John Taaffe, 1st Viscount Taaffe of Corren, left fifteen children, of whom the eldest was Theobald.
Theobald Taaffe was appointed to lead the Irish Munster army by Donagh MacCarthy, Viscount Muskerry in 1647. He was not an impressive commander, failing to prevent the sack of Cashel and then leading the Munster army to defeat at the battle of Knocknanauss in 1647. He had an antiquated sense of chivalry - before Knocknanuss he suggested to Baron Inchiquin, the enemy general, that the battle should be decided by 1000 hand picked men from each side. Inchiquin's reply was sarcastic: you have performed as much as I desire in bringing your army hither, I shall not desire you to loose any advantage you have in numbers of men, being your offer was only made for recreation.
As fate would have it, Taaffe and Inchiquin fought on the same side at the Battle of Arklow two years later. Unfortunately for Taaffe, Inchiquin lost this time.
With the defeat of the Royalist cause in Ireland, Taaffe went into exile with Charles II. He was one of the ten named in Act for the Settlement of Ireland 1652 as leaders of the Royalist forces in Ireland.
Following the Restoration, he was created Earl of Carlingford.
He was sent on missions to the Duke of Lorraine and to the Holy Roman Emperor, by which was established the connection of his family with the house of Habsburg and Lorraine, which continued to the end of the Habsburg monarchy.
He was married twice, firstly to Mary White, by whom he had a son, The Hon. John Taaffe, who married Rose Lambart, and secondly to Anne Pershall, without issue. He also had a daughter by Lucy Walter named Mary Crofts (The Hague, 1651–1693), whose father some sources claim to have been Theobald Taaffe, 1st Earl of Carlingford and others Henry Bennet, 1st Earl of Arlington, married firstly William Sarsfield and had female issue, and married secondly William Fanshawe (b. The Hague, May 1651), and had issue.
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From the British Civil War (BCW) Project:
http://bcw-project.org/biography/theobald-viscount-taaffe
Theobald Taaffe, 2nd Viscount Taaffe, d.1677
Commander of the Confederate army of Munster defeated at the battle of Knocknanuss by Lord Inchiquin in 1647.
The son of John Taaffe, first Viscount Taaffe of Corren, Theobald sat as MP for County Sligo in the Irish Parliament of 1639 and succeeded as second Viscount Taaffe upon the death of his father in 1642. After fighting for King Charles I during the English Civil War, he returned to Ireland in 1643 to attend the Confederate Assembly at Kilkenny and was appointed commander of the Confederate army of Connacht in 1644. Taaffe captured several government garrisons but his refusal to take the Confederate Oath of Association led to doubts regarding his loyalty and he was replaced as commander in Connacht.
Taaffe supported the Marquis of Ormond in his attempts to negotiate a treaty between the Confederates and the Royalists against Parliament. He accompanied Ormond when he tried to proclaim the First Ormond Peace during the summer of 1646, but the treaty was rejected by Archbishop Rinuccini and his supporters. Taaffe and other former Ormondists came over to the Confederates after Ormond surrendered Dublin to Parliamentarian forces and left Ireland in June 1647.
Supported by Viscount Muskerry, Taaffe was appointed commander of the Confederate army of Munster against Rinuccini's wishes. Muskerry and the Ormondist faction on the Supreme Council intended to keep the Munster army intact in order to safeguard their interests but in September 1647, Lord Inchiquin stormed and sacked the Rock of Cashel, desecrated the cathedral of St Patrick, and raided the town of Callan, only ten miles from the Confederate capital Kilkenny. Fearing that Inchiquin might join forces with the Dublin Parliamentarians for a combined attack on Kilkenny, the Supreme Council ordered Taaffe to bring Inchiquin's army to battle, resulting in the disastrous Confederate defeat at the battle of Knocknanuss on 13 November 1647.
In 1648, Ormond returned to Ireland and negotiated the Second Ormond Peace, which secured an alliance of Royalists, Confederates and Scots against the English Parliamentarians. Taaffe held a relatively insignificant post as commander of artillery in Ormond's army, which was defeated at Rathmines in August 1649. The following year, with Cromwell's forces advancing through Ireland, Ormond sent Taaffe to negotiate with Charles III, Duke of Lorraine, for money and supplies, but the negotiations came to nothing.
Under the terms for the Cromwellian settlement of Ireland, Taaffe was excepted from pardon and his estates confiscated by the English. However, he was reinstated at the Restoration and granted additional estates in counties Louth and Tyrone that had belonged to kinsmen implicated in the 1641 uprising. In June 1661, he was created Earl of Carlingford in the Irish peerage. Charles II sent him on a diplomatic mission to the Hapsburg Emperor Leopold and the prince-bishop of Munster in 1665 to solicit their co-operation against the Netherlands. This was his final public appointment. He died in December 1677 and was succeeded as second Earl of Carlingford by his third son Nicholas.
Sources:
- J.G. Alger, Theobald Taaffe, second viscount Taaffe and first earl of Carlingford, DNB 1898
- Pádraig Lenihan, Theobald Taaffe, first earl of Carlingford, Oxford DNB, 2004
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Theobald Taaffe, 1st Earl of Carlingford's Timeline
1603 |
1603
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1639 |
1639
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Ballymote, Sligo, County Sligo, Ireland
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1677 |
December 31, 1677
Age 74
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