Baron Trimlestown

Baron Trimlestown, of Trimlestown in County Meath, is a title in the Peerage of Ireland.

Barnewall, Barons Trimlestown crest.[1]

History

The title was created in 1461 for Sir Robert Barnewall, who was the younger brother of Nicholas Barnewall, Chief Justice of the Irish Common Pleas, and younger son of Sir Christopher Bernevall, Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench in Ireland. He married Elizabeth le Brun, the heiress of Roebuck Castle in South Dublin. He was succeeded by his son Christopher, the second Baron. Christopher was implicated in the Lambert Simnel conspiracy, but received a royal pardon in 1488. His son John, the third Baron, served as Lord Chancellor of Ireland from 1534 until his death in 1538. The tenth baron, Matthias Barnewall, was attainded in 1691 for supporting the Jacobite cause, but his brother successfully recovered the title and family estate.[2]

The barony became dormant on the death of the sixteenth Baron, in 1879. In 1891 the peerage was claimed by Christopher Patrick Mary Barnewall (de jure 17th Baron Trimlestown), a descendant of Hon. Patrick Barnewall, second son of the seventh Baron. He died before he had fully established his claim, but in 1893 his younger brother Charles Aloysius Barnewall was confirmed in the title by the Committee for Privileges of the House of Lords. As of 2013 the title is held by the grandson of the successful claimant, the twenty-first Baron, who succeeded his elder brother in 1997.

There is no known heir to the barony so on the death of the current holder, it will become dormant until either extinction is proven or an heir is found.

The Viscounts Barnewall were members of another branch of the Barnewall family and a third branch were the Barnewall baronets of Crickstown.

Barons Trimlestown (1461)

Barnewall escutcheon

There is no known heir to the barony.

The grave of Charles Aloysius Barnewall, 19th Baron Trimlestown at St Mary Magdalen Roman Catholic Church, Mortlake in December 2021

See also

References

  1. Courthope, William. (1839). Debrett's Complete Peerage of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland &c (22 ed.). London: J. G. & F. Rivington. p. 656.
  2. John Burke, 'Barnewall' in A General and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerage and Baronetage of the British Empire (Henry Colburn, 1838), p.972.
  3. "Lord Trimlestown", The Gentleman's Magazine, Vol. XII (new series), December 1839, p. 648.
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