Maurice Roche, 8th Viscount Fermoy (1597–1670) was an magnate and soldier in southern Ireland, and a politician of the Irish Catholic Confederation. He joined the rebels in the Irish Rebellion of 1641 in January 1642, early for Munster, by besieging Richard Boyle, 1st Earl of Cork, a Protestant, in Youghal. He fought for the Confederates in the Irish Confederate Wars and sat on three of their Supreme Councils. He fought against the Parliamentarians in the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland and was excluded from pardon at the surrender in 1652. At the restoration of the monarchy in 1660 he recovered his title but not his lands.
Birth and origins
Family tree
Maurice Roche with wife, parents, and other selected relatives.[a]
He succeeded his father as the 8th Viscount Fermoy on 22 March 1635.[16] He is also counted as 3rd Viscount.[17] Lord Fermoy took his seat in the House of Lords of the Parliament 1640–1649 on 26 October 1640.[18][19]
When the insurgents organized themselves in the Irish Catholic Confederation, Fermoy was elected a member of the first Supreme Council, sitting from November 1642 to May 1643;[34] and was re-elected for the second Supreme Council sitting from May 1643 to November 1643.[35]
He then lost influence but made a come back in the seventh Supreme Council.[36]
Later life
Fermoy was excluded from pardon of life and estate in the Commonwealth's Act of Settlement on 12 August and therefore lost his estates.[37]
^This family tree is based on genealogies of the Viscounts of Fermoy,[1] and the earls of Clancarty.[2] Also see the lists of siblings and children in the text.
^Muskerry changed sides on Ash Wednesday 1642.[25] Calculations with the Easter Calculator of the University of Utrecht or that of the IMCCE show that Ash Wednesday fell on 2 March in 1642.
^Cokayne 1926, p. 299, line 15. "VII. 1600. 7. David (Roche), Viscount Roche of Fermoy [I. [Ireland] ], only surv. [surviving] s. [son] and h. [heir] by his 1st wife."
^Burke 1866, p. 454. "The family of Roche was established in Ireland by Adam de Rupe of Roch Castle, co. Pembrokeshire, who accompanied Robert FitzStephen to that country in 1196."
^Dunlop & Cunningham 2004, p. 460, left column. "Roche married, before 1593, Joan daughter of James FitzRichard Barry, Viscount Buttevant, and his wife, Ellen MacCarthy Reagh."
^Furnivall 1896, p. 126. "Nat longe ther aftyr, come into Irland Richard de Cogan, Miles brother, wyth fair meygne from the kynge I-sent; & ther-aftyr yn the begynnyge of Marce come Phylype de barry, a man ..."
^Burke 1866, p. 443, left column. "Richard le Poer ... d. [died] 2 August, 1607, having had issue, I. John (Oge) his heir who d.v.p. [predeceased his father] ..."
^Cokayne 1926, p. 300. "9. David (Roche), Viscount Roche of Fermoy [I.], s. and h., in 1650 'had a good party in the West of Ireland' in the Rom. Cath. interest. He d. unm., 1681, in London."
^ abBurke 1866, p. 456, left column, line 10. "David Roche, Viscount Fermoy, a naval officer, was drowned near Plymouth, in the great storm of 1703, and dying unm. [unmarried] was s. [succeeded] by his nephew "
^ abDunlop 1897, p. 68, left column, bottom. "He died in the odour of loyalty at Castletown Roche on 22 March, 1635, and was buried on 12 April at the Abbey, Bridgetown."
^Ó Siochrú 2009, Beginning. "Roche, Maurice (1597–1670), 3rd Viscount Fermoy, politician, was son and heir of David Roche (qv) and Joan, daughter of James FitzRichard, Viscount Buttevant."
^House of Lords 1779, p. 136, left column. "Die lunae, 26o Octobris 1640o ... Maurice Viscount Fermoy is brought in, and placed by his proxy, the earl of Ormond ..."
^Morrill 1991, p. 8. "Yet there never has been any agreement amongst historians about what to call the crisis in England in the 1640s. Contemporaries in England saw it as 'The Troubles' or 'The Great Civil War'" or as the 'Great Rebellion'; while contemporaries in Scotland saw it as the 'Wars of the Covenant' and contemporaries in Ireland as the 'War of the Three Kingdoms'.
^Pocock 1996, p. 172. "Irish historians ... object, or so I have been told, to the term 'the British Isles' for reasons with which I can sympathise."
^Dunlop 1895, p. 205. "In accordance with the final arrangements for the rebellion, Sir Phelim on the evening of 22 Oct. surprised Charlemont Castle ..."
^Townshend 1904, pp. 100–101. "... in the beginning of January [1642] Youghal had surrendered to the Irish under Lord Roche and General Barry. ... My Lord [Cork] had some small notice of their coming, and therefore got with all his men into the castle ..."
^Townshend 1904, p. 101–102. "... Lord Cork's sons-in-law, the Earls of Kildare and Barrymore, ... were under arms with 4,000 men ... These marched in good order and better resolution ..."
^McGrath 1997a, p. 203, line 20. "He declared for his co-religionists on Ash Wednesday 1642 ..."
^M'Enery 1904, p. 172. "Lord Muskerry joined the insurgents early in March [1642]."
^Ohlmeyer 2004, p. 107, left column, line 31. "Donough's mother died in or before 1599 when his father married as his second wife Ellen (d. [died] in or after 1610), widow of Donnell MacCarthy Reagh and daughter of David Roch, seventh Viscount Fermoy."
^McGrath 1997b, p. 266, line 6. "In April 1642 he [St Leger] was besieged in Cork by Theobald Purcell, Richard Butler, and Lords Roche, Ikerrin, Dunboyne and Muskerry."
^Bagwell 1909, p. 3. "... besieged in Cork 'by a vast body of enemy lying within four miles of the town, under my Lord of Muskerry, O'Sullivan Roe, MacCarthy Reagh, and all the western gentry ...' "
^M'Enery 1904, p. 163, penultimate line. "The principal men among the besiegers were General Gerald Barry, Patrick Pursell of Croagh, County Limerick, lord Roche, lord Muskerry ..."
^Meehan 1882, p. 28, line 11. "The inhabitants ... opened their gates to the confederates ..."
^Adams 1904, p. 255. "... capitulated on the 21st of June [1642]. Lord Muskerry took possession the next day."
^ abCregan 1995, p. 510 top. "First Supreme Council, 11 November 1642 – May 1643 ... Viscount Roche ..."
^Cregan 1995, p. 510 middle. "Second Supreme Council, May 1643 – November 1643 ... Viscount Roche ..."
^Cregan 1995, p. 511 lower. "Seventh Supreme Council, 17 September 1646 – 17 March 1647 ... Viscount Roche ..."
^Firth & Rait 1911, p. 599. "That James Butler Earl of Ormond, James Touchet Earl of Castlehaven, Ullick Bourk Earl of Clanrickard, Christopher Plunket Earl of Fingal, James Dillon Earl of Roscomon, Richard Nugent Earl of Westmeath, Morrogh O Brien Baron of Inchiquin, Donogh Mac Carthy Viscount Muskerry, Theobald Taaff, Viscount Taaff of Corren, Richard Butler Viscount Mountgarret, Roch Viscount Fernjoy ... be excepted from pardon for Life and Estate."
^Ó Siochrú 2009, Last paragraph, penultimate sentence. "After the restoration of Charles II in 1660, Fermoy petitioned in vain for the return of his estates."
^ abÓ Siochrú 2009, Last paragraph, last sentence. "He [Fermoy] died in relative poverty in 1670 and was succeeded by his son and heir David."
^Joyce 1903, p. 172. "On the 23d of September, 1601, a Spanish fleet entered the harbour of Kinsale with 3,400 troops ... "
^Warner 1768, p. 6. "... the twenty-third October [1641] ... seized all the towns, castles, and houses belonging to the Protestants which they had force enough to possess;"
^Townshend 1904, pp. 100–102. "... in the beginning of January [1642] Youghal had surrendered to the Irish under Lord Roche and General Barry. ... My Lord [Cork] had some small notice of their coming, and therefore got with all his men into the castle ..."
^O'Sullivan 1983, p. 278. "... the San Pietro, the vessel which had brought him to Ireland and on which he now proposed to depart ... on the morning of the 23rd February 1649, Rinuccini quitted 'the place of his refuge' and went on board."
^Coffey 1914, p. 213. "Cromwell landed in Dublin on August 15th [1649]."
McGrath, Brid (1997a). "Donough Mc Carthy, (1594–1665) Cork County". A Biographical Dictionary of the Membership of the Irish House of Commons 1640 to 1641 (Ph.D.). Vol. 1. Dublin: Trinity College. pp. 203–204. hdl:2262/77206. – Parliaments & Biographies (PDF downloadable from given URL)
McGrath, Brid (1997b). "William St. Leger (c1580–1642) Cork County". A Biographical Dictionary of the Membership of the Irish House of Commons 1640 to 1641 (Ph.D.). Vol. 1. Dublin: Trinity College. pp. 265–266. hdl:2262/77206. – Parliaments & Biographies (PDF downloadable from given URL)