Arms: Quarterly, 1st & 4th, argent a chevron gules between three serpents proper, Cotter; 2nd and 3rd, azure, a fesse between a fleur-de-lis in chief and a mullet in base or, Rogerson. Crest:-A dexter arm embowed, armed and grasping a dart, all proper.
The eighth Baronet (the current holder of the title) is the seventh Baronet's only son, Sir Julius Cotter
.[16] He succeeded his father as the eighth Baronet of Rockforest on 11 January 2023.[17] He was educated at Allhallows College, Rousden and the University of East London (BA).[18] Cotter worked as an Assistant Director from 1999 to 2009, and has been an actor since 2010.[19][20]
Seats: Anngrove, Rockforest
Sir James Fitz Edmond Cotter (Irish: Séamus Buidhe Mac Coitir or Séamus Mac Éamonn Mhic Coitir; c.1630–1705), knight and grandfather of the first Baronet of Rockforest, was one of the most prominent Catholic landlords in Ireland especially in County Cork. Born around 1630, the second son of Edmond Fitz Garrett Cotter of Anngrove and Elizabeth Connell of Barryscourt, he was knighted in 1685, and died in 1705.
James Cotter was an intimate of James II and probably served at sea with the King when he was still the Duke of York, in the war against the Dutch of 1665. King James II is reported to have familiarly referred to Cotter as "Shaymus Bwee," Séamus Buidhe in Irish. James Cotter is believed to have been knighted by King James in 1685 following the Battle of Sedgemoor. Sir James Cotter was Commander-in-Chief of King James II's forces in Cork, Limerick and Kerry and was a great ally to the House of Stuart. He lived at Ballinsperig, later to be known as Anngrove. When King James II landed in Kinsale in March 1689, he went to Annegrove and stayed there with Sir James. King James II promised Cotter an elevation to the peerage as a Marquess[21] but following the surrender of the Jacobite forces under the Treaty of Limerick in 1691, the King returned to France where he spent the rest of his life in exile and his promise to Cotter of a Marquessate could therefore not be kept.
Although a Jacobite, Sir James was politically astute having the support of his Protestant neighbours which allowed him to retain his property and lands. He was heralded by many poets in Ireland as one of the few Catholic landowners.[22][23]
Rockforest then became the family's seat from the mid 18th century. Wilson, writing in 1786, describes it as "a most beautiful improvement, highly wooded, situated on the Blackwater, the seat of Sir James Laurence Cotter". The main section of the house and wings, built by Sir James, dates to the early Georgian period (his grandfather was granted the lands in 1652). This design incorporated an earlier house built during the reign of Elizabeth I which had been built by the original owners the Roches, Barons of Fermoy.
In 1837, in A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland, Samuel Lewis describes Rockforest thus: 'Rockforest the handsome mansion of Sir J. L. Cotter, Bart., is beautifully situated on a rising ground between the Black-water and the Lavally mountain, in an extensive and richly wooded demesne, bounded on the north by the river, which sweeps bodly under the rock or Carrig, the woods and castellated tower on the summit of the rock forming a most picturesque and interesting scene.'[24] It was here that the very rare form of quartz Cotterite was discovered by Grace Elizabeth Cotter (1830–79), first-born daughter of Reverend George Edward Cotter (third son of the second Baronet of Rockforest).[25][26]
Rockforest was eventually sold in 1916, by the fifth Baronet. The then auction sales brochure called it to the attention of "Noblemen, Hunting Men, Capitalists and Others" and describes the house thus, "this stately Mansion, which is in perfect structural and decorative repair, occupies a commanding situation on an eminence richly timbered, and affords delightful and varied views in the midst of charming scenary on the River Blackwater". It continues, " ... justly enjoying the reputation as the most Desirable and Beautiful Residential Property on the fertile banks of the Irish Rhine".
Cotter was educated at Allhallows College, Rousden, and the University of East London where he graduated with a BA Honours Degree in Fine Art and Film Theory.[32]
He worked as gallery assistant at the Michael Parkin Fine Art gallery in Belgravia, London (before its closure in 1999), cataloguing and hanging shows, and later as an Assistant Director for various Production Companies in Spain making commercials, documentaries and television series.[33]
Since 2010 Cotter has been an actor working in film and television.[34]
He is known for the roles of Doisdado in the Prime Video series Operación Marea Negra / Silent Cargo (2023–2024), Mr. Anderson in the Netflix series Vivir Sin Permiso / Unauthorized Living (2020) and as Hugh Fleming in the series La Verdad (2018), also on Prime Video. He is credited as Julius Cotter.[35] Cotter has lived most of his life between England and Spain and speaks fluent Castillian Spanish.
On 11 January 2023 he succeeded his father as the 8th Baronet of Rockforest (1763).[36]