Bridget FitzGerald

Irish poet and noble woman From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bridget FitzGerald, Countess of Tyrconnell and later Viscountess Barnewall (c.1589 – 1682), was an Irish noblewoman and poet.

Bornc.1589
Died1682 (aged 90)
Spouses
  • (died 1608)
  • (m. 1619; died 1663)
IssueHugh Albert O'Donnell
Mary Stuart O'Donnell
9 others (with Nicholas Barnewall)
Quick facts Born, Died ...
Bridget FitzGerald
Countess of Tyrconnell
Bornc.1589
Died1682 (aged 90)
Spouses
  • (died 1608)
  • (m. 1619; died 1663)
IssueHugh Albert O'Donnell
Mary Stuart O'Donnell
9 others (with Nicholas Barnewall)
FatherHenry FitzGerald, 12th Earl of Kildare
MotherFrances Howard, Countess of Kildare
Close

Early life

Bridget FitzGerald was born circa 1589.[1][2] Her parents were Henry FitzGerald, 12th Earl of Kildare,[3] and Lady Frances Howard, daughter of the Earl of Nottingham. When her father died in 1597 she was sent to live with her grandmother, Mabel Browne, Countess of Kildare, in Maynooth.[4][page needed]

First marriage

Bridget's first husband, Rory O'Donnell, 1st Earl of Tyrconnell

Bridget married Rory O'Donnell either in 1604[5] or around Christmas 1606.[6] Their only son, Hugh Albert, was born around October 1606.[7] Due to increasing hostility from the English nobility,[8][6] Rory fled Ireland in September 1607 whilst Bridget was pregnant with their second child.[3][9] As Bridget was staying at her paternal grandmother's Maynooth estate at the time, far away from the point of departure in Rathmullan, she was left behind.[3] Rory was joined by about ninety people - his extended family (including Hugh Albert), the family of wartime ally Hugh O'Neill, and various followers.[9]

When Bridget learned of her husband's departure, she was expected to deliver the baby within two weeks. Rory did not intend to abandon her, assuming she would reunite with him in Continental Europe at a later time.[3] According to Rory's messenger Owen MacGrath, "[Rory's flight was not] for want of love... if [he] had known sooner of his going, he would have taken [Bridget] with him."[10] Nevertheless, nineteen-year-old Bridget was distressed[3] and furious by her husband leaving with no warning.[11]

MacGrath attempted to persuade Bridget to leave Ireland a few weeks after the flight.[10] She considered going,[12] though she eventually refused.[10] Bridget's mother, Lady Kildare, had advised her to cooperate with the English.[10][13] Bridget never saw her husband or son again.[14] Rory died in Rome on 28 July 1608.[15][6]

Second marriage and death

Bridget presented her daughter at the English court with a personal appeal to King James I. Bridget sufficiently roused the king with an emotional telling of her plight and financial troubles, and he granted Bridget a pension of £200 from Tyrconnell's escheated estates.[14] Mary was placed under the patronage of the King and Bridget was sent back to Ireland.[16] In 1609, Bridget returned to her family's estates in Kildare.[11] She raised Mary there[17][11] as a Catholic.[18][11]

On 7 July 1617[19][20] or 1619, Bridget remarried[14] to Nicholas Barnewall, 1st Viscount Barnewall from Turvey, County Dublin. They had nine children. Barnewall died in 1663, leaving five sons and four daughters.[16]

Bridget died in 1682, at the age of ninety.[21]

Poetry

She wrote in Irish, but only one of her poems has survived, a work in an elegant classical style from about 1607.[1][22][23][24][25]

Children

With Rory O'Donnell, 1st Earl of Tyrconnell:

With Nicholas Barnewall, 1st Viscount Barnewall:

  • Henry Barnewall, 2nd Viscount Barnewall (died June 1688)[19][20]

References

Further reading

See also

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