Geoffrey de Marisco

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Died1245 (1246)
France
OccupationJusticiar of Ireland
Geoffrey de Marisco
Died1245 (1246)
France
OccupationJusticiar of Ireland

Geoffrey de Marisco (died 1245) was the justiciar of Ireland. He held considerable power in Ireland during the reign of King John and the early reign of Henry III. Among his activities were helping to prosecute wars against the native Irish rulers. In 1245 he was accused of treason and executed shortly thereafter.

His name, which, translated, is simply Marsh, was as common in England in the Middle Ages as the marshes from which it was derived (Monumenta Franciscana, vol. i. Pref. p. lxxvii), and the compilers of the pedigrees of the family of Mountmorres, or Montmorency, have caused much confusion by importing into their schemes the names of all persons of any note who were known by that common appellation, or by one at all like it [see under Mount-Maurice, Hervey de]. Nothing seems certain about Marisco's parentage further than that he was a nephew of John Comyn (d. 1212), archbishop of Dublin (Documents, No. 276), a fact which may account for his rise to wealth and power in Ireland; and that his mother was alive in 1220 (Royal Letters, Henry III, i. 128).

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