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Nicholas St Lawrence, 4th Baron Howth

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Died
  
1526

Parents
  
Lady Joan Beaufort

Nicholas St Lawrence, 4th Baron Howth

Cousins
  
Henry Stafford, 2nd Duke of Buckingham, Charles Somerset, 1st Earl of Worcester, Margaret Spencer

Grandparents
  
Edmund Beaufort, 2nd Duke of Somerset, Eleanor Beauchamp, Duchess of Somerset

Uncles
  
Henry Beaufort, 3rd Duke of Somerset, Edmund Beaufort, John Beaufort, Marquess of Dorset, Thomas Beaufort

Aunts
  
Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Stafford, Eleanor Beaufort, Anne Beaufort, Mary Beaufort, Elizabeth Beaufort

Similar
  
Edmund Beaufort - 2nd Duke, Eleanor Beauchamp - Duchess, Edmund Beaufort, Henry Beaufort - 3rd Duke, Henry Stafford - 2nd Duke

Nicholas St Lawrence, 4th Baron Howth (c. 1460 – 1526) was a leading Irish soldier and statesman of the early Tudor period.

Contents

Early life

He was born about 1460, eldest son of Robert St Lawrence, 3rd Baron Howth and his first wife Alice White, daughter of Nicholas White, and heiress of Killester. His stepmother Joan Beaufort was a cousin of King Henry VII, to whom Nicholas, unlike most of the Anglo-Irish nobility reminded steadfastly loyal. The date of his father's death and his own succession to the title is in dispute but it was probably no later than 1487.

Lambert Simnel

The pretender Lambert Simnel appeared in Ireland in 1487, claiming to be Edward, Earl of Warwick, nephew of Edward IV, to whom he bore a striking resemblance. (The real Earl of Warwick was kept a close prisoner in the Tower of London until his execution in 1499). Simnel gained the support of most of the Anglo-Irish nobility, notably the powerful 8th Earl of Kildare, and was crowned as "King Edward VI" at Christ Church Cathedral in Dublin 1487. Nicholas, however, no doubt mindful of his own close connection to the Tudor dynasty, warned Henry VII of the impending invasion. Following Henry's triumph at the Battle of Stoke, Nicholas was rewarded with a substantial grant of money (this was noteworthy in itself as Henry, from the very beginning of his reign, was notorious for his parsimony) and the confirmation of his right to the Lordship of Howth.

The King, however, could not resist playing a joke by inviting Howth, with ten other Irish nobles, to a banquet at Greenwich in 1489 where, to their great embarrassment, they were waited on at table by Lambert Simnel, who had been pardoned and made a kitchen boy; (he was later promoted to the office of Falconer).

Battle of Knockdoe

Despite their differences over the Simnel rebellion, Howth became a close ally of Kildare (who like Simnel had received a pardon from Henry VII), and he later challenged Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond to a duel on Kildare's account. He also quarreled with Sir James Butler, Ormonde's cousin, who predicted, wrongly, that Nicholas' stout and bullish nature would see him die by violence. Kildare and Howth fought together at the notoriously bloody Battle of Knockdoe in 1504 between the forces of the Crown and the Burkes of Connaught. Howth is credited with urging the immediate attack which resulted in a victory for the Crown's forces.

Lord Chancellor of Ireland

Lord Howth was Lord Chancellor of Ireland from 1509 to 1513. O'Flanagan suggests that his entire training had been as a soldier and that the appointment was presumably a tribute to his loyalty to the Crown, and his II to Kildare, rather than due to any legal ability. On the other hand, his uncle Walter and his brother Thomas were both distinguished lawyers and it is likely enough that Nicholas had some legal training. O'Flanagan also notes that his career as Lord Chancellor leaves no trace on the records, but that in the absence of any known complaints about his performance, he presumably fulfilled his duties adequately enough. The death of his great patron, the Earl of Kildare in 1513 meant the end of Howth's political career; he was dismissed from the Lord Chancellorship and the Council and lived in retirement until his death in 1526.

Family

Lord Howth married three times and had children by each marriage. His first wife was Genet, or Jenet Plunkett, daughter of Christopher Plunket, 2nd Baron Killeen, by his wife Elizabeth Welles, daughter of Sir William Welles, Lord Chancellor of Ireland; his second wife was Anne, daughter of Thomas Berford; and his third wife, who outlived him, was Alison Fitzsimon, sister of Walter Fitzsimon, Archbishop of Dublin, and widow of Sir Nicholas Cheevers. After Lord Howth's death, Alison made a third marriage into the Plunkett family.

He had eleven children, although it is not entirely clear which children were by which marriage- they were:

  • Christopher St Lawrence, 5th Baron Howth;
  • Amory;
  • Robert;
  • Thomas;
  • Katherine, who married Sir John Plunkett;
  • Marian, who married firstly Sir Christopher Nugent, by whom she was the mother of the 5th Baron Delvin; she married secondly Sir Gerald Fitzgerald, Knight Marshal of Ireland, and thirdly John Parker, the Master of the Rolls in Ireland;
  • Eleanor, who married Sir Walter Cheevers, (who was her stepmother Alison's son by a previous marriage);
  • Margaret, who married Sir William Darcy;
  • Elizabeth, who married Thomas Netterville, judge of the Court of Common Pleas (Ireland);
  • Alison, who married firstly John Netterville of Dowth, ancestor of the 1st Viscount Netterville and secondly Sir Patrick White, Baron of the Court of Exchequer (Ireland), by whom she had two sons and a daughter
  • Anne, who married Thomas Cusack.
  • References

    Nicholas St Lawrence, 4th Baron Howth Wikipedia