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Sir William Warren (died 1602)

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Name
  
Sir Warren


Role
  
Died 1602

Sir William Warren (died 1602)

Sir William Warren (c.1558-1602) was an Irish landowner, statesman and soldier of the late sixteenth century. He is mainly remembered now for having facilitated the controversial marriage of Hugh O'Neill, Earl of Tyrone and his third wife Mabel Bagenal, which took place at his private residence, Drumcondra Castle.

Contents

Family

Warren was the son of Captain Humphrey Warren (died 1561) and Elizabeth Clifford (died 1581). His father, a professional soldier of English birth, had come to Ireland in the service of the English Crown in about 1550 and retained the confidence of three successive monarchs. Humphrey was a close associate of Thomas Radclyffe, 3rd Earl of Sussex, Lord Deputy of Ireland 1556-1558, and he sat in the Irish House of Commons as member for Carrickfergus in the Parliament of 1559. His marriage was a most advantageous one. Elizabeth Clifford was the daughter and co-heiress of Sir Nicholas Clifford of Sutton Valence and Bobbing in Kent, and his wife Maria Harper, and the widow of Sir William Brabazon, the Vice-Treasurer of Ireland, and of Christopher Blount, a cousin of Baron Mountjoy. After Humphrey's death she made a fourth marriage to Sir John Moore. William was thus born into the heart of the Anglo-Irish nobility: he was a half-brother of Edward Brabazon, 1st Baron Ardee, and of Garret Moore, 1st Viscount Moore. His grandmother Mary Harper was the sister of Sir George Harper, a politician of some importance in the reign of Henry VIII, to whom the Harper family had a distant connection by marriage. Another powerful connection was Sir Conyers Clifford, Lord President of Connaught (died 1599), who was his second cousin on his mother's side.

William and his brother Henry continued this pattern of advantageous marriages: Henry married Alice Loftus, daughter of Adam Loftus, Archbishop of Dublin, and William, sometime after 1586, married Jenet Finglas, widow of John Bathe, Chancellor of the Irish Exchequer. Through this marriage he acquired for his lifetime possession of very substantial lands in County Dublin, and of Drumcondra Castle.

His wife's open adherence to the Roman Catholic faith caused him some trouble politically : at a time when Irish office holders were required to take the Oath of Supremacy, recognising Elizabeth I as head of the Church of Ireland, Warren was suspected, probably with good reason, of privately sharing his wife's religious beliefs. Of her first husband's children, two became Catholic priests, which inevitably raised questions about the nature of the religious upbringing they had received at home, especially as their father had also been an all but open Catholic.

William Warren and Hugh O'Neill

He was given a military command, and in April 1586 he was entrusted by the Lord Deputy of Ireland, Sir John Perrot, with the task of negotiating with Sorley Boy MacDonnell, a powerful Scottish chieftain who had challenged the authority of the English Crown by establishing a political presence in County Antrim. Sorley had been on friendly terms with William's father Humphrey in the late 1550s, and William succeeded in persuading him to make terms with the Crown. William asked repeatedly to be made Governor of Carrickfergus, but without success. Like his half brother Garrett, Lord Moore, he became a close friend and ally of Hugh O'Neill.

O'Neill and Mabel Bagenal

O'Neill's third marriage in August 1591 to Mabel, daughter of Sir Nicholas Bagenal, Knight Marshal of Ireland, is one of the most romanticised episodes in Irish history: Mabel has been called "the Helen of Troy of Elizabethan Ireland". Whether it was a genuine love marriage (as suggested in the play Making History by Brian Friel) or whether it was simply an effort by O'Neill to form an alliance with Mabel's powerful family is debatable. What is clear is the central role which Warren and his wife played in the marriage. Mabel, who had been living with her sister Mary and Mary's husband Patrick Barnewall at Turvey House, appeared at Drumcondra Castle, about six miles from Turvey, where she was quickly followed by O'Neill.

According to the detailed version of the episode given by Seán Ó Faoláin in his biography of O'Neill, Warren himself visited Turvey House to pay a call on Mabel, and pretended to "kidnap" her (in fact with her consent and connivance)and then rode to Drumcondra, where they were joined by O'Neill. Since Mabel wished to be married in a Protestant ceremony, the marriage was celebrated in Drumcondra Castle by Thomas Jones, Bishop of Meath, and future Archbishop of Dublin, although the Bishop, by his own account, acted with great reluctance, and only to save Mabel's good name. The wedding was followed by five days of feasting, after which the newlyweds departed for O'Neill's home at Dungannon. Warren is said to have been a regular visitor to O'Neill's house in the following months, and to have accompanied him several times to Mass. These stories, whether true or false, can only have increased suspicions about his loyalty to the Crown.

Nine Years' War

The outbreak of the Nine Years' War, one of the most serious Irish rebellions against English rule, in which Hugh O'Neill was the overall commander on the Irish side, placed Warren in a very difficult position. Despite his English parentage and powerful Anglo-Irish family connections, his closeness to the "Arch-Rebel" O'Neill, and the long held suspicion that he was secretly a Roman Catholic, inevitably raised serious questions about his own loyalties, although he maintained that he was prepared to fight against O'Neill, and also to persuade him to come to terms. By 1596 Warren's loyalty was so suspect that, despite being seriously ill, he was summoned to a hearing before the Irish Privy Council where he was reprimanded and threatened with imprisonment, although the threat was not carried out.

Later years

Warren's fortunes improved during the Deputyship of Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex: Warren was in high favor with Essex, whom he entertained at Drumcondra Castle. After the downfall of Essex, Warren was quick to ingratiate himself with the rising power at the English Court, Robert Cecil, 1st Earl of Salisbury. Through Cecil's favor he at last obtained the Governorship of Carrickfergus, but died soon afterwards.

His marriage seems to have been childless, and at his death possession of his lands reverted to the Bathe family. His widow Jenet remarried Terence O'Dempsey, 1st Viscount Clanmalier. She died in 1627.

  • Hugh O'Neill, Earl of Tyrone
  • Making History
  • References

    Sir William Warren (died 1602) Wikipedia