Charles Cobbe


Charles Cobbe was Archbishop of Dublin from 1743 to 1765, and as such was Primate of Ireland.

Life

Cobbe was the second son of Thomas Cobbe, of Swarraton, Winchester, Receiver General for County Southampton, by his marriage to Veriana Chaloner. He was educated at Winchester College and Trinity College, Oxford.
Charles Cobbe's maternal grandfather James Chaloner was Governor of the Isle of Man from 1658 to 1660. Following the Restoration of the monarchy, Chaloner committed suicide by taking poison at the approach of English soldiers, knowing they had orders to arrest him and to secure his castle for the king. In some sources, Charles’s father Thomas Cobbe is also given the title Governor of the Isle of Man. Charles's older brother was Colonel Richard Chaloner Cobbe.
In 1730, Charles married Dorothea Levinge, widow of Sir John Rawdon Bt, of Moira, County Down.
Dorothea had two sons by Sir John: John, later Earl of Moira; and Arthur Rawdon.
Dorothea bore two more sons by Charles Cobbe: Charles ; and Thomas.
Charles was founder of the prominent Cobbe family in Ireland, and built the ancestral home Newbridge Estate outside Dublin between 1747 and 1752.
He died at St. Sepulchre's, Dublin, on 14 April 1765, and was buried at Donabate.

Ecclesiastical career

Cobbe arrived in Ireland in August 1717 as chaplain to his cousin Charles Paulet, 2nd Duke of Bolton, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.
By January the following year he was appointed Dean of Ardagh.
In 1720, he was appointed to the Bishopric of Killala.
By 1726 he was translated to the See of Dromore, and in 1731 he was promoted to the Bishopric of Kildare and the Deanery of Christ Church.
He held this position until 10 March 1743 when he was enthroned as Archbishop of Dublin, bringing him to fourth in precedence in the government of Ireland.