Henry Talbot (landowner)


Sir Henry Talbot was a seventeenth-century Irish landowner and brother-in-law of Tyrconnell.
The Talbot family were part of the Old English community of The Pale which had remained Roman Catholic after the Irish Reformation. He possessed estates at Mount Talbot and Templeogue in County Dublin. His father was Robert Talbot of Templeogue, who married Eleanor, a daughter of Henry Colley, of Carbury Castle, County Kildare and his wife Catherine Cusack.
Following the Restoration of Charles II, he was accused of treasonous participation in the Irish Confederate Wars of the 1640s. However he was acquitted after being found to be an "innocent Papist", allowing him to recover his estates which had been confiscated by the English Republic during the Cromwell era.

Family tree


Henry.


Marriage and children

He married Margaret, the daughter of Sir William Talbot, 1st Baronet of Carton, County Kildare and his wife Alison Netterville, and became the brother-in-law of Richard Talbot, 1st Earl of Tyrconnell, an influential figure at Court who assisted in demonstrating his innocence.
  1. William, who became a colonel in the Irish army and was killed at the Siege of Derry;
  2. James, who became a colonel in the Irish army and was killed at the Battle of Aughrim;
  3. Elizabeth, who married John Talbot, a landowner in County Dublin;
  4. Mary, who married Theobald Dillon, 7th Viscount Dillon.
Two of his sons, William Talbot and James Talbot, served as Colonels in the Jacobite Irish Army during the War of the Two Kings. They were killed at the Siege of Derry and the Battle of Aughrim respectively. Of his daughters, Elizabeth married the County Dublin landowner John Talbot, who was also an active Jacobite; and Mary married Theobald Dillon, 7th Viscount Dillon.