John Nangle, 16th Baron of Navan


John Nangle, 16th Baron of Navan ) was an Irish nobleman of the early Tudor era. He was renowned in his own lifetime as a courageous soldier, who fought with distinction at the Battle of Knockdoe.

Family

He was the son of Thomas Nangle, 15th Baron of Navan: his mother was Ismay Welles, daughter of Sir William Welles, Lord Chancellor of Ireland, and his wife Anne Barnewall.
The Nangle family had come to Ireland around 1172 and became substantial landowners in County Meath, although it has been said that most of them played a "curiously obscure" role in Irish history. The Baron of Navan was a feudal baron: that is, he was entitled to style himself a Baron but he was not a and did not have the right to sit in the Irish House of Lords. The date of Thomas's death is uncertain, but John had succeeded to the title by 1487.

Lambert Simnel

Like almost all of the Anglo-Irish nobility, Lord Navan appears to have followed without question the policies pursued by Gerald FitzGerald, 8th Earl of Kildare, who dominated Irish political life between the late 1470s and his death in 1513. Along with nearly all the Irish nobility, Lord Navan joined with Kildare in 1487 in declaring that the pretender Lambert Simnel was the rightful King of England. Simnel was crowned in Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin and invaded England with a largely Irish army, but was crushed at the Battle of Stoke Field. The victorious King Henry VII showed remarkable clemency by pardoning almost all of the surviving rebels, including Navan, as well as Simnel himself, who was given a job in the royal household. In 1488 Sir Richard Edgcumbe accepted Navan's pledge of homage and fealty to King Henry.
Lambert Simnel in Ireland.

Battle of Knockdoe

Lord Navan remained a loyal supporter of the Earl of Kildare and fought under his command against the Burkes of Clanricarde at the Battle of Knockdoe in 1504. Navan was highly praised for his courage in the fight. According to the account of the battle in the Book of Howth:
MacSweeney struck Darcy such a blow that he put Darcy on his knee: that Nangle, Baron of Navan, being a lusty gentleman, that day gave MacSweeney such payment that he was satisfied ever after.

Marriage and issue

Navan's date of death is not recorded, but it must have been before 1508 when a deed refers to his widow as having remarried. She was Eleanor, daughter of Sir Thomas Dowdall of Newtown; her second husband was William Preston, 2nd Viscount Gormanston. Their tomb in the Preston chapel at St. Patrick's Church, Stamullen, with their images carved in effigy, still exists, although the church itself has been in a ruinous condition since the seventeenth century. She and Navan had at least 2 children: