Mary Butler, Duchess of Ormonde


Mary Butler, Duchess of Ormonde was the second wife of James Butler, 2nd Duke of Ormonde.
The duke's first wife, Lady Anne Hyde, daughter of Viscount Hyde of Kenilworth, died in January 1685, leaving one daughter. Lady Mary Butler, who died in infancy. At the time of his second marriage, he was still styled Earl of Ossory.
Lady Mary Somerset was the daughter of the Duke of Beaufort and his wife, the former Mary Capel. She married the duke on 3 August 1685 at St. Michael's Church, Great Badminton, Gloucestershire, the same church where her mother and several Dukes of Beaufort are buried.
In 1688, on the death of his grandfather, the earl succeeded to the dukedom. His wife then became a duchess.
The duke and duchess had a son and two daughters:
In 1702, the duchess became a Lady of the Bedchamber to the new monarch, Queen Anne of Great Britain. A portrait of her with her son, the Earl of Ossory, was painted by Sir Godfrey Kneller
In 1715, because of his support for the Jacobite rising of 1715, her husband's titles were forfeited and he was obliged to go into exile. It was eventually ruled that the attainder enacted by the Parliament, applied only to his titles in the Peerages of England and Scotland, not to his Irish titles, which were later restored on behalf of his brother, Charles Butler, 1st Earl of Arran.
The duchess is thought not to have had any contact with her husband during his long exile. Nevertheless, along with the duke and their son and daughters, the duchess was buried in the family vault at Westminster Abbey.