Cross Tipperary

Cross Tipperary, formally the County of the Cross of Tipperary, was an Irish county comprising those lands within County Tipperary which were excluded from the "County of the Liberty of Tipperary", the county palatine under the jurisdiction of the Earl of Ormond. Cross Tipperary existed from the granting of the liberty in 1328 till its revocation in 1621, and was explicitly abolished in 1715.

Creation

After the Norman invasion of Ireland, only the most securely controlled areas on the east and south coast were shired into "royal counties", with sheriffs answerable to the chief governor based in Dublin. Areas impractical of full control were granted to magnates as "liberties" or "palatine counties", with seneschals appointed by the local overlord. The "crosslands" owned by the church (whether the diocese or a religious order) were exempted from each such grant and remained under royal jurisdiction. Tipperary was a royal county in the 13th century, but the English Lordship of Ireland's control loosened after Edward Bruce's campaign of 1315–18. Control of Tipperary was tenuous and so the liberty was granted to James Butler, 1st Earl of Ormond in 1328. The excluded crosslands became a separate county.[1] They included the town of Cashel, seat of the Archbishop of Cashel, and scattered other crosslands.

Each of the other liberties was either forfeited or merged in the Crown, such that its territory was combined with the corresponding County of the Cross and established as a single royal county. Thus, eventually, only Cross Tipperary remained as an anomaly.

Crosslands

Only those lands in church ownership at the time of the 1328 grant were part of the county of the cross; lands acquired by the church subsequently were not added to it, and lands ceded by the church remained part of it. This was most notable after the Dissolution of the monasteries instigated by Henry VIII. The Irish Manuscripts Commission's report on Down Survey of the 1650s states, 'To establish the identity "of the lands of Abbeys and houses of religion within the precincts of Cross Tipperary" would be a considerable undertaking'.[2] A 1600 list of freeholders in Cross Tipperary included holders of land in the baronies of Middle Third, Clanwilliam, Slievardagh, and Eliogarty, and the town of Clonmel.[3] A county jury of Cross Tipperary in 1606 had members from Fethard, Ballyclerahan, Lattin, and elsewhere.[4] Heffernan's partial list of crossland locations names Tipperary town, Cahir, Emly, Holy Cross Abbey, Athassel, Inislounaght, Moorestown Kirk, Cregstown, and Mollough.[5]

Dough Arra

At the county assizes in Cashel in 1606, Sir Nicholas Walsh , Chief Justice of the Irish Common Pleas, by special commission established the barony of Dough Arra, at the junction of counties Tipperary, Clare, and Limerick, and added it to Cross Tipperary.[4][6] Dough Arra had previously been the unshired túath of the O'Brien-Arra sept. It was later merged with part of Uaithne (Owney) to form the modern barony of Owney and Arra.

Parliamentary representation

Cross Tipperary was a separate county constituency from Tipperary in the Irish House of Commons, although not every parliament returned members for both constituencies.[7] The earliest record of members from Cross Tipperary dates from 1374.[2][8]

MPs for Cross Tipperary[7]
ParliamentMPsResidence
1585Richmond Archbold
Edmund PrendergastNewcastle
1613Edmond ButlerCloghowly
Thomas LaffanCregstowne
1634Sir Thomas GeoghClonmel
Geffrey MocklerDracoasland (probably Acarandraky, aka Drake's Acre, parish of Moorestownkirk in Middle Third[2])

Hugh Kearney suggests that Cross Tipperary's lack of representation in the 1639 parliament was a consequence of Thomas Wentworth's opposition to Catholic MPs.[9]

Extinction

In 1621, Walter Butler, 11th Earl of Ormond forfeited the liberty by Quo Warranto.[4] In 1662, after the Restoration, James Butler, 1st Duke of Ormonde was again granted palatine jurisdiction, this time including all the lands formerly in Cross Tipperary as well as those of the earlier grant.[4] The letters patent making the grant stated that upon the 1621 seizure "the barony of Owny and Arra and divers other towns, villages, and townlands, scattered through the various baronies of the County Tipperary, and called the County of the Cross of Tipperary, were annexed to the County of Tipperary, and made part and parcel of the said County".[4] This was despite the fact that Cross Tipperary returned MPs to the 1634 parliament.[7]

James Butler, 2nd Duke of Ormonde took the losing Jacobite side in the 1715 rising and was attainted by a 1715 Act of the Irish Parliament.[4][10] The act's long title begins "An Act for extinguishing the Regalities and Liberties of the County of Tipperary, and Cross Tipperary, commonly called the County Palatine of Tipperary".[10] Section 2 stated:[10]

And it is hereby enacted and declared, That whatsoever has been denominated or called Tipperary, or Cross Tipperary, shall henceforth be and remain one county for ever, under the name of the county of Tipperary.

References

  • Empey, C. A. (1970). "The County of the Cross of Tipperary" (PDF). The Butler lordship in Ireland (PhD). Dublin, Ireland: Trinity College Dublin Department of History. pp. 394–425. Retrieved 27 February 2019.
  • Empey, C. A. (1985). "The Norman period, 1185–1500". In Nolan, William; McGrath, Thomas G. (eds.). Tipperary: History and Society : Interdisciplinary Essays on the History of an Irish County. Dublin: Geography Publications. pp. 71–92. ISBN 9780906602034.
  • Falkiner, Caesar Litton (1904). "The Counties of Ireland". Illustrations of Irish history and topography: mainly of the seventeenth century. Longmans, Green. pp. 108–142. Retrieved 14 August 2011.

Notes

  1. Falkiner 1904, pp.133–4
  2. Simington, Robert C. (1931). "Introduction". County of Tipperary. Western and northern baronies, with the return of crown and church lands for the whole county. The Civil Survey, A.D. 1654–1656. 2. Stationery Office for the Irish Manuscripts Commission. pp. xxv–xxvii. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
  3. Brewer, J.S.; Bullen, William (1869). Calendar of the Carew Manuscripts: 1589-1600. Longmans, Green, Reader, & Dyer. pp. 480–481.
  4. Deputy keeper of the public records in Ireland (26 April 1873). "Appendix 3: Extract from Report of the Assistant Deputy Keeper on the Records of the Court of Record of the County Palatine of Tipperary". Fifth Report. C. 760. HMSO. pp. 32–37. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
  5. Heffernan, Patrick (1940). The Heffernans and their times: a study in Irish history. J. Clarke. p. 33. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
  6. Falkiner 1904, pp.141–2
  7. "Part II; Parliaments of Ireland, 1559–1695; Tipperary". Return of the name of every member of the lower house of parliament of England, Scotland, and Ireland, with name of constituency represented, and date of return, from 1213 to 1874. Command papers. C.69-I. HMSO. 1878. p. 632. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  8. Martin, Robert Montgomery (1843). Ireland Before and After the Union with Great Britain. W. S. Orr and Company. p. 9.
  9. Kearney, Hugh F. (1989). Strafford in Ireland 1633-1641: A Study in Absolutism. Cambridge University Press. p. 242. ISBN 9780521378222.
  10. Ireland (1794). "2 George I c.8". Statutes Passed in the Parliaments Held in Ireland. III: 1715–1733. Printed by George Grierson, printer to the King's Most Excellent Majesty. pp. 5–11. Retrieved 14 August 2011.

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