On 26 May 1544 when he was still a little boy, his father, the 9th Earl of Ormond, granted him Kilcash as an appanage[6] as is attested by his territorial designationof Kilcash. The existing tower house[7] at Kilcash was probably built at that time.[8]
Well he did so. Because only a bit more than a year later, on 28 October 1546, when John was about six, his father suddenly died in London having been poisoned during a banquet at Ely House,[9] probably at the instigation of Anthony St Leger, who was Lord Deputy of Ireland and a political opponent. John's eldest brother Thomas succeeded as the 10th Earl.
Much of Kilcash's life was taken up with a fierce feud his family had with the Earls of Desmond. The Desmonds were the Ormonds' neighbours on the western and southern sides. Despite their enmity, these two families were both more or less Gaelicized Old English and had intermarried many times; the last such marriage having been that of Kilcash's parents as his mother was a Desmond FitzGerald. The Desmond wars should also be seen in the wider picture of the Tudor conquest of Ireland. In 1560 his mother's intervention secured a peaceful outcome to a stand-off at Bohermore (known as "the battle that never was").
In 1563 Kilcash was badly wounded in a fight with the Desmonds and his recovery was deemed uncertain.[16] He was unable to participate in the private Battle of Affane, which was fought on 8 February 1565, only a bit more than a month after his mother's death.[17] His stepfather, Gerald FitzGerald, 14th Earl of Desmond was taken prisoner in the battle[18] after Kilcash's brother Edmund had shot him into the hip with his pistol.[19] Lord Ormond (his eldest brother) and Lord Desmond were called to London and promised to keep the peace.
Kilcash could of course also not fight to suppress the Desmond Rebellions that were started in 1569 by James fitz Maurice FitzGerald, captain of the Desmond forces in the earl's absence. The captain was supported by many Irish in southern Ireland but also by some of Butler's brothers, notably Edmund.[20] The rebellion was directed against Henry Sidney the Lord Deputy of Ireland. Kilcash's brother Thomas, Lord Ormond returned to Ireland landing at Waterford in July 1569[21] whereupon his brothers submitted quickly.
However, Edmund, Edward and Piers were attainted in April 1570[22] by an act[which?] of the Irish Parliament. That meant that Edmund ceased to be Ormond's heir presumptive and John, the next brother, took his place but only for about a month as he died on 10 May 1570.[23] John's eldest son, Walter, thereafter became heir presumptive. James fitz Maurice FitzGerald surrendered on 23 February 1573 and Gerald followed in September ending the first Desmond rebellion.
Death and timeline
John Butler died on 10 May 1570 at Kilcash and was buried in Kilkenny.[24]
Timeline
As his birth date is uncertain, so are all his ages.
^ abJohn's year of birth is bracketed between 1534, the birth of his older brother, and the death of his father in 1544, minus two gestations of his younger brothers James, Edward and Piers. 1537 seems a good estimate.
^This family tree is partly based on the condensed Butler family tree pictured in Dunboyne[3] and on genealogies of the Earls of Desmond[4] and Ormond.[5] Also see the lists of siblings and children in the text.
Citations
^Butler 1929, p. 39. "John of Kilcash, the third brother, left one lawful son, Walter, an infant six months old when John died in 1570."
^Debrett 1828, p. 640. "Theobald le Boteler on whom that office [Chief Butler of Ireland] was conferred by King Henry II., 1177 ..."
^Somerset Fry 1997, p. 220, 3rd column. "This consists of a six-storey tower-house with bartizan and high chimney stacks ..."
^ abBreffny 1977, p. 146, line 1. "James, ninth Earl of Ormond, granted the lands of Kilcash to his third son John Butler by deed dated 26 May 1544 and it was probably at that time that the tower-house with bartizans and tall chimneys was built ..."
^ abCokayne 1895, p. 148, line 6. "He d. in London, 28 Oct. 1546, from the effects of poison taken on the 17th at supper at Ely House, Holborn ..."
^Lainé 1836, p. 91, bottom. "2. Catherine Mac Carthy, mariée 1e avec Jean Butler de Kilcash, fils puyné de Jacques Butler, 9e comte d'Ormon ..."
^Edwards 2004, p. 231, left column, line 1. "He [Walter] emerged as heir to the Kilcash estate in co. Tipperary some time before September 1576 after the death without issue of his brother ..."
^Burke & Burke 1915, p. 1549, right column, line 61. "1. Joan, m. [married] 1st Nicholas Shortall, of Upper Claragh, co. Kilkenny, and 2ndly Sir Oliver Shortall, Knt. of Ballylorcan, same co."
^ abJoyce 1903, p. 146, line 15. "Desmond, taken unawares, was defeated in a battle fought in 1565 at Affane in the County Waterford, and he himself was wounded and taken prisoner."
^ abMcGurk 2004, p. 809, left column. "On 8 February 1565 the two rival armies met at the ford of Affane on the Blackwater in co. Waterford. Desmond was wounded in the thigh and taken prisoner by Ormond, but soon released."
^Lee 1886, p. 80, left column. "In June 1569 Sir Edmund, who had a personal hatred of Sidney, in temporary concert with some members of the Desmond family, broke into open revolt against the lord deputy."
^Lee 1886, p. 80, left column, bottom. "He landed in Waterford in July 1569, and found Munster in the throes of a civil war, in which his brother Sir Edmund was matched against Sidney's lieutenant, sir Peter Carew."
^ abLee 1886, p. 80, right column, line 7. "In April [1570] Ormonde's three brothers Edmund, Edward and Piers, were attainted, and Ormonde passionately protested against the indignity."
^ abLodge 1789a, p. 28, line 8. "John Butler of Kilcash, Esq.; who married Catharine, daughter of Cormac Mac Carthy Reagh, and dying at his seat 10 May 1570, was buried in Kilkenny ..."
Lainé, P. Louis (1836). "Mac-Carthy". Archives généalogiques et historiques de la noblesse de France [Genealogical and Historical Archives of the Nobility of France] (in French). Vol. Tome cinquième. Paris: Imprimerie de Bethune et Plon. pp. 1–102. OCLC865941166.