Stained glass, All Saints Church, Horsford, Norfolk, showing arms of Dacre Barrett, son of Richard Barrett and Anne Loftus. He married, firstly, Lady Jane Chichester, daughter of Arthur Chichester, 2nd Earl of Donegall and Jane Itchingham. Arms of Lennard, Lord Dacre (Or, on a fess gules three fleurs-de-lys of the first) quartering Barrett, Lord Newburgh (Party per pale barry of four counterchanged argent and gules) impaling the arms of Chichester, Marquess of Donegall quartered with Echyngham (Azure, fretty argent).[1]

Arthur Chichester, 2nd Earl of Donegall (died 26 October 1678) was an Anglo-Irish politician.

Chichester was the son of Lieutenant Colonel John Chichester (died 1647), of Dungannon, County Tyrone, the latter being the younger brother of Arthur Chichester, 1st Earl of Donegall, and younger son of Edward Chichester, 1st Viscount Chichester. His mother was Mary Jones (died 1673), daughter of Roger Jones, 1st Viscount Ranelagh. After his father's death, she remarried Colonel Christopher Copley of Wadworth. He was knighted at Whitehall in 1660, and served in the Irish House of Commons as Member of Parliament for Dungannon (1661–1666). He was also made an Irish Privy Counsellor in 1672.

Chichester married Jane Ichyngham, daughter of John Ichyngham of Dunbrody, County Wexford, a descendant of Sir Edward Echyngham (died 1527) of Barsham, Suffolk.[2][3][4]

In 1675 Chichester succeeded his uncle as second Earl of Donegall, inheriting the title under the special remainder granted with it to the male heirs of his grandfather, Edward Chichester, 1st Viscount Chichester. He was Custos Rotulorum for County Antrim and Governor of Carrickfergus for twelve years before dying in Ireland in 1678. His wife survived him and remarried.

References

  1. 'Launditch: Horsfield', in F. Blomefield, ed. C Parkin, An Essay Towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk Vol. X (William Miller, London 1809), p. 435 (Google).
  2. 'Inquisition, Wexford, James I, no. 55: 1624', in Inquisitionum in Officio Rotulorum Cancellariae Hiberniae Asservatarum, Repertorium, (Commissioners, 1826), I, Part 4 pp. 29–30 (Google).
  3. J. Morrin, 'Historical notes of the Abbey of Dunbrodin', Transactions of the Ossory Archaeological Society, I: 1874–1879 (1879), pp. 407–31, at pp. 409–13 (Internet Archive).
  4. F.H. Suckling, 'Some notes on Barsham Juxta Beccles, Co. Suffolk (third part)', The Genealogist Vol. XXII (1906), pp. 52–61, at pp. 53–54 (Internet Archive)
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