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Encyclopedia Britannica



CORK, RICHARD BOYLE

This article appears in Volume V07, Page 156 of the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: COM-COR
CORK, RICHARD BOYLE , 1sT
EARL
  of (1566-1643), Irish statesman, second son of Roger Boyle of
Faversham
  in Kent, a descendant of an ancient Herefordshire family, and of Joan, daughter of Robert Naylor of Canterbury, was born at Canterbury on the 3rd of October 1566, and was educated at the King's school and at Bennet (Corpus Christi) College,
Cambridge
 , where he was admitted in 1583. He afterwards studied law at the Middle Temple and became clerk to Sir Richard Manwood,
chief
  baron of the exchequer; but finding his position offered little opportunity for advancement he determined to make a new start in Ireland. He landed in Dublin on the 23rd of June 1588, as he relates himself, with 27, 3s. in money, a gold bracelet worth ro, and a diamond ring, besides some fine wearing apparel. He began to make his fortune almost immediately. In 1590 he obtained the appointment of deputy escheator to John Crofton, the escheator-general, and in 1595 he married Joan, daughter and co-heiress of William Appsley of Limerick, who died in 1599, having brought him an estate of 5oo a year.
Meanwhile he had been the object of the attacks of Sir Henry Wallop and others, incited, according to his own account, by envy at his success and increasing prosperity, and was apprehended on various charges of fraud in his office, being more than once thrown into prison. He was on the point of leaving for England to justify himself to the queen, when the rebellion in Munster in October 1598 again reduced him to poverty and obliged him to return to London to his chambers at the Temple. He was, however, almost immediately taken by Essex into his service, when Sir Henry Wallop again renewed his prosecution, with the result that Boyle was summoned before the
star
  chamber. His enemies appear to have failed in substantiating their accusations, and in the course of the inquiry, at which he had secured the presence of the queen herself, he was able to expose several instances of malversation on the part of his opponent, who was dismissed in consequence from his office of treasurer, while Boyle himself, who had favourably impressed the queen, was declared by her as " a man fit to be employed by ourselves " and was at once made clerk of the council of Munster. He brought to Elizabeth the news of the victory near Kingsale in December 16ot, and in October 16o2 was again sent over by Sir George Carew, the president of Munster, on Irish affairs; and on this occasion, at the instance of Carew, he bought for t000 the whole of Sir Walter Raleigh's lands in Cork,
Waterford
  and Tipperary, consisting of 12,000 acres with immense capabilities of development. This offered a splendid opportunity for the exercise of his genius for business and administration. Manufactures were established, the breeding of cattle and fish introduced, mines opened, colonists from England encouraged to come over, the natural resources of the land developed, bridges, harbours and roads constructed, and towns settled, order being maintained by 13 castles garrisoned by retainers.
While himself quickly accumulating vast riches, the services
which Boyle rendered to the government and to the nation at such a time of disorder and transition were incalculable. He soon became the most powerful subject in Ireland. On the 25th of July 1603 he married, as his second wife, Catherine, daughter of Sir Geoffrey Fenton, secretary of state, and was knighted. In 16o6 he became a privy councillor for Munster and in 1613 for Ireland. On the 6th of September 1616 he was raised to the peerage as Lord Boyle, baron of Youghal, and on the 26th of October 1620 was created
earl
  of Cork and Viscount Dungarvan. He was appointed on the 26th of October 1629 a lord justice, and on the 9th of November 1631 lord high treasurer. Though no peer of England, he was " by writ called into the Upper
House
  by His Majesty's great grace," and took his place as an " assistant sitting on the inside of the Woolsack."' The appointment of Wentworth (Lord Strafford), however, as lord deputy in 1633 put an end to the predominant power and influence of Cork in Ireland. " A most cursed man," he writes in his diary on Wentworth's arrival, " to all Ireland and to me in particular." In reality these two great men had much in common, held similar views of administration, and had the same talents for practical statesmanship. Cork had already carried out in Munster the policy which Strafford desired to see extended to the whole of Ireland. But Cork belonged to the " spacious days of great Elizabeth," and for such a man there was no room within the narrow despotism and intolerance of the government of Charles. The subjection of the great was part of Strafford's settled policy, and consequently, instead of seeking his collaboration in developing the country and in maintaining order, he studied merely to diminish his influence. He subjected him to various humiliations. He forced him to remove his wife's tomb from the choir in St Patrick's at Dublin, and deprived him arbitrarily of the greater part of the revenues of Youghal, a portion of the Raleigh estates. " No physic," wrote Laud, delighted, " better than a vomit if it be given in time, and there-fore you have taken a very judicious course to administer one so early to my Lord of Cork. I hope it will do him good... ." 2 Cork, however, refrained from any systematic or retaliatory resistance, and even simulated an admiration for Strafford's rule. At the latter's trial he was an important witness, but took no active part in the prosecution, though he thoroughly approved of his condemnation and execution. Scarcely had he returned to Ireland from witnessing his rival's destruction when the rebellion broke out, but his influence and preparations, supported by the military prowess of his sons, were sufficient to offer a successful resistance to the rebels in Munster and to save the province from ruin. This was his last great service to the state. He died about the 15th of September 1643, leaving a large and illustrious family by his second wife.
Four of his seven sons received independent peerages,Richard, created Baron Clifford and earl of Burlington; Lewis, Viscount Kinalmeaky, killed in 1642 at the battle of Liscarrol; Roger, baron of Broghill and earl of
Orrery
 ; and Francis, Viscount Shannon. Another son was Robert Boyle (q.v.), the famous natural philosopher and chemist.
The title passed to the eldest surviving son, RICHARD BOYLE,
1st earl of Burlington and 2nd earl of Cork (1612-1698), who
matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford, and was knighted in
1624. Returning home after travelling abroad he married in
1635 Elizabeth, daughter and
heir
  of Henry, Lord Clifford, later
earl of Cumberland. On the outbreak of the rebellion he sup-
ported his father in Munster, fought at the battle of Liscarrol,
and raised forces for the first war with the Scots. In 164o he
represented Appleby in the Long Parliament, and in the civil
war he supported zealously the royal cause, being created in
1643 Baron Clifford of Lanesborough in the peerage of England,
in addition to the earldom of Cork which he inherited from his
father the same year. At the Restoration he obtained also the
earldom of Burlington (or Bridlington), and was appointed
lord-lieutenant of the West Riding of Yorkshire, resigning this
office through opposition to the government of James II. He
held the office of lord treasurer of Ireland from r68o till 1695.
' Lords Journals. 2 Strafford Letters, i. 156.
He died on th 5th of January 1698. His two sons having predeceased him, he was succeeded in his titles byhis grandson Charles, issue of his eldest son Charles, as 2nd earl of Burlington and 3rd earl of Cork; and on the extinction of the direct male line in the person of Richard, the 4th earl, in 1753 the earldom of Cork fell to the younger branch of the Boyle family, in the person of John, 5th earl of
Orrery
 , he and later earls being " of Cork and Orrery."


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