Dermot O'Mallun, 1st Baron Glean-O'Mallun

Dermot O'Mallun, 1st Baron Glean-O'Mallun (died 1 May 1639) was an Irish lawyer.

Biography

A Roman Catholic, he was educated abroad and became learned in the law and in poetry. He served as a lawyer to the Archdukes Albert and Isabella of the Spanish Netherlands, and in 1616 he was made a knight of the Order of Calatrava.[1] He also served as an equerry to the Infanta Isabella, as a gentleman of the chamber to the Emperor Ferdinand II, and as mestre de camp of a regiment of cavalry in the Emperor's service.[2] On 5 October 1622 he was raised to the peerage of Ireland by King James I as Baron Glean-O'Mallun and Courchy of county Clare, with remainder to Albert O'Mallun and his heirs male.[3]

O'Mallun was married to Marie Hannedouche, dame de Haguerve, daughter of Sebastien Hannedouche, seigneur de Hunctun, de Faye et de Bondues, and his wife Michelle de Hauteclocque. They had a daughter Anne Marie, who married Jacques Quarré, seigneur de La Haye, and had issue. O'Mallun died on 1 May 1639 and was buried in the Church of St Gudule at Brussels. His widow died on 1 February 1641.[2]

Nothing further is known of the barony, which probably became extinct in about May 1641. However, one Dermot Malone sat under this title in the Patriot Parliament of 1689.[4][5]

gollark: Do any of these people actually like to see stuff like "Here's a Wumpus for now" in the UI?
gollark: And some languages have a grammatical formal/informal distinction - and they use the formal grammar, but with the really informal wording - which makes it even weirder.
gollark: Apparently they try and use the same sort of thing in other languages...
gollark: On a related note, it annoys me a lot that Discord seem to want to appeal to "gamers"; I don't even know *which* gamers, honestly; with the weird phrasing they use in the UI.
gollark: If it was federated and open, people would be able to move off it more easily.

References

  1. John J. Silke, "The Irish Abroad, 1534–1691" in A New History of Ireland, vol. III (1991) p. 613.
  2. Jean Charles Joseph de Vegiano, seigneur d'Hovel, Suite du Supplément au Nobiliare des Pays-Bas et du comté de Bourgogne (1779) p. 223.
  3. G.E.C., The Complete Peerage, vol. IV (1892) p. 29.
  4. G.E.C., ed. Vicary Gibbs and H. Arthur Doubleday, The Complete Peerage, vol. III (1913) p. 633.
  5. John D'Alton, King James's Irish Army List, vol. II (1861) p. 413.

Further reading

  • Moloney, Gerry (2015). "Resurrecting an ancient chief". History Ireland. 22 (5): 20–23. JSTOR 23850520.


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