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List of Irish monarchs

The Royal Arms of the United Kingdom (as displayed outside Scotland) since the accession of Queen Victoria in 1837, featuring the arms of England in the first and third quarter, Scotland in the second, and Ireland in the fourth
The Royal Arms of the United Kingdom (as displayed outside Scotland) since the accession of Queen Victoria in 1837, featuring the arms of England in the first and third quarter, Scotland in the second, and Ireland in the fourth
There were 33 English / British monarchs who were also monarchs of Ireland from 1177 to 1949. Henry II of England first created the title of Lord of Ireland for his youngest son John Lackland in 1177. He had first sought to have John made King of Ireland. This would appear to have been a strategy of his father's to divide his Angevin possessions between his four sons. The approval of Pope Alexander III was sought to have John crowned King of Ireland. Disagreements with first Alexander III and then his successor Pope Lucius III caused this to be delayed and instead John went as only Lord of Ireland. When John arrived in Ireland the people grew to despise him, causing John to leave after only eight months. When he later unexpectedly inherited the English crown in 1199, the title Lord of Ireland would come to be held by the monarchs of England.

After Henry VIII of England made himself Supreme Head of the Church of England, he also requested and got legislation through the Irish Parliament, in 1541 (effective 1542, see Crown of Ireland Act 1542), naming him King of Ireland and head of the Church of Ireland (which today, both in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland, remains a member of the Anglican communion but is no longer an established church like the Church of England). The title "King of Ireland" was then used until 1 January 1801, the effective date of the second Act of Union, which merged Ireland and Great Britain to create the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. This is a list of the monarchs who ruled Ireland during this time.

Contents


Kings of Irish Kingdoms to 1607

Gaelic Ireland consisted of as few as five and as many as nine main kingdoms, further subdivided into dozens of smaller kingdoms. The primary kingdoms were Connacht, Ailech, Airgíalla, Ulster, Mide, Leinster, Osraige, Munster and Thomond. Up to the end of Gaelic Ireland they continued to fluctuate, expand and contract in size, as well as dissolving entirely or being amalgamated into new entities.

The names of Connacht, Ulster, Leinster and Munster are still in current use, being now applied to the four modern provinces of Ireland. The following is a list of the main Irish kingdoms and their kings.

  • List of High Kings of Ireland – historical, legendary and mythical rulers up to 1198.
  • Kings of Ailech – divided into Tír Eógain and Tír Chonaill in the 12th century.
  • Kings of Airgíalla – a federation of nine kingdoms in central Ulster.
  • Kings of Breifne – an expansionist kingdom of Connacht, separating Ulster and Leinster.
  • Kings of Connacht – all the land west of the Shannon except Thomond; its last king inaugurated 1643, and its dynasty still survivies, among the most ancient in Europe.
  • Kings of Dublin – First new aged kingdom, founded by the Vikings, annexed by the High Kings.
  • Kings of Leinster – Its last de facto king died in 1632.
  • Kings of Mide – Ireland's central kingdom, annexed by Connacht in the 11th century.
  • Kings of Moylurg – created in the 10th century for a prince of the Sil Muiredaig dynasty.
  • Kings of Munster – an overkingdom created by the Eóganachta dynasty in the early 400s.
  • Kings of Osraige – buffer state between Munster and Leinster; dissolved in 1550s.
  • Kings of Tara – the most sacred title in Irish history; often confused with "High King."
  • Kings of Tir Eogain – a successor kingdom of Ailech; dissolved in 1607.
  • Kings of Ulster – properly, Ulster east of the lower and upper Bann;

Lords of Ireland

The Lordship of Ireland (1171?1541) was all-island Irish state created in the wake of the Norman invasion of Ireland in 1169?71.

House of Plantagenet

This long-lived dynasty is usually divided into three houses: the Angevins, the House of Lancaster, and the House of York.

Angevins

As the leader of the Norman invasion of Ireland Henry II of England created the title of Lord of Ireland for his youngest son John in 1177. The title came to be held by the monarchs of England when John later, and unexpectedly, inherited the English crown in 1199. | John Lackland
(Jean Sans Terre)
May
1177?1216[1] ||

Tomb effigy of John
Tomb effigy of John
|| 24 December 1167
Beaumont Palace
son of Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitaine[1] || (1) Isabel of Gloucester
Marlborough Castle
29 August 1189
no children

(2) Isabella of Angoulęme
Bordeaux Cathedral
24 August 1200
five children[1] || 19 October 1216
Newark Castle
aged 48[1] |- | Henry III
28 October
1216?1272[2] ||
The effigy of Henry III in Westminster Abbey
The effigy of Henry III in Westminster Abbey
|| 1 October 1207
Winchester Castle
son of John and Isabella of Angoulęme[2] || Eleanor of Provence
Canterbury Cathedral
14 January 1236
nine children[2] || 16 November 1272
Westminster Palace
aged 65[2] |- | Edward I Longshanks
20 November
1272?1307[3] ||
|| 17 June 1239
Westminster Palace
son of Henry III and Eleanor of Provence[3] || (1) Eleanor of Castile
Abbey of Santa Maria la Real de Huelgas
18 October 1254
17 children

(2) Marguerite of France
10 September 1299
three children[3] || 7 July 1307
Burgh by Sands
aged 68[3] |- | Edward II
7 July 1307 –
25 January 1327[4] ||
Modern depiction of Edward II
Modern depiction of Edward II
|| 25 April 1284
Caernarfon Castle
son of Edward I and Eleanor of Castile[4] || Isabella of France
Boulogne Cathedral
25 January 1308
five children[4] || 21 September 1327
Berkeley Castle
aged 43 (murdered)[4] |- | Edward III
25 January
1327?1377[5] ||
The effigy of Edward III in Westminster Abbey
The effigy of Edward III in Westminster Abbey
|| 13 November 1312
Windsor Castle
son of Edward II and Isabella of France[5] || Philippa of Hainault
York Minster
24 January 1328
14 children[5] || 21 June 1377
Sheen Palace
aged 64[5] |- | Richard II
21 June 1377 –
29 September 1399[6] ||
Richard II, by André Beauneveu, 1390s
Richard II, by André Beauneveu, 1390s
|| 6 January 1367
Bordeaux
son of Edward, the Black Prince and Joan of Kent[6] || (1) Anne of Bohemia
14 January 1382
no children

(2) Isabella of Valois
Calais
4 November 1396
no children[6] || 6 January 1400
Pontefract Castle
aged 33[6] |}

House of Lancaster

| Henry IV Bolingbroke
30 September
1399?1413[7] ||

Henry IV
Henry IV
|| 3 April 1366/7
Bolingbroke Castle
son of John of Gaunt and Blanche of Lancaster[7] || (1) Mary de Bohun
Arundel Castle
27 July 1380
seven children

(2) Joanna of Navarre
Winchester Cathedral
7 February 1403
no children[7] || 20 March 1413
Westminster Abbey
aged 45 or 46[8] |- | Henry V
20 March
1413?1422[7] ||
Henry V
Henry V
|| 9 August 1387
Monmouth Castle
son of Henry IV and Mary de Bohun[7] || Catherine of Valois
Troyes Cathedral
2 June 1420
1 son[7] || 31 August 1422
Château de Vincennes
aged 35[7] |- | Henry VI
31 August 1422
– 4 March 1461

30 October 1470
– 11 April 1471[9] ||
Henry VI
Henry VI
|| 6 December 1421
Windsor Castle
son of Henry V and Catherine of Valois[9] || Margaret of Anjou
Titchfield Abbey
22 April 1445
1 son[9] || 21 May 1471
Tower of London
aged 49 (murdered)[9] |}

House of York

| Edward IV
4 March 1461 –
3 October 1470

11 April 1471?1483[10] ||

Edward IV
Edward IV
|| 28 April 1442
Rouen
son of Richard Plantagenet, 3rd Duke of York and Cecily Neville[10] || Elizabeth Woodville
Grafton Regis
1 May 1464
10 children[10] || 9 April 1483
Westminster Palace
aged 40[10] |- | Edward V
9 April?25 June 1483[11] ||
Edward V
Edward V
|| 2 November 1470
Westminster
son of Edward IV and Elizabeth Woodville[11] || unmarried || c. 1483
London
aged about 12 (traditionally believed to be murdered)[12] |- | Richard III
26 June
1483?1485[13] ||
Richard III
Richard III
|| 2 October 1452
Fotheringhay Castle
son of Richard Plantagenet, 3rd Duke of York and Cecily Neville[14] || Anne Neville
Westminster Abbey
12 July 1472
1 son[14] || 22 August 1485
Bosworth Field
aged 32 (killed in battle)[14] |}

House of Tudor

The Tudors were of partial Welsh ancestry, and in 1536 Wales was fully incorporated into the English state (having been under English control since 1284). With Henry VIII's break from the Roman Catholic Church the monarch became the Supreme Head of the Church of Ireland. | Henry VII
22 August
1485?1509[15] ||

Henry VII, by Michel Sittow, 1505
Henry VII, by Michel Sittow, 1505
|| 28 January 1457
Pembroke Castle
son of Edmund Tudor and Lady Margaret Beaufort[15] || Elizabeth of York
Westminster Abbey
18 January 1486
eight children[15] || 21 April 1509
Richmond Palace
aged 52[15] |- | Henry VIII
21 April
1509?1542[16] ||
Henry VIII, by Hans Holbein, c.1536
Henry VIII, by Hans Holbein, c.1536
|| 28 June 1491
Greenwich Palace
son of Henry VII and Elizabeth of York[16] || (1) Catherine of Aragon
Greenwich
11 June 1509
1 daughter

(2) Anne Boleyn
Westminster Palace
25 January 1533
1 daughter

(3) Jane Seymour
Whitehall Palace
30 May 1536
1 son

(4) Anne of Cleves
Greenwich Palace
6 January 1540

(5) Catherine Howard
Hampton Court Palace
28 July 1540 || 28 January 1547
Whitehall Palace
aged 55[16] |}

Kings and Queens of Ireland

In 1542 Henry VIII passed the Crown of Ireland Act 1542 in the Parliament of Ireland stating that Henry VIII of England and his successors would also be Kings of Ireland.

| Henry VIII
21 April
1542?1547[16] ||

Henry VIII, by Hans Holbein, c.1536
Henry VIII, by Hans Holbein, c.1536
|| 28 June 1491
Greenwich Palace
son of Henry VII and Elizabeth of York[16] || (6) Catherine Parr
Hampton Court Palace
12 July 1543[16] || 28 January 1547
Whitehall Palace
aged 55[16] |- | Edward VI
28 January
1547?1553[17] ||
Edward VI, by Hans Eworth
Edward VI, by Hans Eworth
|| 12 October 1537
Hampton Court Palace
son of Henry VIII and Jane Seymour[17] || unmarried || 6 July 1553
Greenwich Palace
aged 15[17] |- | Jane
("The Nine Days' Queen")
10 July?19 July 1553[18] ||
|| October 1537
Bradgate Park
daughter of Henry Grey, 1st Duke of Suffolk and Lady Frances Brandon[18] || Lord Guildford Dudley
The Strand
21 May 1553
no children[19] || 12 February 1554
Tower of London
aged 16 (beheaded)[18] |- | Mary I
("Bloody Mary")
19 July
1553?1558[17] ||
Mary I, by Antonius Mor, 1554
Mary I, by Antonius Mor, 1554
|| 18 February 1516
Greenwich Palace
daughter of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon[17] || Philip II of Spain
Winchester Cathedral
25 July 1554
no children[17] || 17 November 1558
St. James's Palace
aged 42[17] |- | Elizabeth I
("The Virgin Queen")
17 November
1558?1603[17] ||
Elizabeth I, by Darnley
Elizabeth I, by Darnley
|| 7 September 1533
Greenwich Palace
daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn[17] || unmarried || 24 March 1603
Richmond Palace
aged 69[17] |}

House of Stuart

Following the death of Elizabeth I in 1603 without issue, the Scottish king, James VI, succeeded to the English throne as James I in what became known as the Union of the Crowns. In 1604 he adopted the title King of Great Britain, although the two kingdoms remained separate. | James I
24 March
1603?1625[20] ||

James I, by Paulus van Somer
James I, by Paulus van Somer
|| 19 June 1566
Edinburgh Castle
son of Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley and Mary, Queen of Scots[20] || Anne of Denmark
Oslo
23 November 1589
nine children[20] || 27 March 1625
Theobalds House
aged 58[20] |- | Charles I
(
"Saint Charles the Martyr")
27 March
1625?1649[21] ||
Charles I, by Anthony van Dyck
Charles I, by Anthony van Dyck
|| 19 November 1600
Dunfermline Palace
son of James I and Anne of Denmark[21] || Henrietta Maria of France
St Augustine's Abbey
13 June 1625
nine children[21] || 30 January 1649
Whitehall Palace
aged 48 (executed)[21] |}

Commonwealth

There was no reigning monarch between the execution of Charles I in 1649 and the Restoration of Charles II in 1660. Despite this, from 1653 the following individuals held power as Lords Protector, during the period known as the Protectorate.

| Oliver Cromwell
16 December
1653?1658[22] ||

Oliver Cromwell, an unfinished portrait miniature by Samuel Cooper
Oliver Cromwell, an unfinished portrait miniature by Samuel Cooper
|| 25 April 1599
Huntingdon[22]
son of Robert Cromwell and Elizabeth Stewart[23] || Elizabeth Bourchier
St Giles[24]
22 August 1620
nine children[22] || 3 September 1658
Whitehall
aged 59[22] |- | Richard Cromwell
("Tumbledown Dick")
3 September 1658
– 7 May 1659[25] ||
Richard Cromwell, c.1650
Richard Cromwell, c.1650
|| 4 October 1626
Huntingdon
son of Oliver Cromwell and Elizabeth Bourchier[25] || Dorothy Maijor
May 1649
nine children[25] || 12 July 1712
Cheshunt
aged 85[26] |}

House of Stuart (restored)

Although the monarchy was restored in 1660, no stable settlement proved possible until the Glorious Revolution of 1688, when parliament finally asserted the right to choose whomsoever it pleased as monarch.

| Charles II
8 May
1660?1685[27] ||

|| 29 May 1630
St. James's Palace
son of Charles I and Henrietta Maria of France[27] || Catherine of Braganza
Portsmouth
21 May 1662
three children (none survived infancy)[27] || 6 February 1685
Whitehall Palace
aged 54[27] |- | James II
6 February 1685 –
23 December 1688[28] ||
|| 14 October 1633
St. James's Palace
son of Charles I and Henrietta Maria of France[28] || (1) Anne Hyde
The Strand
3 September 1660
eight children

(2) Mary of Modena
Dover
21 November 1673
seven children[28] || 16 September 1701
Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye
aged 67[28] |- | William III of Orange
(Willem Hendrik,
Prins van Oranje)

13 February
1689?1702[29] ||
|| 4 November 1650
The Hague
son of William II, Prince of Orange and Mary Stuart[30] || rowspan=2 | St James's Palace
4 November 1677
three children (none survived infancy)[29] || 8 March 1702
Kensington Palace
aged 51[29] |- | Mary II
13 February
1689?1694[28] ||
|| 30 April 1662
St James's Palace
daughter of James II and Anne Hyde[28] || 28 December 1694
Kensington Palace
aged 32[28] |- | Anne
8 March
1702?1714[31] ||
|| 6 February 1665
St James's Palace
daughter of James II and Anne Hyde[32] || George of Denmark
St James's Palace
28 July 1683
17 children[32] || 1 August 1714
Kensington Palace
aged 49[32] |}

House of Hanover

The Hanoverian succession came about as a result of the Act of Settlement 1701, passed by the English Parliament. In return for access to the economically alluring plantations in North America, the Hanoverian succession and ultimately the Union was ratified by the English Parliament and subsequently the Scottish Parliament in 1707.

| George I
1 August
1714?1727 ||

|| 28 May 1660
Osnabrück
son of Ernest Augustus, Elector of Brunswick-Lüneburg and Sophia of Hanover || Sophia of Celle
Germany
1 November 1682
two children || 11 June 1727
Osnabrück
aged 67 |- | George II
11 June
1727?1760 ||
|| 30 October 1683
Hanover
son of George I and Sophia of Celle || Caroline of Ansbach
Hanover
22 August 1705
eight children || 25 October 1760
Palace of Westminster
aged 76 |- | George III
25 October
1760?1 January
1801 ||
|| 04 June 1738
Norfolk House
son of Frederick, Prince of Wales and Princess Augusta of Saxe-Gotha || Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
St James's Palace
8 September 1761
15 children || 29 January 1820
Windsor Castle
aged 81 |} During George III's reign The Kingdom's of Great Britain and Ireland merged to become the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland under the Act of Union 1800.

In 1949 twenty-six counties in the southern part of Ireland became the Republic of Ireland and thus the British Monarchs continue to rule only over the remaining northern counties of the island that are part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.

House of Windsor

Following dominion status being conferred on the Irish Free State in 1922, in 1927 the title King of Ireland was re-introduced, and lasted until Ireland became a republic in 1949.

| George V
6 December
1922?1936[33] ||

|| 3 June 1865
Marlborough House
son of Edward VII and Alexandra of Denmark[34] || Mary of Teck
6 July 1893
St James's Palace
six children[35] || 20 January 1936
Sandringham House
aged 70[34] |- | Edward VIII
20 January –
11 December 1936[36] ||
|| 23 June 1894
Richmond
son of George V and Mary of Teck[36] || Wallis, The Duchess of Windsor
France
3 June 1937
no children[36] || 28 May 1972
Paris
aged 77[37] |- | George VI
11 December
1936?18 April
1949[38] ||
|| 14 December 1895
Sandringham House
son of George V and Mary of Teck[38] || Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon
Westminster Abbey
26 April 1923
two children[39] || 6 February 1952
Sandringham House
aged 56[40] |}

As the British monarchs continue to rule over Northern Ireland, as a constituent part of the United Kingdom, the continuation of this list is at List of British monarchs.

References

fr:Liste des seigneurs d'Irlande





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