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Archiver > LACY > 1998-03 > 0889758233
From: "Webmaster" <>
Subject: [LACY-L] Interesting Article - but is it accurate?
Date: Thu, 12 Mar 1998 22:03:53 -0500
FYI - I found this out on the Net tonite on one of Ireland's Tourism
Websites.....
http://www.goireland.com/Genealogy/
Lacy, de Lacy
Further Information
The De Lacys of Ireland, more commonly now called Lacy or Lacey, came to
this country at the time of the Anglo-Norman invasion, having gone to
England from Lascy in Normandy in the previous century with William the
Conqueror. In the Annals the name is written de Leis in Irish. The first and
most famous of them was Hugo de Lacy (killed 1186) to whom was "granted" the
whole of O'Melaghlin's territory, the Kingdom of Meath (of much greater
extent than the modern county of Meath). Twice married, his second wife was
a daughter of Roderick O'Connor, King of Ireland. The vast Meath possession
went out of the family through the failure of the male line. The de Lacys of
Co. Limerick, a family which produced many famous men, to some of whom
reference will be made in this note, claim descent from the O'Connor
marriage, but, though this is accepted by O'Donovan, some doubt is cast upon
its authenticity in a closely reasoned article on the subject by N.J.
Synnott (J.R.S.A.I. 1919), who suggested that the Limerick families may be
Lees, a name of frequent occurrence in Limerick records from the twelfth to
the fifteenth century; he points out that in the sixteenth century the Lacys
of Bruff and Bruee spelt their name Leash, as well as Lacy; and Leash, of
course, is phonetically equivalent to the Irish form Leis. Be that as it
may, the Lacys are undoubtedly of Norman origin and are historically
intimately connected with Co. Limerick Most Rev. Hugh Lacy, Bishop of
Limerick from 1557 to 1581, is a case in point, as his name appears in
records as Lacy alias Lees. He was "deprived" of his bishopric by Queen
Elizabeth in 1571, and died for his faith in gaol ten years later. Pierce
Lacy of Bruff, who took a prominent part in the Elizabethan wars, was
executed 19 1607. Col John Lacy was a member of the Supreme Council of the
Confederate Catholics in 1647 and was expressly excluded from the amnesty
after the Siege of Limerick in 1651. At the second Siege of Limerick in 1691
another Pierce, or Peter, Lacy of the Ballingarry family took a prominent
part though then only thirteen years of age. He is better known as Count de
Lacy (1678-1751) for, having gone into exile with Sarsfield, he took service
with Peter the Great of Russia and became one of the most famous soldiers of
the eighteenth century. In deed no Irish family has attained greater fame in
the military history of Europe. The most renowned of these besides Count
peter, already mentioned, were his son Marshal Francis Maurice de Lacy
(1725-1801), who was an Austrian field-marshal, and another Maurice de Lacy
(1740-1820), who was a celebrated general of the Russian army; and Count
Francis Anthony de Lacy (1731-1792), who was a distinguished general and
diplomatist in the Spanish service at the same period.
Though the name is still found in Co. Limerick and other parts of Munster,
the ancestral estates of the de Lacys, which were at Ballingarry, Bruff and
Bruree, have long since passed into other hands, and even a century ago
there was no large landed proprietor of the name in Ireland. It should be
added that the Gaelic surname O Laitheasa, a Co. Wexford family, is Lacy in
English.
Steve Lacy, Webmaster
Genealogy Gateway To The Web
http://www.polaris.net/~legend/mainsite.htm
"Where substance takes precedence over style"
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