Carlingford was a constituency represented in the Irish House of Commons to 1801.
Carlingford | |
---|---|
Former borough constituency for the Irish House of Commons | |
County | County Louth |
Borough | Carlingford |
–1801 | |
Seats | 2 |
Replaced by | Disfranchised |
History
editIn the Patriot Parliament of 1689 summoned by King James II, Carlingford was represented with two members.[1]
Members of Parliament
edit- 1559: John Neill and Sir Henry Radclyffe[2]
- 1585: Robert Neill and Rice ap Hugh[2]
- 1613–1615: Marmaduke Whitechurch and Sir Roger Hope[3]
- 1634–1635: John Travers and Joshua Carpenter [4]
- 1639–1643: Joshua Carpenter (died and replaced 1642 by Chichester Fortescue) and Bernard Saunders [2] (Fortescue and Saunders both died in office 1642)[5]
- 1643–1649 Edward Trevor and Edmund Keating [5]
- 1661–1666: Sir George Rawdon, 1st Baronet and Edward Vernon [5]
1689–1801
editElection | First member | First party | Second member | Second party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1689 Patriot Parliament | Christopher Peppard FitzIgnatius | Bryan Dermod | ||||
1692 | Elnathan Lum | Zaccheus Sedgwick | ||||
August 1695 | Sir John Hanmer, 3rd Bt | |||||
1695 | Elnathan Lum | |||||
1703 | Charles Dering | Arthur Hill | ||||
1705 | William Balfour | |||||
1713 | Sir Hans Hamilton, 2nd Bt | James Stannus | ||||
1715 | Blayney Townley | |||||
1721 | William Stannus | |||||
1723 | Robert Ross | |||||
1727 | Harry Townley | |||||
1741 | John Macarell | |||||
1757 | William Townley-Balfour | |||||
1760 | Blayney Townley-Balfour | |||||
1768 | Robert Ross | |||||
1776 | Thomas Knox[note 1] | Theophilus Blakeney | ||||
1783 | Sir John Blaquiere [note 2] | Thomas Coghlan | ||||
1790 | Sir Charles des Voeux, 1st Bt | James Blaquiere | ||||
January 1798 | Robert Ross[note 3] | Robert Johnson[note 4] | ||||
1798 | Richard Magenis | Sir Thomas Lighton, 1st Bt | ||||
1801 | Constituency disenfranchised |
Notes
editReferences
edit- ^ O'Hart 2007, p. 502.
- ^ a b c A biographical dictionary of the membership of the Irish House of Commons 1640-1641 (thesis). Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). Department of History. 1998.
- ^ Stubbs, Major-General (1919). "County Louth Representatives in the Irish Parliament, 1613-1758". Journal of the County Louth Archaeological Society. 4 (4): 311–317. doi:10.2307/27729225. JSTOR 27729225.
- ^ Kearney, Hugh. Strafford in Ireland 1633-1641: A Study in Absolutism. p. 225.
- ^ a b c Parliamentary Papers, Volume 62, Part 2. p. 626.
Bibliography
edit- O'Hart, John (2007). The Irish and Anglo-Irish Landed Gentry: When Cromwell came to Ireland. Vol. II. Heritage Books. ISBN 978-0-7884-1927-0.
- Leigh Rayment's historical List of Members of the Irish House of Commons. Cites: Johnston-Liik, Edith Mary (2002). The History of the Irish Parliament 1692-1800 (6 volumes). Ulster Historical Foundation.