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    <eadid identifier="P51" countrycode="IE" mainagencycode="2135" url="https://archives.ul.ie/P51" encodinganalog="identifier">P51</eadid>
    <filedesc>
      <titlestmt>
        <titleproper encodinganalog="title">The Limerick Papers</titleproper>
      </titlestmt>
      <publicationstmt>
        <publisher encodinganalog="publisher">Special Collections and Archives Department</publisher>
        <address>
          <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
          <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
          <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
          <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
          <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
          <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
          <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
          <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
        </address>
        <date normal="2024-06-14" encodinganalog="date">2024-06-14</date>
      </publicationstmt>
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      <langusage>
        <language langcode="eng">English</language>
      </langusage>
      <descrules encodinganalog="3.7.2">This description follows guidelines based on *ISAD(G)* 2nd edition (2000), *Irish Guidelines for Archival Description* (2009), *National Council on Archives: Rules for the Construction of Personal, Place and Corporate Names* (1997) and *EAP Guidance on Data Protection for Archive Services* (2018).</descrules>
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    <did>
      <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">The Limerick Papers</unittitle>
      <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51</unitid>
      <unitdate normal="1531-01-01/2019-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1531-c. 2019 (predominantly 1832-1913)</unitdate>
      <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        9 standard boxes and 3 outsize boxes    </physdesc>
      <repository>
        <corpname>Special Collections and Archives Department</corpname>
        <address>
          <addressline>GL0-051, Glucksman Library, University of Limerick</addressline>
          <addressline>Limerick</addressline>
          <addressline>Ireland</addressline>
          <addressline>V94 DPY6</addressline>
          <addressline>Telephone: +353-61-202690</addressline>
          <addressline>Fax: +353-61-213415</addressline>
          <addressline>Email: specoll@ul.ie</addressline>
          <addressline>https://specialcollections.ul.ie/</addressline>
        </address>
      </repository>
      <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
        <language langcode="eng">English</language>
        <language langcode="lat">Latin</language>
      </langmaterial>
      <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
        <famname id="atom_42120_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
      </origination>
    </did>
    <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
      <note>
        <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
      </note>
    </bioghist>
    <odd type="publicationStatus">
      <p>Published</p>
    </odd>
    <odd type="institutionIdentifier">
      <p>2135</p>
    </odd>
    <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
      <p>The main portion of this collection consists of wills, accounts, correspondence and statements from the mid- to late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries relating to the family’s financial affairs, mostly arising from the will of the 1st Earl of Limerick and the dramatic reduction in rents at the turn of the century, which necessitated the sale of holdings through the Land Commission Court in the early 1900s. There is a small but interesting series of leases of property in Limerick City (P51/3/1/1-3 and P51/4/1-2) and a comprehensive set of documents (P51/3/2/1-28) relating to a dispute over title to St George’s Church at No. 1 Mallow Street, Limerick, which was demolished to make way to the Provincial Bank of Ireland, designed by James and George Richard Pain (for a ground plan of the bank by the Pain brothers, see P51/3/2/11).<lb/><lb/>While much of the early material relating to the Earls of Limerick and their antecedents is deposited in the National Library of Ireland, some interesting early documents can also be found in this collection.  Of particular note is a compilation of manuscript transcripts of letters and petitions (P51/1/1) by Edmond Sexten the elder (1486-1555) and his grandson Edmond Sexten the younger (1595-1636) concerning among other things their disputes with Limerick Corporation.  The document is written in secretary hand, but a more easily legible version can be found in P51/1/2.  Also worth noting is a compilation of abstracts and copies of early deeds relating to the Sexton, Casey and Stackpole families (P51/1/3).  A wonderful example of the emergence of the Age of Enlightenment can be found in P51/2/1 in the shape of a commonplace book, in which Colonel Edmund Pery kept notes between 1671 and 1681 on weights and measures, foreign coins, chronology, geography, astronomy, orthography, pronunciation and usage of English, significance of colours, instructions concerning the keep of horses, recipes for ink, boot polish etc., gardening activities and meteorological predictions.<lb/><lb/>A shortcoming of this collection is its limited scope.  There are no rent rolls, no estate correspondence and no personal correspondence of family members.  The building of Dromore Castle remains unrecorded, except for a scrap book (P51/5/4/1) compiled in 1868-1869 to contain sketches by the architect Edward William Godwin and rare photographs of Dromore Castle taken at various stages of its construction and a sketch of fireplace tiles by Godwin (P51/5/4/2).  The only item of personal nature in the collection is an album of photographs, sketches, and signatures collected by May, Countess of Limerick during house parties (P51/6/3/2/2).<lb/><lb/>It should be noted here that the material deposited in the National Library of Ireland dates primarily from 1371 to 1806.  A significant gap of the nineteenth-century material therefore exists, both in terms of estate and personal documentation.</p>
    </scopecontent>
    <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
      <p>The material has been arranged into nine series.  Series 1 contains material pertaining to the Sexten family, maternal ancestors of the Earls of Limerick.  Series 2 contains material pertaining to Colonel Edmund Pery, direct ancestor in the male line of the Earls of Limerick.  Series 3 to 8 contain material relating to the tenure of each Earl, commencing with Edmund Henry, 1st Earl of Limerick in Series 3, and concluding with Patrick Edmund, 6th Earl of Limerick in Series 8.  Series 9 contains ephemera not attributable to any particular Earl, including material of general genealogical interest relating to the Pery and associated families.  Within each series, material has when appropriate been divided thematically into sub-series.  Within each series and sub-series, documents have been arranged chronologically by date.</p>
    </arrangement>
    <controlaccess>
      <persname role="subject">Pain, James (1783-1877), architect</persname>
      <persname role="subject">Pain, George Richard (1792-1838), architect</persname>
      <persname role="subject">Godwin, Edward William (1833-1886), English architect and designer</persname>
      <subject>Inheritance and succession</subject>
      <subject>Landed Estates Court--Ireland</subject>
      <subject>Separation (Law)</subject>
      <subject>Country homes</subject>
      <subject>Architecture</subject>
      <geogname>Ireland--Limerick (City)</geogname>
      <geogname>Dromore Castle--Limerick--Ireland</geogname>
    </controlaccess>
    <phystech encodinganalog="3.4.3">
      <p>Paper documents mostly in good condition.</p>
    </phystech>
    <appraisal encodinganalog="3.3.2">
      <p>All records have been retained.</p>
    </appraisal>
    <accruals encodinganalog="3.3.3">
      <p>Accruals are possible.</p>
    </accruals>
    <processinfo>
      <p>Papers arranged and described by Anna-Maria Hajba in May 2019.</p>
    </processinfo>
    <originalsloc encodinganalog="3.5.1">
      <p>The originals of the photocopied items in the collection are held by the Limerick family.</p>
    </originalsloc>
    <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
      <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.4x0x-5048.</p>
    </altformavail>
    <relatedmaterial encodinganalog="3.5.3">
      <p>The main body of papers relating to the Earls of Limerick are held in the National Library of Ireland, Dublin (https://www.nli.ie/sites/default/files/2022-12/121_limerick.pdf).  Material relating to Edward William Godwin and the building of Dromore Castle is held in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London.</p>
    </relatedmaterial>
    <accessrestrict encodinganalog="3.4.1">
      <p>Unrestricted access to all items.</p>
    </accessrestrict>
    <userestrict encodinganalog="3.4.2">
      <p>Standard copyright regulations apply to all items.  For photocopying or reproducing material, please consult with the staff.</p>
    </userestrict>
    <dsc type="combined">
      <c level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Pertaining to the Sexten Family</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/1</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1531-01-01/1779-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1531-c. 1770s</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        7 items    </physdesc>
          <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
            <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            <language langcode="lat">Latin</language>
          </langmaterial>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <famname id="atom_42123_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>This series contains material pertaining to the Sexten family, maternal ancestors of the Earls of Limerick.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
          <p>The documents have been arranged chronologically by date.</p>
        </arrangement>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Bound manuscript in secretary hand containing transcripts of letters and petitions by Edmund Sexten the elder (1486-1555) and his grandson Edmund Sexten the younger (1595-1636).</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/1/1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1535-01-01/1641-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">c. 1535-1641 (dates covered by contents)</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        140 pp.    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3"><language langcode="eng">English</language><language langcode="lat">Latin</language>
                  Written in secretary hand, which requires specialist knowledge to decipher.        </langmaterial>
            <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/1/5/1/1516b8ad5e9d0b5a014d4c6f2149447a7ce91c5824633e88caaff18b22a9b1fd/111240-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42126_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Paginated 17th-century manuscript in secretary hand, bound in 19th-century tooled leather covers and embossed on the spine *Historical Notices of the Sexten Family &amp; City of Limerick*.  Pages 1-15 contain an additional set of pagination, which runs from 47 to 61.  The manuscript comprises primarily transcripts made by Edmond Sexten the younger (1595-1636) of letters and petitions (mostly in English, with some items in part or fully in Latin), which his grandfather Edmond Sexten the elder (1486-1555) had collected in order to defend himself against allegations that ‘my service to the kinge majestie is deemed... not to be such as did deserve the bountifull remuneration of his heighnes unto me’ and to prove that ‘my service was freely doone without receavinge wages or hire of the king majestie as others dothe’.  In addition to letters and petitions, the transcribed items include a narrative of the costs and charges incurred by Sexton in the King’s service; a list of havens, rivers, creeks, places of importance, territories and lordships with their landlords ‘from Lupes head which is the further land a seaboord by north the river of Limerick as also within the said river’; a declaration of the proportions of Ireland; and King John’s, Queen Elizabeth’s and King James I’s charters to Limerick.  To the abovementioned transcripts, Edmond Sexten the younger has added copies of letters and petitions relating to his own disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the dissolved abbeys of St. Mary’s and St Francis’s, which had come into his grandfather’s possession in 1537, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  In addition to transcripts of formal documents, the manuscript contains a list of books in the possession of Edmund Sexten the younger, grouped under the headings of 'Divinyty', 'History &amp; other bookes of morallyty', 'Scoole bookes', and 'Lawe bookes'; a list of lord deputies and governors of Ireland, and of the mayors, bailiffs, and high sheriffs of Limerick from 1154 to 1636; and pedigrees of branches of the Sexten family descending from Denis Sexten and Simon Sexten, and of the Golde, Comyn, Mortagh, White, and Arthur families of Limerick.  To the list of lord deputies mentioned above has been added a short account dated 22 May 1641 by Edmond Sexten’s son Christopher Sexten relating to the deaths and funerals of his father, daughter Jean (who died of smallpox), and eldest son Stephen, and the burning of his tenements in St Francis’s Abbey in Limerick, all of which events occurred in 1636.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
            <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.f0cv-y954.</p>
          </altformavail>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Bound manuscript in copperplate hand containing transcripts of letters and petitions by Edmund Sexten the elder (1486-1555) and his grandson Edmund Sexten the younger (1595-1636).</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/1/2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1535-01-01/1641-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">c. 1535-1641 (dates covered by contents)</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        291 pp.    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              <language langcode="lat">Latin</language>
            </langmaterial>
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            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42129_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Paginated manuscript, with an un-paginated table of contents, bound in tooled leather covers and embossed on the spine *Historical Notices of the Sexten Family &amp; City of Limerick*.   The contents constitute a copy in copperplate script of P51/1/1, lacking the pedigrees.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
            <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.cfj1-4a05.</p>
          </altformavail>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Bound manuscript containing a compilation of abstracts and copies of early deeds relating to the Sexten, Casey, and Stackpole families.</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/1/3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1531-01-01/1737-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1531-1737 (dates covered by contents)</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        218 pp.    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              <language langcode="lat">Latin</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/e/7/9/e79a1846d073ce33553ce95a2e5ee040b9e52210aadb955e9d4d942ce634d66a/112250-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42132_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Paginated manuscript, with an index, bound in tooled leather covers and embossed on the front cover *Abstracts &amp; Copys of Records, Relative to the Sexton, Casey, &amp; Stackpole Familys.*  The manuscript comprises abstracts and copies of seventeen documents relating to the Sexten family; eight relating to the Casey family; and two to the Stackpole family.  The documents relating to the Sexten family include a memorandum of a decree in favour of George Sexten in a dispute against James Roche concerning a title and possession of a store house (17 October 1531); grant to Edmond Sexten to be Chief Sewer of County Dublin (2 September 1532; in Latin); warrant to pass a grant of the monastery of St Mary’s House in Limerick to Edmund Sexten (24 September 1537); grant to Edmond Sexten of the fee farm of Limerick, with a release of all arrears then owing (1 August 1542; in Latin); free pardon to Edmond Sexten of all offences committed by him (14 December 1545); certificate by the Sheriff of County Limerick of Edmond Sexten having entered into security for his good behaviour (14 December 1545); grant of the office of Gauger and Searcher of Limerick to Humfry Sexten (10 June 1548); a protection to Humfry Sexten (23 April 1555; in Latin); grant to William Sidney of the custody and wardship of Stephen Sexten, brother and heir of Nicholas Sexten deceased (13 September 1558); grant to Edmond Sexten (son of Stephen Sexten) of the livery of his estate and lands (1 June 1559; in Latin); letter of King James I of England on behalf of Edmund Sexten’s favour (7 February 1608/9); grant to Edmond Sexten, his heirs and assigns for ever of several lands in the County and City of Limerick (10 July 1609/10; in Latin); abstract of an inquest held by Edmond Sexten in 1614 which proves that he was that year High Sheriff of County Limerick; abstract of letters patent showing that the wardship of John Gold, son and heir of Thomas Gold, deceased, was granted to Edmond Sexten (4 February 1623/4); inquisition taken at St Francis’s Abbey in County Limerick following the death of Edmond Sexten (22 January 1638; in Latin); inquisition (for which see P51/1/1/6) taken at the Tholsel of Limerick City in 1639 after the deaths of Edmond Sexten and his son Nicholas (9 October 1639; in Latin and English); and an inquisition taken at St Francis’s Abbey in County Limerick in 1639 after the deaths of Edmond Sexten and his son Nicholas (9 October 1639; in Latin and English).  The documents relating to the Casey family include abstracts of letters patent creating William Casey Bishop of Limerick (23 October 1551); letters patent granting the wardship of Thomas Thornton, son and heir of Sir George Thornton Provost Marshal of Munster to James Casey and his assigns (5 June 1605); letters patent granting a pardon of alienation and mesne rates of lands in County Cork to James Casey and Ulick Roche (8 March 1629); letters patent granting special livery to Thomas Casey (18 November 1633); inquisition taken at Kilmallock after the death of Thomas Casey of Rathcannon, incorporating a family settlement made by Thomas Casey, his will, and a variety of other matters (12 March 1637; partly in Latin); inquisition taken at Newcastle, County Limerick after the death of Thomas Casey (10 July 1638; in Latin); bill filed in chancery by the Rev Stacpole Pery and other against Lord Vere Bertie and others relative to the Casey estate and family (25 January 1735); and Lord Bertie’s answer to the same bill (15 February 1737).  The documents relating to the Stackpole family include a grant to Bartholomew Stacpole of Stacpole Court and several other lands in County Clare with liberty of keeping annual fairs (17 July 1676); and a deed of feoffment by way of family settlement made by Bartholomew Stacpole (3 November 1685).</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
            <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.q1m7-fn19.</p>
          </altformavail>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">List of six generations of Bishop William Casey’s descendants</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/1/4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1550-01-01/1779-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">c. 1550s-c. 1770s (dates covered by contents)</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 p.    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/f/b/f/fbf50eb644adc96a2cb7bc8e8812649a2783a43c6e070622799d472641185862/18241-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42135_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>List of six generations of Bishop William Casey’s direct descendants and their spouses.  Originally inserted between the pages of P51/1/3.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
            <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.he4d-4875.</p>
          </altformavail>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">List of wardships, leases, licences and offices granted to George Sexten</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/1/5</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1605-01-01/1623-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1605/6 and 1623 (date of contents)</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 p.    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/d/9/0/d90c14e53304d4124bf494e3730957622dd10931d328c9f5cca678587ab23014/18243-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42138_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>List of wardships, leases, licences and offices granted to George Sexten between 1605/6 and 1623.  A comment at the bottom of the page notes that ‘being doubtful that the above named George Sexten was of the family of Edmond Sexten of Limerick this sheet was omitted to be bound in the collection relative to the said Edmond.’  Originally inserted between the pages of P51/1/3.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
            <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.77cn-wt23.</p>
          </altformavail>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Manuscript in secretary hand comprising a directory of chapters and verses in the Bible on themed topics</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/1/6</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1627-01-01/1629-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1627-1629</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        791 pp.    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3"><language langcode="eng">English</language>
                  Written in secretary hand, which requires specialist knowledge to decipher.        </langmaterial>
            <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/6/8/5/685adc887ba63423e318e981a55ad5fc8e8924189b96f278ac5c4e1816d83be1/112551-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42141_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Manuscript bound in vellum, written in secretary hand and by the same hand as P51/1/1, so presumably Edmond Sexten the younger (1594-1636).  The manuscript is in two parts.  The first part, dated 1629, is paginated from 1 to 504 and comprises lines copied from the Bible, with the relevant book, chapter, and verse provided at the start of each line.  The copied texts are arranged under various headings, such as 'Abraham &amp; Sarah', 'Bees', 'Ezra', 'Fraillty', 'Fraude', 'Free Will', 'Hezekiel', 'pride', 'purgatory', 'Sabath', 'Titus', 'Visitations' and 'Youth'.  The headings appear in no particular order in the main body of the text but have been collated into an alphabetical index of six un-paginated pages at the start of the book.  The second part, dated 1627, is paginated from 1 to 287 and is similar in content to the first part.  An index for the headings has been begun at the end of the book, but only extends to entries for the letter A.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
            <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.7w73-4v33.</p>
          </altformavail>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Inquisition concerning the lands of Edmond Sexten</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/1/7</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1639-10-09/1639-10-09" encodinganalog="3.1.3">9 October 1639</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        32 pp.    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              <language langcode="lat">Latin</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/0/7/7/07700e6f67251647794cb31e73b714e7993d58f80677dfcf78ec2faf4c234f08/112490-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42144_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Inquisition bound in vellum concerning the lands of Edmond Sexten, who died 10 March 1636/37, acknowledging that he died possessed in fee tail of the site of the dissolved monastery of Blessed Virgin Mary and St Edward (also called Holy Cross), and various lands in Limerick city, of which the inquisition gives details.  The ownership passed to his eldest son Nicholas, who died 1 January 1637/38.  The inquisition further acknowledges that the lands now belong to Christopher Sexten, Edmond Sexten’s second son.  For an abstract of this document, see P51/1/3.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
            <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.sg76-ns88.</p>
          </altformavail>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Pertaining to Colonel Edmund Pery (d. 1721) and His Son the Rev. Stackpole Pery (1686-1739)</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/2</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1671-01-01/1729-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1671-1729</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 item    </physdesc>
          <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
            <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <famname id="atom_42147_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>This series contains material pertaining to Colonel Edmund Pery and his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Account and commonplace book kept and compiled by Colonel Edmund Pery between 1671 and 1681, with later additions by his son, the Reverend Stackpole Pery</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/2/1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1671-01-01/1729-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1671-1729</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        172 pp.    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/c/9/7/c97513957b27cc309c8e747da5ead8295fc6575befb4e20c2fc58013bc0ba176/108717-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42150_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Account and commonplace book, bound in vellum, kept and compiled by Colonel Edmund Pery between 1671 and 1681.  The first part of the book contains brief memoranda of financial transactions, mainly monies lent to and borrowed from various individuals, and more complete accounts under headings such as ‘An Acount of All receits of my Cousin Sextens Interest since his death’; ‘Disbursements likewise on the same Account’; ‘An account of what moneys I payed my uncle att my being in London 1679/80’; ‘Receits since my returne from Kinsaile December 1681’; ‘Receits for the use of my uncle Mr Nicholas Batteley since the death of my Cousin Sexten being 23 of November 1671’; ‘Disbursements on the same account Feb the 20th 1671’; and ‘Due to my uncle since accounted for when in England last then owing him £56’.  Upside down from the back are further memoranda of sums on money borrowed or lent.  In addition to accounts, the book contains ‘A Collection of Several things fit to be knowne’.  These include notes on weights and measures; a list of foreign coins and their value in pounds, shillings, and pence; various conversion tables; and a list of the countries of the known world and their acreage.  There are several pages of explanations of terms of scientific nature, particularly relating to geography, topography, astronomy, physics, and mathematics.  These are followed by instructions on how to ‘Know the Age of the Moon’, ‘know when the Moon is at the South by which you may know what tyme of the night is is [sic] by the Moon on a Sun Dual [sic]’; ‘find when it will be new moon in any given Month’; and ‘find Shrove Sunday’.  There are also notes relating to orthography and the pronunciation and usage of English, and a table of the symbolic significance of various colours.  Fifteen pages of the manuscript have been dedicated to instructions about horses.  These include tips on how to identify a good horse, how to tell its age, and how to keep one in good condition, with further notes on equine ailments, and recipes for salves and potions for their treatment.  These are followed by recipes for ‘A Liquor for Bootes’; ‘How to make a Cement which lasteth like marble &amp; resisteth aier or water without disjoyning or uncementing’; ‘To make Iron or Steel exceeding hard’; ‘To make a Candle burne &amp; continue 3 tymes as long as otherways it would; ‘To keep Wine fresh in the heat of summer tho carryed on horse back &amp; exposed to the sun; ‘How to melt mettall quickly yea in a shell upon a little fier; ‘To make quart of good Inck’; ‘To make shott’; ‘To make Iron strong &amp; look like silver’; ‘To make steel cutt Iron as it were Lead’; ‘To make Red Inck’; ‘To make Letters that cannot be read without the paper be put in water’; ‘To make letters that cannot be read but at the fier’; ‘To make Mellons or Cowcumbers ripe before their season’; ‘To keep Grapes fresh all the winter’; ‘To make the hands white’; ‘To take a spot of Oyl out of Cloath’; ‘To keep young Children from having pain in breeding Teeth’; ‘To mak hair not to grow’; ‘To keep flyes from flesh’; ‘To kill fleas’; ‘To take away the Tooth ach’; ‘To renue old &amp; woren letters’; ‘To cure the sting of waspes or Bees’; and ‘To make Hair Curle’.  The book concludes with a gardener’s calendar with advice on farming and gardening activities for every month of the year, and ways to predict ‘Dearth or Scarcity, Plenty, Sickness, Heat, Cold, frosts, snow, winds, Rain, Hail, Thunder &amp;c’ from nature.  To Pery’s observations have been added sheep, cattle, and butter accounts for 1724, 1725-1726, and 1729 by a different hand, possibly by Pery’s son, the Reverend Stackpole Pery.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
            <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.5zvk-c290.</p>
          </altformavail>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Pertaining to Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844), 1st Earl of Limerick (1803-1844)</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1787-01-01/1886-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1787-1886</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 sub-series    </physdesc>
          <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
            <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <famname id="atom_42153_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
          </origination>
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        <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>This series contains material pertaining to Edmund Henry Pery, 1st Earl of Limerick.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
          <p>The series has been divided thematically into three sub-series by subject matter.</p>
        </arrangement>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Deeds</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1787-01-01/1838-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1787-1838</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 files    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42156_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>This sub-series contains leases of plots in Limerick City granted by Edmund Henry Pery, 1st Earl of Limerick.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
            <p>The sub-series has been arranged into four files according to plots leased.</p>
          </arrangement>
          <c level="file">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Leases of part of South Priors Land in the South Liberties of the city of Limerick</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/1/1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1787-08-04/1834-09-16" encodinganalog="3.1.3">4 August 1787, 22 July 1829 and 16 September 1834</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 items    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/1/7/6/176315e365de3019e15e66b8cf95689e57198de3631ee903878cd287105bba0c/112539-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42159_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Lease dated 4 August 1787 between [Edmund Henry] Viscount Pery of the 1st part; and Lancellott [Lancelot] Hill of the city of Limerick esquire of the 2nd part of a plot of ground part of South Priors Land in the South Liberties of the city of Limerick, together with all the profits and benefits which may arise and accrue from the dock and quay Hill has undertaken to build on the front of this ground.  Term: three lives renewable forever.  Conditions: yearly rent of one shilling by two equal instalments on 25 March and 29 September, together with one shilling sterling as a fine for the renewal of each life.  The quay to remain open for passengers and carriages at all times, and the premises to be kept in good and tenantable order.  A plan by Richard Wilson of the quay, dock and building ground between Hill’s deal yard and the River Shannon to a scale of 84 feet in an inch dated 2 August 1787 has been annexed to the lease.  Also a renewal of the lease to Averell Hill dated 22 July 1829; and a second renewal to Walter Hussey Hill dated 16 September 1834.  Also see P51/4/1.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
              <p>Arranged chronologically by date of lease.</p>
            </arrangement>
            <phystech encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <p>Item P51/3/1/1 (3) is damaged and fragile.</p>
            </phystech>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.647v-jr86.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="file">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Leases of part of the Strand at South Priors Land in the Liberties of Limerick city</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/1/2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1791-01-31/1835-03-02" encodinganalog="3.1.3">31 January 1791, 1 January 1828 and 2 March 1835</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 items    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/b/d/f/bdf539e351b5a18d28cffecd729ebda6d8d9621f4d8f9f291d8e5c4dc50c8e52/112529-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42162_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Lease dated 31 January 1791 between [Edmund Henry] Viscount Pery of the 1st part; and James Fisher of the city of Limerick merchant of the 2nd part of the lot of ground marked No. 1 in a plan of a new town laid down by David Dukart in 1765 and described in the annexed map marked with the letter M, being part of the Strand adjoining the River Shannon at South Priors Land in the Liberties of the city of Limerick containing in front towards the river 200 feet, in rere 200 feet and in depth from said street to low water mark with liberty to  erect a quay not exceeding 60 feet wide on such part of said premises as shall be contiguous to the river for the purpose of landing goods on or making use of (in common with other people) as a street.  Term: three lives renewable forever.  Conditions: yearly rent of £27.1.8 sterling by two equal instalments on 25 March and 29 September, together with £27.1.8 sterling as a fine for the renewal of each life.  Fisher to lay out the sum of £300 in valuable and lasting improvements upon the demised premises within the space of seven years from the date of the lease.  A map describing part of Newtown Pery in the Liberties of the city of Limerick laid down by a scale of 200 feet to an inch has been annexed to the lease.  Also a renewal of the lease to John Fisher and James Fisher dated 1 January 1828; and a second renewal to James Joseph Fisher, Thomas Fisher, George Shackleton, and Aphra Scanlan dated 2 March 1835.  In two folders.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
              <p>Arranged chronologically by date of lease.</p>
            </arrangement>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.qke1-yx43.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="file">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Leases of part of South Priors Land adjacent to Catherine Street in Limerick city</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/1/3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1804-08-20/1838-07-06" encodinganalog="3.1.3">20 August 1804, 4 June 1828 and 6 July 1838</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 items    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/1/5/2/15251fa1dbe0b46e222d216ef995a7a5e27baaaa5c7994a22fc8eca077c87031/115256-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42165_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Lease dated 20 August 1804 between Edmund [Henry] Viscount Pery of the 1st part; and Joseph Massey Harvey of the city of Limerick merchant of the 2nd part of a plot of ground part of South Priors Land in the South Liberties of the city of Limerick containing in front to Catherine Street 132 feet and from front to rere 150 feet bounded on the south in front by Catherine Street, on the north by the Reverend William Hoare’s holding, on the east by William Russell’s holding, and on the west by Mallow Street.  Term: three lives renewable forever.  Conditions: yearly rent of £75.1.6 sterling by two equal instalments on 29 September and 25 March, together with £27.1.8 sterling as a fine for the renewal of each life.  The premises to be maintained in good and tenantable repair.  A map by James Williams of a plot of ground part of South Priors Ground as let to Joseph Harvey laid down by a scale of 30 feet to one inch has been annexed to the lease.  Also a renewal of the lease to James Harvey dated 4 June 1828 (damaged and fragile); and a second renewal to James Harvey of the 2nd part and Henry Maunsell of the 3rd part dated 6 July 1838.  Also see P51/4/2.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
              <p>Arranged chronologically by date of lease.</p>
            </arrangement>
            <phystech encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <p>Item P51/3/1/3 (2) is damaged and fragile.</p>
            </phystech>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.gh4g-v546.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="file">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Renewals of a lease of part of the Strand at South Priors Land in the Liberties of Limerick city</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/1/4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1810-04-12/1832-07-16" encodinganalog="3.1.3">12 April 1810, 2 June 1828 and 16 July 1832</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 items    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/8/6/2/86212b8fbb3d1ae517e2c44632c6d8312c5d2ceacd58a84ad7f598cd6618e576/113360-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42168_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Renewal of a lease dated 12 April 1810 between Edmond Henry [1st] Earl of Limerick of the 1st part; and the Reverend Averell Hill, Archdeacon of Limerick of the 2nd part of the half lot of ground marked no. 3 in the plan of a new town laid down by David Dukart in 1765 and described in a map annexed to the original lease [now not present] dated 26 April 1791 being part of the Strand adjoining the River Shannon at South Priors Land in the Liberties of the city of Limerick containing in front towards the river 99 feet and in depth from a new intended street to low water mark which said premises are bounded by two streets intended to be left 60 feet wide each and by an intended quay and half lot of ground in Lancelot Hill’s possession.  Term: three lives renewable forever.  Conditions: yearly rent of £13.8.1½ sterling, together with one peppercorn as a fine for the renewal of each life, if demanded.  Also a second renewal of the lease to Averill Hill dated 2 June 1828; and a third renewal to Walter Hussy Hill dated 16 July 1832.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
              <p>Arranged chronologically by date of lease.</p>
            </arrangement>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.dp07-v613.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Concerning a Dispute over Title to St. George's Church</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1832-01-01/1835-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1832-1835</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file and 27 items    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42171_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>In 1769, Edmund Henry Pery decided to replace a chapel of ease on his estate close to Limerick with a new church in a better location. As the church was likely to cost a large sum of money, Pery induced his relatives to assist.  Sir Henry Hartstonge agreed to pay for the new church on ground donated by Pery in exchange of £50 in cash, the materials of the old church, and the four lots of ground upon which it was built.  In 1771, Pery granted Hartstonge a lease of the four lots of ground.  Soon after, Sir Henry Hartstonge let the lots for building.  In 1797, Pery granted and released to church wardens Anthony Lefroy and Alexander Torrens part of the land whereupon the new church had been built.  The local clergyman attempted to let the lot for building but the church wardens objected as they had not been empowered to let the land for that purpose.  In 1804, Pery demised the lease to the Bishop of Limerick along with the right to do with the plot of ground what he pleased except for a space of 20 feet immediately contiguous to the church which was to be applied solely to the use and convenience of the church.  Later that year, the Bishop leased part of the ground to John Meade Thomas, who subsequently expended a large sum of money on building on this plot of ground.  By now, the new church had become inconvenient for the parish and a decision was made to replace it.  An agreement was entered into with the Provincial Bank of Ireland for the sale of the lot that remained in the Bishop’s possession.  However, as a consequence of the lease made in 1804, the Bishop did not have the power to dispose of it and an Act of Parliament was passed to enable him to do so.  The Act made no statement that the premises ever belonged to the Earl of Limerick but it did state that the lot was part of the estate of the Earl of Limerick who was a consenting party to the act and entitled to the rent of five shillings a year if demanded. In c. 1833 the Bishop of Limerick attempted to sell this plot of ground to the Provincial Bank of Ireland for the construction of a bank.  A dispute arose as to the title of ownership and resulted in a court case, to which the papers in this sub-series relate.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
            <p>The documents have been arranged chronologically by date.  In case of copies, the dates of the originals have been applied.</p>
          </arrangement>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a pre-nuptial settlement</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1832-01-01/1835-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">c. 1832-1835 (date of copy)</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        5 sheets    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/c/4/a/c4a4933f97d405548ee51c853c6ffb8d60e6f578a1038e326c7288e81401fd3d/113368-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42174_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy of a pre-nuptial settlement dated 8 February 1681 between Edmond Pery of the city of Limerick esquire of the 1st part; Robert Rice of the city of Limerick of the 2nd part; and Bartholomew Stackpoole of Stackpoole Court, county Clare esquire and Stephen Comyne of the city of Limerick, gentleman of the 3rd part involving the hamlets and lands of Rathany in county Limerick containing by estimation 430 acres; the several messuages, land tenements and hereditaments with their appurtenances in the North Liberties of the city of Limerick commonly called North Priores [Priors] Land containing by estimation 40 acres; the Abbey called St Francis Abbey in the South Liberties of the city of Limerick commonly called South Priores [Priors] Land containing by estimation 120 acres; and Saint Mary’s House situate on the east side of the parish of the Blessed Virgin Mary in the city of Limerick.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.ffar-1b30.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a lease of four lots of ground in South Priors Land in the liberties of Limerick city</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1832-01-01/1835-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">c. 1832-1835</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 sheets    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/e/6/5/e657fe3cf9df4bb4e7d0b64ab0333fdda8cca378f7f00a0f13a403b5a2977773/113381-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42177_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy of a lease dated 16 September 1771 between Edmond Sexton Pery of the city of Dublin of the 1st part; and Sir Henry Hartstonge of the city of Limerick of the 2nd part of the four lots of ground described in an annexed map forming part of South Priors Land in the liberties of the city of Limerick.  Term: for three lives renewable forever.  Conditions: yearly payment of one peppercorn if demanded.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.ews8-yg05.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a family settlement</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1832-01-01/1835-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">c. 1832-1835</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        10 sheets (outsize)    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/f/4/5/f454d884ce1066a1352e88933832e46de8253dd53779b3c7195339cb0b0919d1/113385-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42180_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy of a family settlement dated 9 November 1779 between Edmond Sexton Pery of the city of Dublin of the 1st part; the Reverend William Cecil Pery, Dean of Killaloe of the 2nd part; Edmond Henry Pery, only son of the said Dean of Killaloe of the 3rd part; Viscount Devesci and Sir Henry Hartstonge, Baronet of the 4th part; and John Dowdall Hammond of the 5th part.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <phystech encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <p>Fragile, with loose and damaged first sheet.</p>
            </phystech>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.s6gk-g367.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a lease of four lots of ground in South Priors Land in the liberties of Limerick city</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1832-01-01/1835-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">c. 1832-1835</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 sheets    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/7/9/9/799d2985d34f5eef6c455c770c8fa844e664786d273adf6c124ba2ccb5221c03/113406-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42183_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy of a lease dated 22 February 1796 between Edmond [Henry] Viscount Pery of the 1st part; and Sir Henry Hartstronge of the city of Limerick Baronet of the 2nd part of the four lots of ground marked in the annexed map forming part of the South Priors Ground in the South Liberties of the city of Limerick together with the tithes thereof.  Term: for three lives renewable forever.  Conditions: yearly payment of one peppercorn if demanded.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.e5dk-gb27.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Attested copy of a conveyance of a plot of ground in the South Liberties of Limerick city</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1832-01-01/1835-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">c. 1832-1835</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        5 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/a/8/6/a86d9770ece8c5f6dafd477e505908c562d482dc8a541a4b4cf7cb8c12b9b7ba/113419-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42186_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Attested copy of a conveyance dated 26 August 1797 between Edmond [Henry] Viscount Pery of the 1st part; and Anthony Lefroy and Alexander Torrance church wardens of the Parish of Saint Michael’s in the Liberties of the City of Limerick of the 2nd part of the plot of ground, described in an attached map, containing 142 feet in length and 118 feet in breadth being part of South Priors lands in the South Liberties of the city of Limerick whereon a chapel has lately been built in length 72 feet and in breadth 48 feet.  Term: forever.  Conditions: the yearly rent of one peppercorn if demanded.  No grave shall be made or erected or a person or persons buried in any part of the said premises at any time.  A yearly rent of £300 sterling is payable in case any person shall be so buried.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.5hf0-at79.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a lease of a plot of ground in South Priors lands in the south liberties of Limerick city</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1832-01-01/1835-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">c. 1832-1835</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        7 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/4/f/c/4fcc1b4ec816ad9b4c7b049a8f0a4010dff16c807d403cf2e5660e2060dd8829/113423-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42189_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy of a lease dated 26 January 1804 between Edmond [Henry] Viscount Pery of the 1st part; Anthony Lefroy of the city of Limerick of the 2nd part; and Thomas Lord Bishop of Limerick of the 3rd part of the plot of ground described in the annexed map containing 132 feet in length and 118 feet in breach being part of South Priors Land in the South Liberties of the city of Limerick whereon a chapel has lately been built in length seventy two feet and in breadth forty eight feet.  Term: forever.  Conditions: annual rent of five shillings sterling if demanded.  The lease grants the Bishop permission to lease the said premises except for a pace of twenty feet immediately contiguous and adjoining the chapel which should be applied solely to the use and convenience of the chapel.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.8px9-c258.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy of a lease of a parcel of ground in South Priors land in the South Liberties of Limerick City</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1832-01-01/1835-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">c. 1832-1835</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        10 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/5/a/f/5af1c602d4bd9059c9f4db274f25d6aa86853225c10110e851469425208f19f4/113433-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42192_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy of a lease dated 26 December 1804 between Thomas Lord Bishop of Limerick of the 1st part; and John Meade Thomas of the city of Limerick, merchant of the 2nd part of a parcel of ground part of South Priors land in the South Liberties of the city of Limerick as described in an annexed map.  Term: for three lives with a covenant for perpetual renewal. Condition: an annual rent of £34 together with a renewal fine of one peppercorn on the fall of each life.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.8tjp-s991.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="file">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copies of a family settlement</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1832-01-01/1835-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">c. 1832-1835</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 items (outsize)    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/2/f/e/2fe067ae3880872c28a89bfafcd4ec8e9f8e4b4d354fda6615b7a20a4f0c2b5e/113444-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42195_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copies of a family settlement between Edmond Henry [1st] Earl of Limerick of the 1st part; Henry Hartstonge Perry [sic] Viscount Glentworth, eldest son and heir apparent of the Earl of Limerick and Annabella Percy [sic] Viscountess Glentworth of the 2nd part; John Wright of the city of Dublin gentleman of the 3rd part; James Peacock of the city of Dublin gentleman of the 3th part; Thomas Casey and Pryce Peacock of the city of Dublin esquires of the 5th part; and Thomas Philip Maunsell of the city of Limerick esquire and John Radcliffe of the city of Dublin esquire of the 6th part.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <phystech encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <p>Item P51/3/2/8 (2) is fragile.</p>
            </phystech>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.nd3n-dy68.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Abstract of title</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1832-01-09/1832-01-09" encodinganalog="3.1.3">9 January 1832</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        12 sheets (outsize)    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/4/f/e/4fe707554e1c465dd5fdd8bba4e26104dcdacffb7d3f836d82fb493c787ee885/113483-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42198_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Abstract of title of the [1st] Earl of Limerick and others to part of South Priors Land upon which a Chapel of Ease has been erected, with observations on behalf of the proposed purchasers the Provincial Bank of Ireland by P. &amp;. Mahony solicitors for the opinion of Stephen Woulfe.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.se98-r665.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy queries and opinion on abstract of title</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1832-01-09/1832-01-09" encodinganalog="3.1.3">9 January 1832</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 sheets    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/9/b/9/9b99036ae5e139bf134828aaa0fe6064710fbce7938d97d8e8a677811807bb39/18249-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42201_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy queries and opinion of [Stephen] Woulfe on abstract of title of the [1st] Earl of Limerick and others to part of South Priors Land, upon which a chapel of ease has been erected.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.cc70-yx81.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Ground plan for the Provincial Bank of Ireland and two small houses</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1832-05-01/1832-05-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">May 1832</unitdate>
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        1 item    </physdesc>
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                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/9/9/e/99e3a8ac6605d8cf915c94c2c4bf4138f2de7d73a9e5bcc330a6c5a00164fb63/113507-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
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                <famname id="atom_42204_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Ground plan by James and George Richard Pain for the Provincial Bank of Ireland and for two small houses to be built at Limerick on the site of George’s Church.</p>
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          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Case for the advice and opinion of the Attorney General</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1833-09-04/1833-09-04" encodinganalog="3.1.3">4 September 1833</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 pp.    </physdesc>
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                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/c/0/8/c08c36c160fd6713e3d65fa8afee3c7e1f2f22f887112f8ac317eeba1455698d/18252-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
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            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
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              <p>Published</p>
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              <p>Case for the advice and opinion of the Attorney General concerning the title to the Limerick Church.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.smjh-s168.</p>
            </altformavail>
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          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Abstract of title with the opinion of the Attorney General</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1833-10-11/1833-10-11" encodinganalog="3.1.3">11 October 1833</unitdate>
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        9 sheets    </physdesc>
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                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/f/0/4/f04f9c89e0a634215e45aecf4dd15de1f06d2853f81055272a39c63648be0fb4/113509-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42210_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
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              <p>Abstract of the title of the Bishop of Limerick to the Chapel of Ease and yards called George’s Church in the city of Limerick, with the opinion thereon of the Attorney General Francis Blackburne.</p>
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy case for the Attorney General concerning the Limerick Church</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/14</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1833-09-01/1833-09-30" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. September 1833?]</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/5/4/a/54a2725c10e656ffdcb780e40cd989e1cc57d7cfcd2cc6d97078934a4570bdc1/18257-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42213_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy case for the Attorney General concerning the Limerick Church prepared by P. Mahony &amp; Co.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.t17y-va19.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Act to enable the Bishop of Limerick to sell and dispose of Saint George’s Chapel</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/15</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1833-01-01/1833-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1833</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        7 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/e/e/5/ee5db93bcecc6558c1ea33d6c24f3f0bbdf4bcaf6b35b61bbb62d68d123b698a/18261-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42216_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Act to enable the Bishop of Limerick to sell and dispose of Saint George’s Chapel, in the City of Limerick, and the land on which the same is built (heretofore part of the Estate of the Earl of Limerick), and to apply the proceeds of such sale in the erection of a new chapel.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.nzq9-s154.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Observations on the title to the Limerick Church on behalf of the Provincial Bank of Ireland</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/16</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1833-10-01/1833-10-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. October 1833?]</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/b/3/e/b3e16af0267062698f918b76d910699164b2b6c3044ad1dbae4f3d3fb096064f/18268-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42219_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Observations on the title to the Limerick Church on behalf of the Provincial Bank of Ireland submitted to the Attorney General by P. Mahony &amp; Co.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.f14p-kb09.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Common search in Registry for acts by Sir Henry Hartstonge</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/17</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1833-10-01/1833-11-30" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. October-November 1833]</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/a/7/b/a7bb8be4934071876c1161eba99c214cd18b34d992367065dee627f0df2c1584/18272-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42222_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Common search in Registry for any act by Sir Henry Hartstonge from 1771 to 1804 inclusive and by the Bishop of Limerick from 1804 to 30 October 1833 respecting the church and ground in Limerick called George’s Church in the parish of St Michael and city of Limerick.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.sgx4-yt54.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Case of the Bishop of Limerick with copy opinion</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/18</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1833-10-25/1833-10-25" encodinganalog="3.1.3">25 October 1833</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        10 sheets    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/6/8/7/6874c00c95f9bcaa9016bd09a7f70a5eb5bcb102c5c6c624fea69c5ac421e9a7/113519-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42225_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Case of the Bishop of Limerick with the Provincial Bank of Ireland and copy opinion thereof of [Francis] Blackburne.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.gdxn-sc53.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Sketch of the plot of ground belonging to George’s Church</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/19</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1833-11-07/1833-11-07" encodinganalog="3.1.3">7 November 1833</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 item    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/9/2/d/92dd1ff57822d98bb78680969ab92d78ea4cff12d560537ccf6c5fd39d316407/18274-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42228_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Sketch by George Richard Pain of the plot of ground belonging to George’s Church Limerick to be purchased for the Provincial Bank.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.5drk-rw89.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy affidavit of Mary Anne Williams</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/20</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1833-11-09/1833-11-09" encodinganalog="3.1.3">9 November 1833</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/a/9/e/a9ed707c30769fd15171a537b101deb4bda688f5cf4145a382901d4f6b029c86/18276-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42231_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy affidavit of Mary Anne Williams stating that her father James Williams, architect was the builder of George’s Church which formerly stood at the end of Thomas Street in the city of Limerick.  She also states that her father had pointed to Viscount Pery the error of building a church in this location as it interrupted the view in George’s Street, and that upon hearing this Lord Pery ordered the church to be taken down and a new one to be built in the present location.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy affidavit of John Cusack</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/21</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1833-11-09/1833-11-09" encodinganalog="3.1.3">9 November 1833</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/4/f/5/4f55e5412f1a0b34cff71b9c70421b50abb5e046727d1e3a3e1fc3f72a26aa5a/18279-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42234_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy affidavit of John Cusack, aged 76, stating that George’s Church has been as long as he can recollect in the state and situation it is now placed.  Cusack also states that according to old inhabitants of the city a church which formerly stood at the end of Thomas Street was taken down and the church on George’s Street commenced building in about 1771.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.0g5v-e667.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">List of documents relating to St George’s Church</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/22</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1834-01-01/1834-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 1834]</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/0/a/1/0a16955f356068870d56e345bd1ea3151e3a50795fd1f39d08386baf0ab2d5f9/18282-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42237_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>List prepared by Farrers &amp; Co. [Solicitors, London] of 15 documents sent [to the 1st Earl of Limerick?] relating to St George’s Church in Limerick city.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.hfa4-x433.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy opinion of A. R. Sidebottom</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/23</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1834-01-01/1834-01-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">January 1834</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/9/f/0/9f0b6f64d50a76bdb5d1b2c3d60c7945946fe8b63e721207f77d2f23d8d30b37/18287-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42240_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy opinion of A. R. Sidebottom, Lincoln’s Inn, relating to Limerick Church and the Provincial Bank.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.b0y7-cg32.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Statement by A. R. Sidebottom</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/24</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1834-01-01/1834-01-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">January 1834</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/e/c/3/ec3a7eba703cbd8956a2a973d93ae5dd2e35d34b49289547c9bda5fd63f91c8b/18290-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42243_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Statement by A. R. Sidebottom concerning the title to the Limerick Church.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.t5fx-dx82.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy observations by A. R. Sidebottom</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/25</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1834-08-01/1834-08-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">August 1834</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/7/2/d/72d154dc03d91fc69642666cd8715df30206b86757badde29cbe10efc580eee8/18294-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42246_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy observations by A. R. Sidebottom on behalf of the Provincial Bank in the case of Limerick Church.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.3rkn-g622.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">A. R. Sidebottom’s instructions for the completion of purchase</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/26</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1834-01-01/1834-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 1834]</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/c/8/1/c819b3c55be48d5977b75216bc0321ad86acf9abad2294169eddef4db5b817cb/18298-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42249_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>A. R. Sidebottom’s instructions for the completion of the Provincial Bank of Ireland’s purchase of a piece of land from the Bishop of Limerick, in which the 1st Earl of Limerick is to join.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.p85a-mw30.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Draft bond for the perusal of A. R. Sidebottom</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/27</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1835-01-01/1835-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1835</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        14 sheets    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/d/b/5/db5069d028a601405886e7683632df4bada453ac91515fe67b31a208a441f946/18302-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42252_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Draft bond from Edmond Henry 1st Earl of Limerick to Edward Blount and Oliver Farrer for the perusal and settlement of [Alexander Radclyffe] Sidebottom.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.dhgd-sm48.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Draft release [of St George’s Church and piece of land]</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/2/28</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1835-08-01/1835-08-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">August 1835</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        23 sheets    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/8/e/f/8ef26e0f8bc7bb55bfe9e6dd13cead1f29a44be51d0331fbee77d6239ca1796b/113530-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42255_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Draft release of a chapel [St George’s Church] and piece of land in the city of Limerick between John, Bishop of Limerick of the 1st part, Edward Henry, [1st] Earl of Limerick of the 2nd part, and Edward Blount of Bryanston Square, county Middlesex and Oliver Farrer of Lincoln’s Inn Fields, county Middlesex [trustees for the Provincial Bank of Ireland] of the 3rd part.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.w2qm-v781.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Concerning the 1st Earl's Death and Matters Arising from It</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1840-01-01/1886-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1840-1886</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        8 items    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42258_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>This sub-series contains wills, declarations, bills of complaint and related documents arising from the death of Edmund Henry, 1st Earl of Limerick which occurred on 7 December 1844.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
            <p>The documents have been arranged chronologically by date.</p>
          </arrangement>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy will and codicils of Edmond Henry [1st] Earl of Limerick</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/3/1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1840-01-01/1844-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1840-1844</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        60 sheets (outsize)    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/5/c/7/5c7e55a2c7d0572c6de26fae82cdd0a1256b13f213f2bdc3bf11b71151b1b27f/113555-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42261_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy will of Edmond Henry [1st] Earl of Limerick relating to his real and personal property in England dated 29 July 1840;  copy will relating to his real and personal property in Ireland dated 29 July 1840; and a codicil dated 4 February 1844.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.nr5n-z086.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Declaration by John MacNamara</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/3/2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1846-05-12/1846-05-12" encodinganalog="3.1.3">12 May 1846</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/8/2/9/8291e6bbb321b181cfc0dc9b9253b3afef368249921ce48e53c2cc10d34896af/18319-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42264_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Declaration by John MacNamara of Court in the parish of Kildimo, county Limerick, former servant to the late Sir Henry Hartstonge, that Sir Henry Hartstonge died on 25 February 1797 without issue; that following his death the late [1st] Earl of Limerick came into possession of the Hartstonge estate in the parish of Kildimo; and that this estate is now and has for many years past been known as the Court Estate.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.x29j-r158.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy declaration by Annabella Tennison, Dowager Viscountess Glentworth</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/3/3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1852-07-23/1852-07-23" encodinganalog="3.1.3">23 July 1852</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/b/b/8/bb8feab47a9491bb2d2bc10559a2ab1fa842a149f2d79be9862f3ea84bc18e8d/18322-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42267_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photocopy of a declaration by Annabella Tennison, Dowager Viscountess Glentworth of Clifton Place, Hyde Park, county Middlesex that she is the mother of Edmund Henry Pery, late Viscount Glentworth who was her eldest son and who died on 16 February 1844 without surviving male issue.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.2hmw-xz67.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Bill of Complaint in Chancery</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/3/4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1853-08-04/1853-08-04" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[4 August 1853]</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        14 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/a/2/6/a264d6b92b950f0acdbb8cecd703fb38e345c74652d6512b8717d4a5e6c88ce2/18325-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42270_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Bill of Complaint in Chancery in the case between William Hale John Charles Pery commonly called Viscount Glentworth and others, plaintiffs; and Thomas Spring Baron Monteagle and others, defendants.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.pbc0-z420.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Bill of Complaint in Chancery</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/3/5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1859-07-01/1859-07-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">July 1859</unitdate>
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        10 pp.    </physdesc>
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                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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                <famname id="atom_42273_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
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              <p>Published</p>
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              <p>Bill of Complaint in Chancery in the case between William Henry Tennison, [2nd] Earl of Limerick, plaintiff; and William Hale John Charles Pery, commonly called Viscount Glentworth, defendant.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.ahwb-dp14.</p>
            </altformavail>
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          <c level="item">
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              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Supplemental Bill of Complaint in Chancery</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/3/6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1874-10-27/1874-10-27" encodinganalog="3.1.3">27 October 1874</unitdate>
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        20 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/2/5/a/25a1b3878fcfca17d1015ba8a003fd6e03a5e684ed4cc19ec03970ea69cf6ca7/18351-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
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                <famname id="atom_42276_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Supplemental Bill of Complaint in Chancery in the case between William Hale John Charles, [3rd] Earl of Limerick and others, plaintiffs; and William Henry Edmond de Vere Sheaffe Pery commonly called Viscount Glentworth (an infant), defendant.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.4qq7-we93.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Appointment of new trustees</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/3/7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1876-05-17/1876-05-17" encodinganalog="3.1.3">17 May 1876</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 membranes    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/2/7/8/2786308d686e157f2e7b82d8017de00bb075613086cd200c54a9c0ba1cf17bba/113617-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42279_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Appointment by George Lake Russell of Thomas Hughes, Alfred George Marten, and George Frederick Rooper as the new trustees of the English will of Edmond Henry, [1st] Earl of Limerick.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.j6tv-s451.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Affidavit in support of summons for sale of heirlooms</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/3/3/8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1886-01-01/1886-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1886</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        10 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/f/3/5/f350525b1d9baea82308967a7bb6b1dad6fc3e064324ff9d3bf6a45d82fb3ee1/18373-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42282_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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              <p>Affidavit of the [3rd] Earl of Limerick in support of summons for sale of heirlooms in the matter of the wills of Edmond Henry late [1st] Earl of Limerick deceased and of the Settled Lands Acts 1882 and 1884 in the High Court of Justice Chancery Division.  The affidavit incorporates a schedule of items to be sold.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.ddxx-2s35.</p>
            </altformavail>
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        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Pertaining to William Henry Tennison Pery (1812-1866), 2nd Earl of Limerick (1844-1866)</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/4</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1854-01-01/1862-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1854-1855, 1862</unitdate>
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        3 items    </physdesc>
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            <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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            <famname id="atom_42285_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
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          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>This series contains material pertaining to William Henry Tennison Pery, 2nd Earl of Limerick.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
          <p>The documents have been arranged chronologically by date.</p>
        </arrangement>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Fee farm grant of part of South Priors Land to Dame Emily Ribton</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/4/1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1854-10-28/1854-10-28" encodinganalog="3.1.3">28 October 1854</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 membrane    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/3/1/f/31f61475e9f40b7969a5e8041aff836fc02a299f21b3d5ed56b6482e772bf477/113623-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42288_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Fee farm grant between William Henry Tennison [2nd] Earl of Limerick of the 1st part; and Dame Emily Ribton wife of Sir John Sheppey Ribton of Woodbrook in the County of Dublin Baronet of the 2nd part of the lot of ground part of South Priors Land in the South Liberties of the city of Limerick and all the profits and benefits which may arise and become due from the dock and quay as stated in the original lease (for which see P51/3/1/1/ (1)).  Term: forever.  Conditions: one shilling sterling to be paid by two equal instalments on 25 March and 29 September.  Premises to be retained in good repair.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
            <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.rsq9-ds96.</p>
          </altformavail>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Fee farm grant to Thomas McNamara of part of South Priors Land</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/4/2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1855-09-25/1855-09-25" encodinganalog="3.1.3">25 September 1855</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 membrane    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/3/7/a/37a5e98679afbcc746bc303e8d9e91744e50be69c391eef8c007fd84d726ca4b/113626-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42291_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Fee farm grant between William Henry Tennison [2nd] Earl of Limerick of the 1st part; and Thomas McNamara Junior of Corbally in the Liberties of the city of Limerick esquire of the 2nd part of that plot of ground part of South Priors Land in the South Liberties of the city of Limerick containing front to Catherine Street 132 feet and from front to rere 150 feet bounded on the south in front by Catherine Street on the north by Reverend William Hoare’s holding on the east by William Russell’s holding and on the west by Mallow Street as described on a map annexed to the original lease (for which see P51/3/1/3 (1)).  Terms: forever.  Conditions: yearly rent of £75.8.1 sterling to be paid by two equal instalments on 25 March and 29 September. Premises to be kept in good and tenantable order.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
            <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.6df6-cr66.</p>
          </altformavail>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy transfer of existing mortgage security</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/4/3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1862-05-20/1862-05-20" encodinganalog="3.1.3">20 May 1862</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        32 sheets (outsize)    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/0/d/1/0d1fba96ea29ae573058ee1c49ff35ba6067e0ef1e336e840155a2ebb6c42e97/113629-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42294_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Copy transfer of existing mortgage security between Nassau William Senior of Kensington Gore in the county of Middlesex Esquire and Charles Purton Cooper of Boulogne-sur-Mer in the kingdom of France, Barrister at Law of the 1st part; William Henry Tennison [2nd] Earl of Limerick of the 2nd part; the Honourable William Hale John Charles Pery, commonly called Viscount Glentworth of the 3rd part; John Ellis Clowes of the Temple in the city of London and Thomas Glover Kensit of Skinners Hall in the city of London of the 4th part; George Rooper of 26 Lincoln’s Inn Fields in the county of Middlesex esquire of the 5th part; and John Vanderkiste of Limerick land and estate agent of the 6th part on the life interest of the Earl of Limerick in settled estates in Limerick, Cork, and Clare and a further mortgage by appointment for term under power of a re-settlement of 19 May 1862 to secure £25,000 and interest.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
            <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.rkzq-vr34.</p>
          </altformavail>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Pertaining to William Hale John Charles Pery (1840-1896), 3rd Earl of Limerick (1866-1896)</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1862-01-01/1913-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1862-1913</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        5 sub-series    </physdesc>
          <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
            <language langcode="eng">English</language>
          </langmaterial>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <famname id="atom_42297_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>This series contains material pertaining to William Hale John Charles Pery, 3rd Earl of Limerick.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
          <p>The series has been divided thematically into five sub-series by subject matter.</p>
        </arrangement>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Concerning the 3rd Earl's First Wife, Caroline Maria née Gray (1837-1877)</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1862-01-01/1862-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1862</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 item    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42300_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>This sub-series contains material pertaining to Caroline Maria née Gray (1837-1877), first wife of the 3rd Earl of Limerick.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Marriage settlement of William Hale John Charles Pery Viscount Glentworth and Miss Caroline Maria Gray</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/1/1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1862-08-27/1862-08-27" encodinganalog="3.1.3">27 August 1862</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        7 membranes    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/6/d/a/6da2075d2c252cc0944cf5da2af1b2c5433bdeb4e7ef9538c778901439a8aef1/113664-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42303_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Marriage settlement of William Hale John Charles Pery Viscount Glentworth and Miss Caroline Maria Gray.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.tzcv-4n82.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Concerning the 3rd Earl's Second Wife, Isabella née Colquhoun (1850-1927)</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1896-01-01/1913-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1896-1913</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        5 items    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42306_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>This sub-series contains material pertaining to Isabella née Colquhoun (1850-1927), second wife of the 3rd Earl of Limerick</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
            <p>The documents have been arranged chronologically by date.</p>
          </arrangement>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy will and codicils of Frances Isabella Katharine Hettich</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/2/1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1896-01-01/1904-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1896-1904</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        12 sheets    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/f/a/9/fa92895cd29048e8478b4964dedb0c3398d80288ad27c5cac8d6a330b6fb0fc0/113673-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42309_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy will of Frances Isabella Katharine Hettich [Lady Isabella’s paternal aunt] dated 10 September 1896; and four related codicils dated 20 July 1899, 10 February 1902, 29 December 1903 and 28 April 1904.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.s1ej-hy34.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">List of Frances Isabella Katharine Hettich's investments</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/2/2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1910-01-01/1911-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 1910-1911]</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/3/6/2/362d4a01689e40a61e3e49377b7feb50a81194c95359c9df137c0f29ec14d985/18379-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42312_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>List of investments of Frances Isabella Katharine Hettich, who died on 23 September 1905.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.2qth-ck47.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Accounts with beneficiaries</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/2/3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1911-05-22/1911-05-22" encodinganalog="3.1.3">22 May 1911</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        8 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/e/7/0/e7005d8b3e3d31b24922681362cc2919c33b9870fe63934df65a02aa96429db3/18384-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42315_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Accounts of Frances Hettich’s trustees with the beneficiaries.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.gn00-rv50.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Accounts with residuary legatees</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/2/4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1911-07-15/1911-07-15" encodinganalog="3.1.3">15 July 1911</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/4/a/7/4a7e89b13f8f5f58ab67b532764599ca8f84a3aeb2a9991df5ce3fdfc18e2889/18392-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42318_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Accounts of Frances Hettich’s trustees with the residuary legatees.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.bx1b-s364.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter relating to the settlement of Frances Hettich’s estate</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/2/5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1913-05-01/1913-05-01" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1 May 1913</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 p.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/c/6/1/c615c8edc050529043f8209451cb9b47a237b5220c6d79a4cd480cc5c128fd5b/18395-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42321_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter from Arthur R. Farrer, 66 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London WC to Major Sir E[dmund] H[albert] Elliot, 40 Queens Gate Gardens, London SW [second husband to Isabella, Countess of Limerick] relating to the settlement of Frances Hettich’s estate.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.e0fe-9g43.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Concerning the 3rd Earl's Estates and Financial Affairs</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1873-01-01/1894-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1873-1894</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file and 12 items    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42324_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Many of the documents in this sub-series relate to Viscount Glentworth, eldest son of the 3rd Earl of Limerick, who in c. 1893 appealed to his father for assistance in procuring money to pay some liabilities of his own.  The 3rd Earl consented to let the trustees of the 1st Earl’s will (for which see P51/3/3/1) to divide a sum of money out of the net produce of the sale of certain heirlooms (for which see P51/3/3/8) for the purpose.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
            <p>The documents have been arranged chronologically by date.</p>
          </arrangement>
          <c level="file">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Barrington &amp; Son relating to testamentary matters</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/3/1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1873-03-22/1873-03-22" encodinganalog="3.1.3">22 March 1873</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 items    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/2/0/e/20e2435662250b0ad9f1a15848431752a0492122f7f6ec107db34b1ed3399e49/18397-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42327_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Letter from Barrington &amp; Son, 10 Ely Place, Dublin to John Vanderkiste, Limerick enclosing a schedule of charges on the trust estate paid out of the fund in the Landed Estates Court, and discussing the jointure due to the Dowager Countess of Limerick and annuities due to Lady Gray, Lady Repton, and Lady Georgiana Pery out of the trust estate.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.ajhz-nr44.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Note relating to mortgage security</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/3/2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1873-10-01/1873-10-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">October 1873</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 p.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
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              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42330_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Note relating to a transfer of the Equity and Law Society mortgage security.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.7yam-1684.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Tenement valuation book for counties Limerick, Cork, and Clare</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/3/3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1884-08-08/1884-08-08" encodinganalog="3.1.3">8 August 1884</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        314 pp. with index of 24 pp. (outsize)    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/6/5/d/65dbb51a86e9311b0641461562b98954637028c12811eee51132d792e552bf4f/113686-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42333_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Hardcover tenement valuation book with index of the estate of the [3rd] Earl of Limerick for counties Limerick, Cork, and Clare.  The right hand pages have been numbered consecutively from 1 to 147, while the left-hand pages bear no pagination.  The entries have been arranged first by county and then by ward or townland, as follows.  For County Limerick: Abbey Ward; Castle Ward; Custom House Ward; Dock Ward; Market Ward; Shannon Ward; Glentworth Ward; Irishtown Ward; South Suburb Ward; and Knockainy.  For County Clare: Kilkishen; Cloontra; Cloghera; and Quin.  For County Cork: Kilmacleine; Ballyclogh; Mallow; Blackrock Ward; Caherduggan; and Bawncross.  Recorded information for each tenement includes a map reference; name of street (where applicable); name of occupier; name of immediate lessor; description of tenement (e.g. ‘house &amp; yard’; ‘house &amp; small garden’; ‘shop &amp; rooms’; ‘school’, etc.); size of area in acres, roods, and perches (in most cases left blank); rateable annual valuation of land (in most cases left blank) and of buildings; and total rateable annual valuation.  There is also a column for observations but this has not been used.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <phystech encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <p>Fragile volume with several loose or damaged pages.</p>
            </phystech>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Statement regarding the rental income of Irish estates</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/3/4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1885-01-01/1885-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1885</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/9/6/5/965a1556a183906ba56585e109230b9a87085d8974500adf2c0da20513b416fd/18405-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42336_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Statement regarding the rental income of the [3rd] Earl of Limerick’s Irish estates and charges to which they are subject, and the securities of the Equity and Law Society  mortgage.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <phystech encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <p>Fragile.</p>
            </phystech>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.cgy7-yy17.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">List of stock held in trusts</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/3/5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1885-01-01/1890-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1885-1890</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/f/8/c/f8ce0167556a1140dc0c090d6cd66b9044fea8192b44f7cf344c9ec620bd1fce/18409-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42339_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>List of stock held in Will Trust and Settlement Trust for the [3rd] Earl of Limerick.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.f3p7-5290.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy summary of settled and devised estates</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/3/6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1888-01-01/1888-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1888 (date of original)</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        15 sheets (outsize)    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/b/b/4/bb433db223b44af4a578f2060e1aa853d32a8a9de50a1975b9620c1c7a0e5b6f/18412-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42342_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Colour photocopy of a bound hardback volume containing a summary of the settled and devised estates passing on the death of William Hale John Charles, 3rd Earl of Limerick, and the charges to which they are subject; includes a family pedigree.  Lacking copies of pages 2 and 8, and with two copies of page 13.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.gtwg-gs42.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Viscount Glentworth’s statement of position</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/3/7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1890-07-01/1890-07-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">July 1890</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/4/1/e/41eb3c5a1ed0c7e8176fc023d9c18c556a62688f17b06c59ed84e92a63fa3c38/18429-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42345_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Viscount Glentworth’s statement of position concerning the family’s settled and devised estates and the charges to which they are subject.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.0s0d-ks08.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">List of documents in the possession of John Vanderkiste</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/3/8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1892-06-18/1892-06-18" encodinganalog="3.1.3">18 June 1892</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/9/d/2/9d21e6b257efa84e510bdb250f000baa65fb4ea2ede256e778ecddeb1a1c744a/18432-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42348_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>List of documents for the [3rd] Earl of Limerick late in the possession of John Vanderkiste.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <phystech encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <p>Fragile.</p>
            </phystech>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.m6gc-n894.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Draft statement of position</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/3/9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1893-01-01/1893-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1893</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        8 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/3/9/6/39619c5d8539b7c95478ae80b59031f38bf038b04c86f2cdeb7a8cdd6f3f72e6/18436-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42351_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Draft statement of position concerning the [3rd] Earl of Limerick’s settled and devised estates, together with a list of policies on his life and incumbencies affecting the estate.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.e4f9-3338.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Statement of position</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/3/10</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1893-12-11/1893-12-11" encodinganalog="3.1.3">11 December 1893</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/b/3/6/b36e0599176f7efaa1a858d393414a817bdedca94d5a7477d56aa2e4726f186c/18446-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42354_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Statement of position concerning the [3rd] Earl of Limerick’s settled and devised estates, and A[rthur] P[epys] Whately’s opinion thereof.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.80p3-8w93.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Draft list of mortgages to the Equity and Law Society</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/3/11</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1893-01-01/1893-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1893</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/8/2/a/82abef39ba296b91e3a2e99f545460c0cf62dc2afc7d6f2b9a080dc89549f4c1/18451-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42357_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Draft list in tabular form of the [3rd] Earl of Limerick’s mortgages to the Equity and Law Society, listing date of deed, amount of loan, property charged, policies charged, and remarks.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.nhkh-8041.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Notes concerning settled estates</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/3/12</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1893-01-01/1893-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 1893]</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        7 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/d/a/c/dac2276a4e5eae7702b34dfd2bdcea7e77964184a05a53e32f9dbaba7519fcaf/18456-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42360_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Notes concerning the [3rd] Earl of Limerick’s settled estates and the charges to which they are subject.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.3jpq-3361.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Statement of division of heirloom plate money</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/3/13</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1894-01-01/1894-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1894</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/5/1/9/519d30bcc4c956d898ba2c1acea3ebc47a4eb39c706c441c1ac15eeebad70913/18464-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42363_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Statement of division of heirloom plate money and the [3rd] Earl of Limerick’s and Viscount Glentworth’s share thereof.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.zmnr-1c45.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Concerning Dromore Castle, County Limerick</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1868-01-01/1881-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">c. 1868-1869, 1881</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 items    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42366_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>This sub-series contains material relating to Dromore Castle, County Limerick and its construction in 1868-1874.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
            <p>The documents have been arranged chronologically by date.</p>
          </arrangement>
          <phystech encodinganalog="3.4.3">
            <p>Paper documents mostly in good condition.</p>
          </phystech>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Scrap album of sketches and photographs</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/4/1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1868-01-01/1874-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">c. 1868-1874</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        60 plates    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/c/4/3/c437ba73a722eaa78fdb76e6feb3a1f8e4804e9a16bee56ffa0bc6101278aaf5/75465-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42369_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Scrap album containing floor plans of Dromore Castle, county Limerick; sketches, mainly of buildings and interior details, by the architect Edward William Godwin, some in colour; and 22 black-and-white photographs, mainly of Dromore Castle in the process of construction c. 1868-1874.  Many of the middle plates are blank.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <phystech encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <p>The album is damaged, lacking spine and with loose plates, and requires conservation treatment.</p>
            </phystech>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Design by Edward William Goodwin for fireplace tiles</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/4/2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1868-01-01/1874-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">c. 1868-1874</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 item    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/8/a/e/8ae4c362e99fbe41eb4c2f842f6c4f717183078b7e6fbab83daba5e344a65c2b/18466-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42372_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Full-size drawing on tracing paper by architect Edward William Godwin of tiles for fireplace, with instructions on the colour scheme to be applied and maker to be used.  Originally found inserted between the plates of P51/5/4/1.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <phystech encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <p>Fragile.</p>
            </phystech>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.4wx1-a935.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy letter from tenants with reference to the building of Dromore Castle</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/4/3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1881-05-01/1881-05-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">May 1881</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/d/8/6/d864ab270b8a41e8447fff356b836f0712e12b7913b53492ceda1c5deb1a2a3e/18468-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42375_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Colour photocopy of a letter from fifteen undersigned tenants to the [3rd] Earl of Limerick, thanking him for his liberal reduction of 30% of rent and the work he has provided ‘at a time of almost unprecedented distress in the Country’.  Special mention is made of the building of Dromore Castle ‘which afforded employment to many artisans and Labourers for the last six or seven years’.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.av7e-7d78.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Concerning the 3rd Earl's Death and Matters Arising from It</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/5</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1888-01-01/1902-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1888-c. 1902</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 items    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42378_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>This sub-series contains a will, accounts and queries relating to the death of the 3rd Earl of Limerick, which occurred on 8 August 1896.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
            <p>The documents have been arranged chronologically by date.</p>
          </arrangement>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy will and codicils of the 3rd Earl of Limerick</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/5/1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1888-01-01/1892-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1888-1892</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        19 sheets    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/2/a/8/2a88f0f73ea8d8152e22261f2dce573733840ffe7d5032ec571987ee32c497e6/114031-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42381_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy will of William Hale John Charles, 3rd Earl of Limerick dated 11 December 1888; a codicil dated 4 July 1890; and a second codicil dated 28 June 1892.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.6xvh-1d24.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Account of property chargeable with estate duty</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/5/2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1897-02-18/1897-02-18" encodinganalog="3.1.3">18 February 1897</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 item (outsize)    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/b/2/a/b2a2119bef29ac901c977163adcd4f5e75016f876dfad5786ca3d9729f5a11f4/114052-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42384_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Account prepared for Inland Revenue by Barrington &amp; Son Solicitors of property chargeable with estate duty on the death of William Hale John Charles [3rd] Earl of Limerick, which occurred on 8 August 1896.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <phystech encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <p>Fragile.</p>
            </phystech>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.dwjx-8998.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Queries from Barrington &amp; Son to Rooper &amp; Whately</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/5/3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1896-01-01/1897-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 1896-1897]</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/e/3/f/e3f77d4e233c27fa8e4e8ac17eac28fc5eb43a3c26ce2f360df7423da17bbf3e/18473-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42387_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Queries from Barrington &amp; Son to Rooper &amp; Whately following the death of the 3rd Earl of Limerick relating to a mortgage, addresses of various individuals, and the names and ages of the late Earl’s children.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.47h7-kg42.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Explanation relating to estate duty and tax</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/5/5/4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1902-01-01/1902-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 1902]</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/2/6/6/26666920dcd8a66a4394809599f510a7da0be3bc5656d49e73938b8aee16635e/114108-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42390_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Explanation relating to estate duty and tax following the death of the 3rd Earl of Limerick.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.bxmk-hc50.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Pertaining to William Henry Edmund De Vere Sheaffe Pery (1896-1929), 4th Earl of Limerick (1896-1929)</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1862-01-01/2018-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1862-2018</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        5 sub-series    </physdesc>
          <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
            <language langcode="eng">English</language>
          </langmaterial>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <famname id="atom_42393_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>This series contains material pertaining to William Henry Edmund De Vere Sheaffe Pery, 4th Earl of Limerick.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
          <p>The series has been divided into five sub-series by subject matter.</p>
        </arrangement>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">The 4th Earl's Appointment as Deputy Lieutenant</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1897-01-01/1897-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1897</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 item    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42396_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>This sub-series contains material pertaining to the appointment of the 4th Earl of Limerick as Deputy Lieutenant.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Appointment as Deputy Lieutenant</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/1/1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1897-07-13/1897-07-13" encodinganalog="3.1.3">13 July 1897</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 item    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/c/8/1/c8175b182c1d24b9d26d49d8f8c25cb6eac8ed6c9c854b9d4c99bd29cd387705/18476-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42399_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Appointment of William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe Pery, [4th] Earl of Limerick as Deputy Lieutenant of County Limerick.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.ejgz-sk33.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Concerning the 4th Earl's Estates and Financial Affairs</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1897-01-01/1927-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1897-1927</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 sub-series    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42402_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>This sub-series contains material relating to the estates and financial affairs of the 4th Earl of Limerick, mostly in relation to the sale of holdings through the Land Commission Court in the early 1900s as a consequence of a reduction in rents.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
            <p>The documents have been divided into three sub-series according to their form.</p>
          </arrangement>
          <c level="subseries">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Deeds</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1897-01-01/1919-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1897-1919</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 sub-series    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42405_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>This sub-series contains deeds and related documents concerning the 4th Earl of Limerick.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
              <p>The material has been divided into three sub-series by document type.</p>
            </arrangement>
            <c level="subseries">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Abstracts of Title and Settlements</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/1/1</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1897-01-01/1897-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1897</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 items    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42408_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>This sub-series contains an abstract of title and a settlement concerning the 4th Earl of Limerick.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
                <p>The documents have been arranged chronologically by date.</p>
              </arrangement>
              <c level="item">
                <did>
                  <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Abstract of the title of the 4th Earl of Limerick to estates in Ireland</unittitle>
                  <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/1/1/1</unitid>
                  <unitdate normal="1897-01-01/1897-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1897</unitdate>
                  <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        65 pp.    </physdesc>
                  <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                    <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                  </langmaterial>
                  <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/d/8/c/d8cceca49fd2dd2b3c1372c70715d43a44ea932291dfda30b8c29fc1a15e1f5c/114112-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                  <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                    <famname id="atom_42411_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                  </origination>
                </did>
                <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                  <note>
                    <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                  </note>
                </bioghist>
                <odd type="publicationStatus">
                  <p>Published</p>
                </odd>
                <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                  <p>Abstract of the title of the [4th] Earl of Limerick to estates in Ireland, providing a condensed history of his rights to the settled and devised Irish estates, summaries of the original grants and subsequent conveyances, and encumbrances affecting the property.</p>
                </scopecontent>
                <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                  <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.tnve-9h91.</p>
                </altformavail>
              </c>
              <c level="item">
                <did>
                  <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy settlement of the 4th Earl of Limerick’s Irish estates</unittitle>
                  <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/1/1/2</unitid>
                  <unitdate normal="1897-11-17/1897-11-17" encodinganalog="3.1.3">17 November 1897</unitdate>
                  <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        9 sheets    </physdesc>
                  <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                    <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                  </langmaterial>
                  <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/2/1/b/21bc2d6e7152e20f9b5592fcdf5e05cf6dd029b516761cfa17895ad859719213/114184-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                  <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                    <famname id="atom_42414_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                  </origination>
                </did>
                <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                  <note>
                    <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                  </note>
                </bioghist>
                <odd type="publicationStatus">
                  <p>Published</p>
                </odd>
                <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                  <p>Copy settlement of the [4th] Earl of Limerick’s Irish estates made between William Henry Edmond de Vere Sheaffe, Earl of Limerick of the 1st part; May, Countess of Limerick, his wife of the 2nd part; and John Henry Kennedy of Whitwell Hall, county Norfolk esquire and John Beatty Barrington of Limerick city esquire, as trustees, of the 3rd part.</p>
                </scopecontent>
                <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                  <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.x5w9-tj14.</p>
                </altformavail>
              </c>
            </c>
            <c level="subseries">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letters of Attorney</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/1/2</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1897-01-01/1919-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1897, 1906, and 1919</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 items    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42417_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>This sub-series contains letters of attorney executed by the 4th Earl of Limerick.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
                <p>The documents have been arranged chronologically by date.</p>
              </arrangement>
              <c level="item">
                <did>
                  <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Draft appointment granting powers of attorney</unittitle>
                  <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/1/2/1</unitid>
                  <unitdate normal="1897-12-01/1897-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">December 1897</unitdate>
                  <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        9 pp.    </physdesc>
                  <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                    <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                  </langmaterial>
                  <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/a/2/6/a264f63e1f6b9912a2fb66bf6e294a3c40fc432b5fdbdf2f1e1e957be1c55b56/114204-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                  <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                    <famname id="atom_42420_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                  </origination>
                </did>
                <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                  <note>
                    <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                  </note>
                </bioghist>
                <odd type="publicationStatus">
                  <p>Published</p>
                </odd>
                <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                  <p>Draft appointment by William Henry Edmond de Vere Sheaffe, [4th] Earl of Limerick granting John Henry Kennedy of Whitwell Hall, Norfolk and Maximilian George Rooper of 17 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London powers of attorney for twelve calendar months from the date of the appointment.</p>
                </scopecontent>
                <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                  <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.p858-3227.</p>
                </altformavail>
              </c>
              <c level="item">
                <did>
                  <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Appointment granting powers of attorney</unittitle>
                  <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/1/2/2</unitid>
                  <unitdate normal="1906-02-15/1906-02-15" encodinganalog="3.1.3">15 February 1906</unitdate>
                  <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 pp.    </physdesc>
                  <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                    <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                  </langmaterial>
                  <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/a/6/f/a6fdafd3b565d694cc7e818ccde7d50b5a90ff764f629f5785763ec4c87cc3f3/18479-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                  <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                    <famname id="atom_42423_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                  </origination>
                </did>
                <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                  <note>
                    <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                  </note>
                </bioghist>
                <odd type="publicationStatus">
                  <p>Published</p>
                </odd>
                <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                  <p>Appointment by William Henry Edmond de Vere Sheaffe, [4th] Earl of Limerick granting John Beatty Barrington powers of attorney during the Earl’s absence abroad.</p>
                </scopecontent>
                <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                  <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.1d1v-rh82.</p>
                </altformavail>
              </c>
              <c level="item">
                <did>
                  <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Appointment granting powers of attorney</unittitle>
                  <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/1/2/3</unitid>
                  <unitdate normal="1919-10-01/1919-10-01" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1 October 1919</unitdate>
                  <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 pp.    </physdesc>
                  <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                    <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                  </langmaterial>
                  <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/a/5/b/a5b889f0627cbedde692af4c404b2163ae6fd630bac43e4bb6843cc5af3ed517/18483-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                  <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                    <famname id="atom_42426_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                  </origination>
                </did>
                <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                  <note>
                    <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                  </note>
                </bioghist>
                <odd type="publicationStatus">
                  <p>Published</p>
                </odd>
                <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                  <p>Appointment by William Henry Edmond de Vere Sheaffe, [4th] Earl of Limerick granting Maximilian George Rooper of 17 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London esquire powers of attorney to manage the Earl’s estates during his absence from England.</p>
                </scopecontent>
                <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                  <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.jch5-jz23.</p>
                </altformavail>
              </c>
            </c>
            <c level="subseries">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Mortgages and related documents</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/1/3</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1898-01-01/1914-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1898-1914</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        6 files and 2 items    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42429_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>This sub-series contains mortgages and related documents concerning the 4th Earl of Limerick.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
                <p>The documents have been arranged chronologically by date.</p>
              </arrangement>
              <c level="file">
                <did>
                  <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Mortgage with John Beatty Barrington</unittitle>
                  <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/1/3/1</unitid>
                  <unitdate normal="1898-01-01/1898-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1898</unitdate>
                  <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 items    </physdesc>
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                    <famname id="atom_42432_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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                  <note>
                    <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                  </note>
                </bioghist>
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                  <p>Published</p>
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                  <p>Mortgage and related draft mortgage between William Henry Edmond De Vere Sheaffe, [4th] Earl of Limerick of the 1st part and John Beatty Barrington of the city of Limerick esquire of the 2nd part for £1,200 and interest thereon at the rate of £5 per cent per annum.</p>
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                <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                  <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.ztxs-s752.</p>
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              <c level="file">
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                  <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Mortgage, agreement and release of a policy of assurance</unittitle>
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                  <note>
                    <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                  </note>
                </bioghist>
                <odd type="publicationStatus">
                  <p>Published</p>
                </odd>
                <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                  <p>Mortgage dated 10 April 1899 between William Henry Edmond de Vere Sheaffe, [4th] Earl of Limerick (mortgagor) of the 1st part; and Jannetta Ann Millin of 38 Dukes Avenue, Chiswick, London, widow and Charles Frederick Kennedy of 110 Cannon Street, London, solicitor (mortgagees) of the 2nd part of a policy of assurance on the life of the mortgagor granted by the Equitable Life Assurance Society on 10 April 1899 for the sum of £500, to secure the repayment of £150 paid to the mortgagor by the mortgagees.  Also a related agreement dated 4 January 1900 between Alice Tullette, Grand Hotel, Brighton, Sussex and parties of the earlier mortgage, assigning to Alice Tullette a policy of assurance on the life of the Earl.  The Earl of Limerick having been unable to pay the sum of £75 owing to the mortgagees and in consideration of their forbearance to press for its immediate payment that sum and interest shall be taken from the said policy of insurance in priority to any moneys due to Alice Tullette.  Also a reassignment and release of the policy of assurance dated 19 September 1900 to Alice Tullette, all monies owing to the mortgagees for which the policy acted as security having been paid.</p>
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                <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                  <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.0xe0-wt88.</p>
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              <c level="file">
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                  <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Deeds of charge to secure £500 and interest</unittitle>
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                  <unitdate normal="1900-01-01/1901-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1900-1901</unitdate>
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                    <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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                  <note>
                    <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                  </note>
                </bioghist>
                <odd type="publicationStatus">
                  <p>Published</p>
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                <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                  <p>Deed of charge dated 11 January 1900 between William Henry Edmond De Vere Sheaffe, [4th] Earl of Limerick of the 1st part; George James Malcolm Hearton of 9 Saint James Street in the county of London esquire and John Beatty Barrington of Barrington Street, Limerick, land agent of the 2nd part; and Sir Andrew Lusk Baronet and William Strang esquire, trustees of the General Life Assurance Company of the 3rd part of sureties to secure £500 and interest.  Also a related notice of assignment dated on the same day.  Also a supplemental deed of charge dated 12 January 1900 between William Henry Edmond De Vere Sheaffe, [4th] Earl of Limerick of the 1st part and John Beatty Barrington of the city of Limerick esquire; and a note of further charge by the [4th] Earl of Limerick in favour of the General Life Assurance Company dated 21 November 1901.</p>
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                <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                  <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.sevy-5091.</p>
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                  <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Draft mortgage, further charges and reconveyance of annuity, life interest and policy as securities to a loan</unittitle>
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                  <note>
                    <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                  </note>
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                <odd type="publicationStatus">
                  <p>Published</p>
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                <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                  <p>Draft mortgage dated 1 March 1904 between William Henry Edmond De Vere Sheaffe, [4th] Earl of Limerick (mortgagor) of the 1st part and Maximilian George Roper of 17 Lincoln’s Inn Fields in the city of London esquire and John Beatty Barrington of the city of Limerick (mortgagees) of the 2nd part of annuity, life interest, and policy to secure £300 and interest thereon at the rate of £5 per cent per annum.  Also a draft further charge dated 30 September 1904 between the same parties for a further sum of £160, with a related note; draft further charge dated 18 January 1905 between the same parties for a further sum of £100; copy further charge dated 4 August 1905 between the same parties for a further sum of £578; draft further charge dated 29 March 1906 between the same parties for a further sum of £150; and draft reconveyance dated 23 December 1908 discharging the mortgagor from all claims and demands, all principal money and interest due to the mortgagees having been paid.</p>
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                <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                  <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.jhhk-ms13.</p>
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                  <note>
                    <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                  </note>
                </bioghist>
                <odd type="publicationStatus">
                  <p>Published</p>
                </odd>
                <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                  <p>Set of deeds relating to the appointment of Barrington &amp; Son solicitors to carry out the sale of those of the 4th Earl’s estates in counties Limerick and Clare and the city of Limerick of which he is tenant for life, and to which the provisions of the 1903 and 1904 Purchase of Land (Ireland) Acts do not apply; the appointment of the Equity and Law Life Assurance Society to convey the property to the purchasers; the payment of a percentage of the purchase money as a fee to Barrington &amp; Son and the payment of a bonus to the 4th Earl out of the purchase money; the loan of £200 made by Barrington &amp; Son to the 4th Earl, to which his bonus acts as a security; and further advances to which his life policy acts as security.  The deeds are supplemental to an earlier deed dated 26 April 1906 and to mortgage dated 4 May 1897, neither of which documents is now present.  Some of them also refer to the settlement dated 17 November 1897, for which see P51/6/2/1/1/2.  The documents include two draft memorandums of agreement dated 1906; copy draft deeds of charge dated 17 and 18 July 1907; draft deed of charge dated 4 February 1908; copy draft mortgage dated 11 July 1908 with a related letter; receivership deed dated 30 July 1908; draft mortgage dated 18 December 1908; draft reconveyance dated 20 December 1908; copy draft further charge dated 17 August 1911; and a revocation of receivership deed dated 29 January 1914.  In three folders.</p>
                </scopecontent>
                <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                  <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.pt0c-pc35.</p>
                </altformavail>
              </c>
              <c level="item">
                <did>
                  <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy schedule of deeds concerning the Earls of Limerick</unittitle>
                  <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/1/3/6</unitid>
                  <unitdate normal="1907-01-01/1907-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1907</unitdate>
                  <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        6 pp.    </physdesc>
                  <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                    <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                  </langmaterial>
                  <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/0/b/0/0b0268aa8292b515726ff027a883830355c3b8258f138552030adcc745805f54/114315-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                  <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                    <famname id="atom_42447_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                  </origination>
                </did>
                <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                  <note>
                    <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                  </note>
                </bioghist>
                <odd type="publicationStatus">
                  <p>Published</p>
                </odd>
                <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                  <p>Copy schedule of deeds dating from 1672 to 1897 concerning the Earls of Limerick sent to Messrs Barrington &amp; Son by Messrs Rooper &amp; Whately.</p>
                </scopecontent>
                <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                  <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.1kz8-ae11.</p>
                </altformavail>
              </c>
              <c level="item">
                <did>
                  <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Particulars of sale of ground rents by public auction</unittitle>
                  <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/1/3/7</unitid>
                  <unitdate normal="1907-01-01/1907-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1907</unitdate>
                  <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        337 pp.    </physdesc>
                  <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                    <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                  </langmaterial>
                  <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/8/7/f/87f176506cc8123c1796a198bde4acda7785b91c790b95fb255764934eefc6d4/110536-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                  <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                    <famname id="atom_116376_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                  </origination>
                </did>
                <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                  <note>
                    <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                  </note>
                </bioghist>
                <odd type="publicationStatus">
                  <p>Published</p>
                </odd>
                <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                  <p>Bound volume containing the rental, maps, particulars and conditions of the sale of ground rents, portion of the City of Limerick estate of the 4th Earl of Limerick, by public auction on 3-7 June 1907 by Messrs James H. North &amp; Co., Dublin.  The volume provides a detailed description of each of the 247 lots in tabular form, listing the lot and map numbers; denominations; grantees’ and lessees names; dates of gale days; yearly rent; tenure; and observations.  The columns ‘yearly rent’ and ‘tenure’ of Lots 42 (p. 47) and 51 (p. 55) have been cut out.  In addition, the pages containing Lots 3-4, 17-18, 33-38, 48-49, 66-67, 99, 121-122, 215-218 and 228-231 have been removed.  Several maps are inserted between the pages, but some of these are now missing.  Of the surviving maps, numbers 3, 4, 5 and 7 are loose and maps 8, 10, 11, 13, 14 and 17 are bound into the volume, but not in numerical order.  Also see P51/6/1/2/3/7.</p>
                </scopecontent>
                <phystech encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <p>Fragile.</p>
                </phystech>
                <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                  <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.12ck-t574.</p>
                </altformavail>
              </c>
              <c level="file">
                <did>
                  <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Schedules of deeds submitted to purchasers</unittitle>
                  <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/1/3/8</unitid>
                  <unitdate normal="1907-01-01/1908-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1907-1908</unitdate>
                  <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        222 items    </physdesc>
                  <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                    <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                  </langmaterial>
                  <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/e/3/0/e3017f8b3278e9800f5fac645a0ac8c95e4fabab34394394b5f2909b5ef3b9c0/110865-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                  <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                    <famname id="atom_116380_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                  </origination>
                </did>
                <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                  <note>
                    <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                  </note>
                </bioghist>
                <odd type="publicationStatus">
                  <p>Published</p>
                </odd>
                <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                  <p>Schedules of deeds submitted to purchasers of lots at the sale of ground rents, portion of the City of Limerick estate of the 4th Earl of Limerick, by public auction on 3-7 June 1907 by Messrs James H. North &amp; Co., Dublin (for which see P51/6/1/2/3/7).  The schedules are in tabular form,  listing the number of deed submitted, date of deed, parties’ names and nature of document (i.e. whether a lease, renewal, conveyance etc.).  With gaps and duplicates.  Some schedules have been signed by the buyer.</p>
                </scopecontent>
                <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                  <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.98m0-cy40.</p>
                </altformavail>
              </c>
            </c>
          </c>
          <c level="subseries">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Income and Expenditure Accounts</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1898-01-01/1908-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">c. 1898-1908</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        11 items    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42450_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>This sub-series contains bound hardback volumes of income and expenditure accounts of the Irish estates of the 4th Earl of Limerick.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
              <p>The documents have been arranged chronologically by date.</p>
            </arrangement>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Income and expenditure accounts for 1897</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/2/1</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1898-01-01/1898-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">c. 1898</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        37 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/b/5/2/b529b4ce8cb9886f1cc86d0e9591662d9c5e9c65eb0011d157ff2d0fbe8caba4/114322-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42453_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Bound hardback volume of income and expenditure accounts of the Irish estates of the [4th] Earl of Limerick to 31 December 1897, prepared by John Beatty Barrington.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.d47g-gv56.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Income and expenditure accounts for 1898</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/2/2</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1899-02-01/1899-02-01" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1 February 1899</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        34 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/c/1/c/c1c1a4a62859aadf2457c7f5d1baf41085e0aef30037eae41f71c5d5a009f6e2/114373-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42456_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Bound hardback volume of income and expenditure accounts of the Irish estates of the [4th] Earl of Limerick to 31 December 1898, prepared by John Beatty Barrington.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.jfa1-8q59.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Income and expenditure accounts for 1899</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/2/3</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1900-01-01/1900-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">25 January 1900</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        35 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/0/c/b/0cb9beb09e8b3f3379848e722bf3c923f17828f60159d4f83b0724b765457b15/114420-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42459_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Bound hardback volume of income and expenditure accounts of the Irish estates of the [4th] Earl of Limerick to 31 December 1899, prepared by John Beatty Barrington.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.gep3-0547.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Income and expenditure accounts for 1900</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/2/4</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1901-02-16/1901-02-16" encodinganalog="3.1.3">16 February 1901</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        36 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/0/9/f/09f2718fd657d40fe308849f24ff56d6c1a199e704381a0882518ba2e3387242/114469-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42462_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Bound hardback volume of income and expenditure accounts of the Irish estates of the [4th] Earl of Limerick to 31 December 1900, prepared by John Beatty Barrington.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.8j97-mv83.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Income and expenditure accounts for 1901</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/2/5</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1902-01-16/1902-01-16" encodinganalog="3.1.3">16 January 1902</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        34 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
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                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
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                <p>Bound hardback volume of income and expenditure accounts of the Irish estates of the [4th] Earl of Limerick to 31 December 1901, prepared by John Beatty Barrington.</p>
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              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.zh5f-0g98.</p>
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                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
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                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
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                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
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                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
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            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Income and expenditure accounts for 1906</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/2/10</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1907-07-01/1907-07-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">July 1907</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        30 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/7/a/b/7ab24bc8e45bd33121e4fb88059b7b3af4a70af8538deb3ca959892127868d83/114728-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42480_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Bound hardback volume of income and expenditure accounts of the Irish estates of the [4th] Earl of Limerick to 31 December 1906, prepared by John Beatty Barrington.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.qs5v-ed22.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Income and expenditure accounts for 1907</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/2/11</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1908-03-31/1908-03-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">31 March 1908</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        32 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/8/d/2/8d2495cd013ab331c3805ad3f40aa5cee5c9e9fafcf056cd8e8adc61762873a4/114771-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42483_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Bound hardback volume of income and expenditure accounts of the Irish estates of the [4th] Earl of Limerick to 31 December 1907, prepared by John Beatty Barrington.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.yazs-zj27.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
          </c>
          <c level="subseries">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Trustees’ and Solicitors’ Statements and Correspondence</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1897-01-01/1927-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1897-1927</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        15 files and 32 items    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42486_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>The material in this file relates primarily to charges affecting the 4th Earl of Limerick’s estate in the early 20th century, the decision made in 1906 to sell some of the estate through the Irish Land Commission Court in order to clear the charges and the financial outcome of the sale in 1912-1913.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
              <p>The documents have been arranged chronologically by date.</p>
            </arrangement>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Irish Fish-Oil and Guano Syndicate Limited report and balance sheet</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/1</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1897-12-21/1897-12-21" encodinganalog="3.1.3">21 December 1897</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/e/a/f/eaf8f79d676d82183734eeb90e2ef3f3e44d0b3b672abedd31bd76cfb200b2d7/18522-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42489_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Report and balance sheet of directors of the Irish Fish-Oil and Guano Syndicate Limited to 30 November 1897.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.8gz7-aq48.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Notes concerning Hotel Metropole in Blackpool</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/2</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1898-01-01/1906-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 1898-1906?]</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 p.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/a/f/8/af848e937f18a7d327d17aea66f6817ecbefe283d713deb66f6cfe12a7edc17b/18526-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42492_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Handwritten notes concerning a certificate of incorporation, capital, shares, purchase, and order for winding up of Hotel Metropole, Blackpool.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.dazy-zg91.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Draft statement of amounts not repaid</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/3</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1906-01-01/1906-01-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">January 1906</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/4/d/5/4d51b3cec2bb827ab6818c04d42763d97bd1875c0832e555c2fdf6360be2be3b/18528-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42495_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Draft statement of amounts advanced by Messrs. Rooper &amp; Whately and which have not been repaid by Mr Barrington.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.h0gd-5q58.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter advising the sale of agricultural land</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/4</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1906-02-14/1906-02-14" encodinganalog="3.1.3">14 February 1906</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        6 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/c/e/e/cee1f3c8dcddfd79632a05a3101a33ae8c0ae15811028b9f8534fd2c8a813704/18531-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42498_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Letter from Maximilian George Rooper, Rooper &amp; Whately, 17 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London to the 4th Earl of Limerick, advising the Earl to sell some of his agricultural land and outlining his reasons for it.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.88s7-qb14.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="file">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Statements of proposed sale of estates in the Land Commission Court</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/5</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1906-01-01/1906-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[1906]</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 items    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/c/2/f/c2f7240ed916ed568029effc3d6f22f08729575fa17695eb722b191c1c547faa/114868-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42501_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Statement showing result of proposed sale by auction of the 4th Earl of Limerick’s estates in the Land Commission Court.  With a related draft.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.g6dd-fe13.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Observations on the size and value of settled and devised estates</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/6</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1906-01-01/1909-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 1906-1909]</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/b/8/2/b821d9e0c65e0356eb53aea43349991f3ba6a0c076f9d82dd5c155e564ba5134/18538-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42504_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Observations concerning the size and value of the 4th Earl of Limerick’s settled and devised estates and the charges to which they are subject.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.j1qm-8914.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Table of purchase applications from tenants</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/7</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1906-01-01/1909-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 1906-1909]</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        8 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/8/f/2/8f23e5216c7858431175ccb20bf999961ed525ce2b22be7d122879ff4c7078a2/114874-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42507_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Table prepared by Rooper &amp; Whately solicitors listing purchase applications from the 4th Earl of Limerick’s tenants, providing the application number where relevant; number of the holding on a map; name of townland; name of tenant; amount of advance applied for where relevant; queries, mainly concerning ownership disputes and the state of repair of holdings; and responses to the queries by John Barrington solicitor.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.cks4-n260.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Summary of lots of the 4th Earl of Limerick’s sales</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/8</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1906-01-01/1909-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 1906-1909]</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        30 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/0/2/5/025fada04b60719f80b1084877fe7c06ac54f95d2ca8fd5f2c8440d6b77d643a/18543-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42510_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Summary of lots of the 4th Earl of Limerick’s sales, listing number of lot; amount of rent; years purchase; reserve proposed; and remarks.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.77ww-7v20.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">List of documents sent to Messrs Barrington &amp; Son</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/9</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1907-01-01/1907-01-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">January 1907</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 p.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/4/f/0/4f0953f52653b52473b436fd4401f2e801a01059a9cb63188545b35c60240345/18577-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42513_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>List of documents sent to Messrs Barrington &amp; Son on 11 January 1907.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.7cw2-kw77.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Statutory declaration to the Court of the Irish Land Commission</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/10</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1907-03-27/1907-03-27" encodinganalog="3.1.3">27 March 1907</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/5/e/6/5e69160b15898b2feba980c2a1fc28f31fe17176fc16903812b373dbf37829d7/18580-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42516_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Statutory declaration to the Court of the Irish Land Commission by John Beatty Barrington, Barrington Street, Limerick, land agent that the [4th] Earl of Limerick is a limited owner of the lands of court in the county of Limerick, which include the lands comprised in an agreement dated 1 March 1907; that Viscount Glentworth is entitled to the first vested estate in the said lands; that Viscount Glentworth is under the age of 21; that the aforementioned lands are subject to certain encumbrances now vested in the Equity and Law Life Assurance Society; and that the said Society is not under any disability.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.6h99-7w40.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Anticipatory account with Rooper &amp; Whately</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/11</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1907-04-01/1907-04-30" encodinganalog="3.1.3">April 1907</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/a/2/9/a2932cdfdb5d810e93760b91632badcaea15e6e4eb467fae2014c7e208a4d3cf/18585-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42519_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>The 4th Earl of Limerick in account with Rooper &amp; Whately, being an anticipatory account to 31 October 1907.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.e9ev-zc83.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Particulars of devised and settled estates</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/12</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1907-12-01/1907-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">December 1907</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/b/2/4/b249e43b77a870d9f6cb921d8c8e2ded4e488b49a74b5f03d915907c2a8adcf8/114883-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42522_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Particulars of the 4th Earl of Limerick’s devised and settled estates by Rooper &amp; Whately.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.bsc9-nt11.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="file">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Accounts relating to the 4th Earl of Limerick’s estates</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/13</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1907-01-01/1907-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1907</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 items    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
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                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42525_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Typed accounts relating to the 4th Earl of Limerick’s estates under various headings, as follows: ‘income pending completion of sale’; ‘estimated revenue and outgoings pending completion of sales’; ‘statement showing extra payments to Lord Limerick and Lady Limerick since 27 November 1902’; ‘statement showing payments to Lord Limerick from beginning of trusteeship 23 November 1902 to 27 November 1907 in respect of annual allowance’; ‘statement showing payments to Lady Limerick from beginning of trusteeship 23 November 1902 to 27 November 1907 in respect of annual allowance’; ‘statement showing payments in respect of allowances for children from beginning of trusteeship – 27 Nov 1902 to 27 Nov 1907’; ‘approximate income after conclusion of sale of agricultural portion of the estate’; and ‘extra payments on Dromore’; with a related handwritten note.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.5enn-e920.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy letter concerning the financial status of the 4th Earl of Limerick's estates</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/14</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1908-03-27/1908-03-27" encodinganalog="3.1.3">27 March 1908</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        8 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/0/7/9/079ff7a5f2ad29d2faf5380ef19f3ba5290d7387baed1bf5415e9f9e599d9403/114886-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42528_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Typescript copy letter from Maximilian George Rooper, Rooper &amp; Whately, 17 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London to Captain J. H. Kennedy, Attleborough, [Norfolk, England], providing a history and the current financial status of the 4th Earl of Limerick’s estates.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.4dqy-fv84.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="file">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from W. Barrington to Rooper &amp; Whately enclosing accounts</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/15</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1908-04-06/1908-04-06" encodinganalog="3.1.3">6 April 1908</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        5 items    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/4/9/2/492c7e761cef8e694672e34f4a84c2ac4938dba4a1c461c793be90b5d36a94e9/18602-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42531_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Letter from W. Barrington, Limerick Estates Office, Barrington Street, Limerick to Messrs. Rooper &amp; Whately, Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London enclosing continuation accounts showing an estimate of estate payments to be made by 1 May 1908; and a list of items for which cash must be raised.  Also Earl of Limerick’s accounts to 1 May 1908; and from 1 May to 29 September 1908.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.s54y-tc63.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="file">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Accounts of income and payments to be provided for</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/16</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1908-01-01/1908-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1908</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 items    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/e/4/f/e4ff0a109a036a9e8d9c801cae13294e0ba7e3820c28666d024d3dfadcd28e87/18613-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42534_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Accounts of the [4th] Earl of Limerick’s income and payments to be provided for, 1 May 1908 to 1 May 1909.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.31ge-e939.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">List of monies owed to Captain Kennedy</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/17</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1908-01-01/1908-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[1908?]</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/6/0/d/60df13c07361ee2fcf0e13d6fe7bc75adb7e967a4105c5b1e2bad2a2a2aad8a4/114895-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42537_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Handwritten list of monies owed by the 4th Earl of Limerick to Captain Kennedy [a trustee] accumulated between February and June 1908.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <phystech encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <p>Fragile.</p>
              </phystech>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.fnxq-3q09.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Particulars of income from rents and interest</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/18</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1909-04-14/1909-04-14" encodinganalog="3.1.3">14 April 1909</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        19 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/d/b/2/db2f0cb86aa70f8bedeb0542bf64045134eb95ae1dcc934e73c3564484eeba20/18624-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42540_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Particulars of the 4th Earl of Limerick’s income from rents and interest concerning his settled and devised estates in Limerick city and counties Clare, Cork, and Limerick.  The details given include the name of tenant; name of townland; amount of purchase money; and amount of interest, with a summary at the end.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.747e-h620.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Draft statement of income and expenditure</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/19</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1909-11-01/1909-11-30" encodinganalog="3.1.3">November 1909</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        7 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/e/f/1/ef1177e0367aa6142aff4933846094bb997e9d556a1db914e870de161061c5d8/18647-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42543_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Draft statement of the 4th Earl of Limerick’s income and expenditure for the year 1909 prepared by Rooper &amp; Whately.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.442d-mz16.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="file">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Statement of the 4th Earl of Limerick’s financial position</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/20</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1909-01-01/1909-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1909</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 items    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/2/3/c/23cf379c1fc07af79abf2b949160cc6af3a2f48357605990ce3647c5b9201dfa/114900-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42546_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Statement of the 4th Earl of Limerick’s financial position, with a related draft.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.h93v-m308.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="file">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Observations concerning portions charged for the younger children</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/21</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1909-01-01/1909-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 1909]</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 items    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42549_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Observations concerning portions charged for the younger children of the [4th] Earl of Limerick, and how the money for these charges could be raised.  Also three pages of calculations on the same matter.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.scfz-5c57.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Mr Barrington’s account with the 4th Earl of Limerick</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/22</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1912-05-01/1912-05-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">May 1912</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 p.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/3/d/6/3d6d998f926f588fea0c9352c0220d43cb436577456d823e357ae6d53cca61e8/18663-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42552_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Mr Barrington’s account with the 4th Earl of Limerick to 1 May 1912.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.2qv0-2n26.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="file">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Accounts of assets available for allocation</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/23</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1912-05-27/1912-05-27" encodinganalog="3.1.3">27 May 1912</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 items    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/6/9/b/69b6d552d8dd34f6c214484c055615453b39e6e7802104104735fd95a278d2f6/18666-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42555_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Accounts of assets available for allocation concerning the [4th] Earl of Limerick’s settled and devised estates; of devised estate liabilities on present allocation; and of estimated liabilities to be paid on present allocation concerning the settled estates; also a summary of the financial position of the estates prepared by Barrington &amp; Son.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.mg9x-wy21.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Particulars of the allocation of assets in the Land Court</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/24</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1912-06-25/1912-06-25" encodinganalog="3.1.3">25 June 1912</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        5 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/b/4/7/b479d3cfb4cf844e1f21881e3346e71688c5cdf6a318c42c7582754121c629fb/114909-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42558_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Particulars of the allocation of assets in the Land Court in order of priority concerning the 4th Earl of Limerick’s estates prepared by Rooper &amp; Whately.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.25vr-7507.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Printed list of securities</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/25</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1912-06-29/1912-06-29" encodinganalog="3.1.3">29 June 1912</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 item    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/f/b/d/fbd0b984932dabf7c81b4cf04e5dce572e25c5094b90f39f2d9f98b28cbd8d4e/18671-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42561_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Printed list of securities in which investments have been approved by the Public Trustee, Ireland.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.2adx-rr57.</p>
              </altformavail>
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                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Particulars of settled and devised estates</unittitle>
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                <unitdate normal="1912-07-01/1912-07-01" encodinganalog="3.1.3">July 1912</unitdate>
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        2 pp.    </physdesc>
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                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
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                <p>Particulars of the [4th] Earl of Limerick’s settled and devised estates, revised 13 July 1912.</p>
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                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.e8f2-b826.</p>
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              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Notices from the Court of the Irish Land Commission of stocks transferred</unittitle>
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                <unitdate normal="1912-08-07/1912-08-07" encodinganalog="3.1.3">7 August 1912</unitdate>
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                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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                  <famname id="atom_42567_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
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                <p>Notices from the Court of the Irish Land Commission of stocks transferred to John Henry Kennedy of Attleborough Lodge, Norfolk and Croker Barrington, 58 Fitzwilliam Square, Dublin.</p>
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              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.fsad-7895.</p>
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              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Lists of monies received</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/28</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1912-08-01/1912-08-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">August 1912</unitdate>
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        2 items    </physdesc>
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                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
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                <p>Lists of monies received by the Trustees, the Equity and Law Society, and the [4th] Earl of Limerick.</p>
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                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.x8ws-xp75.</p>
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                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
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                <p>Accounts settled in the Court of the Irish Land Commission in the matter of the estate of the [4th] Earl of Limerick.</p>
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                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.79n9-wc34.</p>
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                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Notification from the Irish Land Commission</unittitle>
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                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
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                <p>Notification from the Irish Land Commission, Estates Commissioners, 25 Upper Merrion Street, Dublin of sums of money placed to the credit of the 4th Earl of Limerick’s estate.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.kx81-xn23.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Estimate of revenue from unsold holdings</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/31</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1912-11-01/1912-11-30" encodinganalog="3.1.3">November 1912</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 item    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/a/f/2/af2c5824499a22d5002352f8273a20465692a302bf9a243135211856113c7317/18685-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42579_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Estimate of revenue from the 4th Earl of Limerick’s unsold holdings for November 1912.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.nt8n-9x06.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Estimate of result of sales</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/32</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1912-11-01/1912-11-30" encodinganalog="3.1.3">November 1912</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 item    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/7/3/c/73cc8a90dab901c4636cace3f34ab33db0282fdcd5677de66efa427dd5c7b8da/18688-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42582_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Estimate of result of sales and present position concerning the 4th Earl of Limerick’s settled and devised estates.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.x2y8-2e35.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Account of the allocation of purchase moneys</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/33</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1912-01-01/1912-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1912</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        23 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/6/b/7/6b77010d7beaea41e25082507fbab6471acaf24a119e807c8deee801ac81544d/114940-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42585_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Account by Barrington &amp; Son of the allocation by the Irish Land Commission Judge of the purchase moneys representing the proceeds of the Land Commission sale record no. E.C.4571. of the 4th Earl of Limerick’s estate.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.91mp-9n21.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Statement as to the priority of charges</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/34</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1912-01-01/1912-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 1912]</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/b/4/a/b4a6e2ac167c21ab6ef4c381f46b92ed6e8a0a3b90c5049670157f060dbf1059/18691-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42588_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Statement as to the priority of charges concerning the 4th Earl of Limerick’s settled and devised estates.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.kc8t-0q27.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy final schedule of encumbrances</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/35</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1912-01-01/1912-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 1912]</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        134 pp. (outsize)    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/2/a/a/2aa1f4cecdd9d83708a9d3a8053c378fea8e11b2836a72fba7125d69766deb24/114943-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42591_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Court of the Irish Land Commission copy final schedule of encumbrances and all claims on foot of encumbrances affecting the 4th Earl’s estate in the counties of Limerick and Clare.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.x8sp-mp02.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Cash accounts concerning settled and devised estates</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/36</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1912-01-01/1912-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 1912]</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 sheets    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
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                  <famname id="atom_42594_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Cash accounts concerning the 4th Earl of Limerick’s settled and devised estates.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.1j5n-6243.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Account of the sales of estates through the Irish Land Court</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/37</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1912-01-01/1912-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 1912]</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 sheets    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/9/0/9/909b24e61333e0ca3df387944026b9014ff1b49f75ab018e8191ccc0cbbcffe0/115010-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42597_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Account of the sales of the 4th Earl of Limerick’s estates through the Irish Land Court.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.ske7-ad81.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="file">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Summaries of documents showing charges on the 4th Earl of Limerick’s estates</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/38</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1912-01-01/1913-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 1912-1913?]</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        5 items    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42600_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Summaries of documents showing charges on the [4th] Earl of Limerick’s estates; a proposed resettlement of his Irish estates; and a related schedule of the 4th Earl of Limerick’s estates and property remaining unsold, and proceeds of sale of property sold.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.thp6-cv95.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="file">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">John B. Barrington in account with the 4th Earl of Limerick</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/39</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1913-01-01/1913-01-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">January 1913</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 items    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/4/9/5/4956da052e9380948d4b5350d606cfc1599e191cb8cf363763f99021a1daf28e/18718-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42603_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>John B. Barrington in account with the 4th Earl of Limerick, being a statement showing sums received and paid since 1 May 1912.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.zrps-gj56.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="file">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy statements of position following the completion of sales</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/40</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1913-02-01/1913-02-28" encodinganalog="3.1.3">February 1913</unitdate>
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        2 items    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
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                <p>Copy statements of position by Rooper &amp; Whately of the 4th Earl of Limerick’s settled and devised estates following the completion of sales of property in Limerick city by auction and sales of agricultural property through the Land Court.</p>
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              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.j3w6-7505.</p>
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                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter from Rooper &amp; Whately relating to the sale of property</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/41</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1913-08-15/1913-08-15" encodinganalog="3.1.3">15 August 1913</unitdate>
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        2 pp.    </physdesc>
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                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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                  <famname id="atom_42609_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
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              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Letter from Rooper &amp; Whately, 17 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London WC to Messrs Farrer &amp; Co., 66 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London WC relating to the sale of the 4th Earl of Limerick’s property.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.fnyt-hq76.</p>
              </altformavail>
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              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Draft report and accounts on the sales of property</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/42</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1913-01-01/1913-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1913</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        5 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/d/c/9/dc91439dfb568b574098022fd1a0691cc59bcfcb4027d048bafb4fa776dfb3ed/115284-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42612_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
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              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Draft report and accounts on the sales of the 4th Earl of Limerick’s property in Limerick city by auction and sales of agricultural property through the Land Court.</p>
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              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.qv38-0168.</p>
              </altformavail>
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            <c level="file">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Accounts of the sales of property through the Irish Land Court</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/43</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1913-01-01/1913-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1913</unitdate>
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        2 items    </physdesc>
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                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
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                <p>Accounts of the sales of property concerning the [4th] Earl of Limerick’s settled and devised estates through the Irish Land Court.</p>
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                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.acs2-4m39.</p>
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                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Observations concerning charges on the devised and settled estates</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/44</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1913-01-01/1913-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 1913?]</unitdate>
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        4 pp.    </physdesc>
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                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/5/5/9/5596552f03d6977bbc5f4a5720212bb7cfb681476c5dbb14179ba1ad20b58a25/18736-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
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              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
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                <p>Observations concerning charges on the devised and settled estates of the [4th] Earl of Limerick and a list of points on which information is required.</p>
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              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.netp-rw80.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="file">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Material relating mostly to stocks and securities</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/45</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1913-01-01/1913-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 1913?]</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        9 items    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/8/d/c/8dce5d722a27e8799242baf40b14fbcd45236b4421f0880a0d33771abb1a9863/18751-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42621_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Material relating mostly to stocks and securities, including a handwritten list of the last prices for Irish Land Stock; handwritten list of the 4th Earl of Limerick’s new investments and related calculations; handwritten notes relating to funds available to the 4th Earl of Limerick; typed list of securities in which trust funds representing purchase money of lands sold under the Irish Land Acts may be invested without the approval of the Public Trustee for Ireland; typed list of securities in which trust funds representing purchase money of lands sold under the Irish Land Acts may be invested with the approval of the Public Trustee for Ireland; page of unspecified handwritten calculations; handwritten calculations relating to the 4th Earl of Limerick’s stock, money on deposit, and payments and interest due; typed list of persons to whom provision is made under an existing receivership deed and the payments due to them, and notes on how these payments will be met; and a handwritten list of costs incurred in Ireland in connection with taxation of costs of sale of the 4th Earl of Limerick’s property in Limerick.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.zt8v-3630.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="file">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Authorities to pay interest or dividends</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/46</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1914-01-01/1916-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1914 and 1916</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        9 items    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/4/1/0/410cc03169624fb20e9b70e7930ea54b446d5cd72e3c7f2e10d66abcb4d6876e/115020-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42624_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Authorities to pay interest or dividends on stocks, shares, and bonds to Rooper &amp; Whately signed by John Henry Kennedy and John Beatty Barrington, with related correspondence, 1914; and requests for transmission of dividend warrants by post, 1916.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.g360-5h30.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">List of investments</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/2/3/47</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1927-01-01/1927-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1927</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 p.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/8/e/a/8eaa496340f2be79f82f83ed61c467bf2059012f9da09eaad81f89e841ab212d/18761-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42627_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Typed list of the 4th Earl of Limerick’s investments.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.frz9-mk32.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Concerning the 4th Earl's Wife, Mary Josephine née Irwin (1867-1943)</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1897-01-01/1929-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1897-1929</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 sub-series    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42630_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>This sub-series contains material relating to the 4th Earl of Limerick's wife, Mary Josephine née Irwin (1867-1943).</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
            <p>The material been divided into two sub-series reflecting the activities to which it relates.</p>
          </arrangement>
          <c level="subseries">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Concerning the Separation of the 4th Earl and His Wife</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/3/1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1897-01-01/1928-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1897-1928</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 files and 2 items    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42633_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>This sub-series contains agreements and covenants relating to the separation of 4th Earl of Limerick and his wife, Mary Josephine née Irwin (1867-1943).</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
              <p>The documents have been arranged chronologically by date.</p>
            </arrangement>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Agreement for separation</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/3/1/1</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1897-10-05/1897-10-05" encodinganalog="3.1.3">5 October 1897</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        7 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/c/9/c/c9ccddc0c30c8f523cc052e0ad887f0dbf3a16133b49b2cf8f088e69026f0b93/115031-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42636_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Agreement for separation between William Henry de Vere Sheaffe, [4th] Earl of Limerick and his wife May Countess of Limerick.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.v85a-3224.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="file">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Notices concerning debts or engagements contracted</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/3/1/2</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1897-12-06/1897-12-06" encodinganalog="3.1.3">6 December 1897</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        6 items    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/d/5/5/d558b3d11c8821d019ec227f138b777d4ee32ae8e41e92aa8c89da712a545deb/18765-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42639_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Envelope containing notices by William Henry Edmond de Vere Sheaffe, [4th] Earl of Limerick that he will not be responsible for any debts or engagements which may be contracted by his wife without his express authority.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.d8rz-ag51.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Agreement to retain provisions of a previous agreement in force</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/3/1/3</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1902-11-27/1902-11-27" encodinganalog="3.1.3">27 November 1902</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 pp.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/d/c/c/dcce0889aee714bfe543da9b0ab7cb5d59b4a10907677571be57cd7522cee27b/18771-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42642_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Agreement between William Henry de Vere Sheaffe, [4th] Earl of Limerick of the 1st part; May Countess of Limerick wife of the Earl of the 2nd part; and John Henry Kennedy of Whitwell Hall, Norfolk Esquire and John Beatty Barrington of Limerick Esquire as trustees of the 3rd part.  It is agreed between the parties that the consequential provisions of a previous agreement dated 5 October 1897 [for which see P51/6/3/1/1] made between the same parties, in which it was agreed that the Earl and Countess shall live apart, shall remain in force.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.91d8-sb17.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="file">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Deed of covenant</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/3/1/4</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1928-08-01/1928-08-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">August 1928</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 items    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/e/0/9/e096cb9c0468b00802f5b6aff2b4b41f1ec2c1553ba5d596333e50c6fb58a0a7/18775-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42645_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Deed of covenant between William Henry Edmond de Vere Sheaffe, [4th] Earl of Limerick of the 1st part; May Countess of Limerick, the wife of the Earl of the 2nd part; and Ellis George Whately of No. 17 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London, solicitor as trustee of the 3rd part, whereby the Earl covenants to pay to the Trustee the annual sum of £875 to be held in trust for the Countess for her separate use; 10 August 1928; with a related letter from May, Countess of Limerick to Ellis George Whately dated 31 August 1928.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.qf67-a524.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
          </c>
          <c level="subseries">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Personal Items of the Countess of Limerick</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/3/2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1900-01-01/1929-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1900-1906 and 1929</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 items    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42648_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>This sub-series contains personal items relating to Mary Josephine née Irwin, Countess of Limerick (1867-1943).</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
              <p>The documents have been arranged chronologically by date of the event of which they treat.</p>
            </arrangement>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photocopy of a birth certificate of Mary Josephine née Irwin</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/3/2/1</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1929-04-26/1929-04-26" encodinganalog="3.1.3">26 April 1929 (date of original)</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 p.    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/d/5/a/d5a7f885793c911f12263e40460fed02772c90e05cf0a510634de5874d24c44a/18779-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42651_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Photocopy of an entry of the birth of Mary Josephine Irwin [Countess of Limerick] at Castletown, Queen’s County on 18 March 1867 copied from the General Register Office records on 26 April 1929.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.yax5-e965.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
            <c level="item">
              <did>
                <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Album of photographs and autographs</unittitle>
                <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/3/2/2</unitid>
                <unitdate normal="1900-01-01/1906-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1900-1906</unitdate>
                <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        82 plates (outsize)    </physdesc>
                <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                  <language langcode="eng">English</language>
                </langmaterial>
                <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/a/1/a/a1aa8e07e4436cc538aab2ea1d55dc9528c9e10aa363e424198d8a8d83e6e80d/115081-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
                <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                  <famname id="atom_42654_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
                </origination>
              </did>
              <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
                <note>
                  <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
                </note>
              </bioghist>
              <odd type="publicationStatus">
                <p>Published</p>
              </odd>
              <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
                <p>Album compiled by May, Countess of Limerick containing black and white photographs, mainly of people and of country houses in Ireland and the UK, sketches (some in colour), postcards, letterheads, and autographs collected during house parties.  Moderate to heavy foxing on most plates.  Also see P51/8/1.</p>
              </scopecontent>
              <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
                <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.amxf-7v24.</p>
              </altformavail>
            </c>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Concerning the 4th Earl's Son, Captain Edmond William Claude Gerard de Vere Pery (1894-1918), Viscount Glentworth (1896-1918)</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1918-01-01/2018-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1918-2018</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file and 2 items    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42657_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>This sub-series contains material relating to the 4th Earl of Limerick's son, Captain Edmond William Claude Gerard de Vere Pery (1894-1918), Viscount Glentworth (1896-1918).</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
            <p>The documents have been arranged chronologically by date of the event of which they treat.</p>
          </arrangement>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photocopy of a birth certificate</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/4/1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1929-04-26/1929-04-26" encodinganalog="3.1.3">29 April 1929 (date of original)</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 p.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/b/e/d/bedbf3e7636029be384e329f37068b403db24d81b176e4fbbe26b557414a49fb/18781-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42660_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photocopy of an entry of the birth of Edmond William Claude Gerard de Vere Pery at Parsonstown, county Kildare on 14 October 1894 copied from the General Register Office records on 29 April 1929.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photocopy of a Royal Air Force casualty card</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/4/2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1918-01-01/1919-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[1918-1919] (date of original)</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/e/e/e/eeebb817fdaf8d6bcc01fe83b2ec072d82971c544f5539b3e0388dd9dd4c910b/18782-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42663_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Colour photocopy of a Royal Air Force casualty card relating to the death in active duty of Captain Edmond William Claude Gerrard de Vere Pery, Viscount Glentworth on 18 May 1918; with an associated information sheet.</p>
            </scopecontent>
          </c>
          <c level="file">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photocopies of photographs of Captain Pery's headstone</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/4/3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="2018-01-01/2018-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 2018?]</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 items    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/6/a/a/6aa1518843fcff7952deacfaf8fd03f3e3637e54ff5e8e86ef704b3942e1165d/18786-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42666_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Black and white photocopies of a photograph of the headstone [at Vis-en-Artois British cemetery at Haucourt, Pas de Calais, France] of Captain Pery, Viscount Glentworth of the Royal Airforce who was killed in action on 18 May 1918; and of the 7th Earl of Limerick standing next to the headstone.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.p55a-0z55.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
        </c>
        <c level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Concerning the 4th Earl's Death and Matters Arising from It</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/5</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1924-01-01/1943-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1924-1943</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 files and 6 items    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42669_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>This sub-series contains a will and codicils, inventories, accounts and reports relating to the death of the 4th Earl of Limerick, which occurred on 18 March 1929.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
            <p>The documents have been arranged chronologically by date.</p>
          </arrangement>
          <c level="file">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy will and codicils of the 4th Earl of Limerick</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/5/1</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1924-01-01/1943-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1924-1928</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 items    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/b/a/b/bab3c4e0e2d0a3bd4bac8f8f0d6934ac53d211b05714ab04d82a9f901ce63960/18793-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42672_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Copy will of William Henry Edmond de Vere Sheaffe, [4th] Earl of Limerick dated 21 March 1924; codicil dated 19 May 1925; second codicil dated 17 August 1927; and a third codicil dated 10 May 1928.  Also a photocopy of the original will and codicil, and an accompanying sheet certifying the validity of the documents.  In two folders.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.q60r-j041.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photocopy of death certificate</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/5/2</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1929-04-02/1929-04-02" encodinganalog="3.1.3">2 April 1929 (date of original)</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 p.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/f/3/d/f3da4e5656b5e9a495b29b37fa1fe03c186658e6d8b65ee2faf15165ba548c78/18803-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42675_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Photocopy of the death certificate of William Henry Edmond de Vere Sheaffe Pery, [4th] Earl of Limerick, who died at Littlecourt, Surrey on 18 March 1929, copied from the General Registry Office records on 2 April 1929.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.y6aj-0r50.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Valuation for probate of silver and plate</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/5/3</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1929-05-28/1929-05-28" encodinganalog="3.1.3">28 May 1929</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        5 pp.    </physdesc>
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                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/5/a/4/5a4ab2ae07a8f508262de282c22b3e5f449f570996066b10362297815ed748cb/18805-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42678_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Valuation for probate of silver and plate, the property of the late [4th] Earl of Limerick by R. Wallace, Gold and Silversmith, Limerick.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.ent2-h222.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="file">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Inventory and valuation of property for estate duty purposes</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/5/4</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1929-01-01/1929-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1929</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 items    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/1/b/3/1b38645653ff6a3dfde459f4ace1d6086fe1ff48afa514b5a3245073ed429dbc/18811-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42681_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Bound hardback inventory of household furniture, books, postage stamps, china and glass, silver plate, and outdoor effects at Little Court, Kingswood, Surrey; and of the contents of a jewel case at Messrs. Rooper &amp; Whately’s offices, the property of the [4th] Earl of Limerick deceased and valued for estate duty purposes; April 1929; 15 pp.  With a related letter from Humbert &amp; Flint, Licensed Valuers, 11 Serle Street, Lincoln’s Inn, London to Messrs. Rooper and Whately, 17 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London dated 9 August 1929.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.m6pm-by16.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Probate of the 4th Earl's will and codicils</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/5/5</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1929-08-31/1929-08-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">31 August 1929</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        20 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/a/f/d/afd24a0962ac426f67060b58b3ca3dd35b42f6b897526d193bd29a9b16d9ca9e/115143-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42684_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
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            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Probate of the will and three codicils of William Henry Edmond de Vere Sheaffe, [4th] Earl of Limerick.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.s7er-mj60</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Inland Revenue affidavit and statements concerning estate duties</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/5/6</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1929-01-01/1929-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1929</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 volume (outsize)    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/9/e/3/9e35c3c3e565eafdd2925cb354c65d7c3fbf042b7091ddbcc123e3e9dce6de71/115156-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42687_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Draft Inland Revenue affidavit and other accounts bound in hard covers concerning estate duties arising from the death of William Henry Edmond de Vere Sheaffe, [4th] Earl of Limerick.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.y4ra-pa68.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Inland Revenue affidavit and statements concerning estate duties</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/5/7</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1929-01-01/1939-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1929, 1939</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        233 pp. (outsize)    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/1/f/d/1fdbabef7f8185d76ca184c1905ceaf147ca08bdc26bb79dd314b91fe4975565/18813-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42690_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Draft Inland Revenue affidavit and other accounts, memorandums, and statements as loose sheets concerning estate duties arising from the death of William Henry Edmond de Vere Sheaffe, [4th] Earl of Limerick.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <phystech encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <p>Fragile.</p>
            </phystech>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.67mb-zr41.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="file">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Reports on death duties assessed by Irish Free State Revenue</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/5/8</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1939-01-01/1939-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[1939?]</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 items    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/9/0/1/9010cc603c8d933d6cd061c52d1cc11e11e640c6bb25681f5aca20cccceb80e6/18961-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42693_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Reports on death duties assessed by Irish Free State Revenue concerning the Irish settled estates of the late 4th Earl of Limerick.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.7neq-jk51.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
          <c level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Memorandum of items of real estate sold</unittitle>
              <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/6/5/9</unitid>
              <unitdate normal="1943-01-01/1943-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[1943?]</unitdate>
              <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        6 pp.    </physdesc>
              <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
                <language langcode="eng">English</language>
              </langmaterial>
              <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/b/8/1/b817289ae6b59c2741647715ed6ea3092d524c2d33fe562fd3434c7e1298f270/18988-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
              <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
                <famname id="atom_42696_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
              </origination>
            </did>
            <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
              <note>
                <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
              </note>
            </bioghist>
            <odd type="publicationStatus">
              <p>Published</p>
            </odd>
            <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
              <p>Memorandum of items of real estate of the 4th Earl of Limerick, deceased and May, Dowager Countess of Limerick, deceased, sold between 18 March 1929 and 11 March 1943.</p>
            </scopecontent>
            <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
              <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.5848-yn35.</p>
            </altformavail>
          </c>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Pertaining to Edmund Colquhoun Pery (1888-1967), 5th Earl of Limerick (1929-1967)</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/7</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1935-01-01/1935-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1935</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file and 1 item    </physdesc>
          <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
            <language langcode="eng">English</language>
          </langmaterial>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <famname id="atom_42699_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>This series contains material pertaining to Edmund Colquhoun Pery, 5th Earl of Limerick.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
          <p>The documents have been arranged chronologically by date.</p>
        </arrangement>
        <c level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Copy correspondence concerning the proposed sale of Limerick City Distillery</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/7/1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1935-06-01/1935-10-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">June-October 1935</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        8 items    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/e/8/3/e8301955397fa17311cfe914221a2dbe322b637129ddeaa317d9c854cb74dde0/115225-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42702_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Copy correspondence between Messrs Rooper &amp; Whately, 17 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London and Messrs. Barrington &amp; Son, 10 Ely Place, Dublin concerning the proposed sale of Limerick City Distillery, property of the [5th] Earl of Limerick to the Limerick Corporation.  Also financial calculations concerning the Limerick Corporation’s offer for part of the premises of Limerick City Distillery; and a map of the Limerick City Distillery premises.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
            <p>Arranged chronologically by date.</p>
          </arrangement>
          <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
            <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.e789-5005.</p>
          </altformavail>
        </c>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Letter concerning the reduction in Irish Free State Land Bonds interest</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/7/2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1935-10-08/1935-10-08" encodinganalog="3.1.3">8 October 1935</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 p.    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
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            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42705_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Letter from Rooper and Whately, 17 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London WC2 to the [5th] Earl of Limerick, 10/11 Austin Friars, London EC2 concerning the reduction in the interest on Irish Free State 4½ per cent Land Bonds.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
            <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.877w-xk05.</p>
          </altformavail>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Pertaining to Patrick Edmund Pery (1930-2003), 6th Earl of Limerick (1967-2003)</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/8</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1963-12-01/1963-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">December 1963</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 item    </physdesc>
          <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
            <language langcode="eng">English</language>
          </langmaterial>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <famname id="atom_42708_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>This series contains material pertaining to Patrick Edmund Pery, 6th Earl of Limerick.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Christmas Card</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/8/1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1963-12-01/1963-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">December 1963</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 item    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/3/9/8/398de43acea808e0e9ff1a15284877b87da3e22c402f4236cfdabd70ef897ddb/19021-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42711_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Christmas greeting to Patrick, 6th Earl of Limerick and his wife Lady Sylvia from her sister Muriel.  The card originally accompanied the Countess of Limerick’s album (for which see P51/6/3/2/2), which was found in a second hand shop and given to the couple as a Christmas present by Muriel and her husband.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
            <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.610k-eq87.</p>
          </altformavail>
        </c>
      </c>
      <c level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Ephemera</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/9</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1790-01-01/2019-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">c. 1790-c. 2019</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 file and 6 items    </physdesc>
          <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
            <language langcode="eng">English</language>
          </langmaterial>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <famname id="atom_42714_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>This series contains documents not attributable to any particular Earl, including material of general genealogical interest relating to the Pery and associated families.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <arrangement encodinganalog="3.3.4">
          <p>The documents have been arranged chronologically by date.</p>
        </arrangement>
        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Sheet of handwritten lines of poetry</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/9/1</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1790-01-01/1830-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 1790s-1830s?]</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pp.    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/3/0/d/30d9effd932b291eca4fd7689de549801b2d2ecb570ca75d6358cf4ba598ba9e/19024-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42717_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Sheet of handwritten lines of poetry, including *Death* by Alexander Balfour (1767-1829).  The sheet has been signed ‘Henry’ on the reverse.  Originally inserted between the pages of P51/1/2.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
            <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.w7y9-kt49.</p>
          </altformavail>
        </c>
        <c level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">First edition Ordnance Survey map sheets no. 11 and 12 of County Limerick</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/9/2</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1845-01-01/1845-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1845</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 items    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
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              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>First edition Ordnance Survey map sheets no. 11 and 12 of County Limerick, with the townlands of Court, Curraheen, and Dromore highlighted in colour.  Map no. 12 has been dated 21 April 1845 by hand.</p>
          </scopecontent>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Photocopied list of the peers of Ireland</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/9/3</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="1895-07-25/1895-07-25" encodinganalog="3.1.3">25 July 1895 (date of original)</unitdate>
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        1 p.    </physdesc>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_42723_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Photocopy of a document listing the peers of Ireland ranked according to their precedence.</p>
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          <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
            <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.59tx-0v83.</p>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Transcript of inscription on Hartstonge Monument</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/9/4</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="2000-01-01/2019-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">[c. 2000-2019]</unitdate>
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        1 p.    </physdesc>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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              <famname id="atom_42726_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Photocopy of a transcript made of the inscription on the Hartstonge Monument at Bruff, county Limerick.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
            <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.0efd-vd90.</p>
          </altformavail>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Laminated pedigree of the Arthur and Sexten families</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/9/5</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="2004-05-04/2004-05-04" encodinganalog="3.1.3">3 May 1904</unitdate>
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        1 sheet (outsize)    </physdesc>
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              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42729_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Laminated pedigree of the Arthur and Sexten families, copied from a certified pedigree by Sylvia Rosalind Pery, Countess of Limerick, widow of the 6th Earl of Limerick.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
            <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.sbzg-hc83.</p>
          </altformavail>
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        <c level="item">
          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Laminated pedigree of the Pery family of Limerick</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/9/6</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="2010-01-01/2010-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">2010</unitdate>
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        1 sheet (outsize)    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
            <dao linktype="simple" href="http://127.0.0.1/uploads/r/special-collections-and-archives-department-2/4/d/8/4d8c4adf193925835e72f3c67c952091b80e697ff748adff9517611bed439675/19028-Service_20File_141.jpg" role="reference" actuate="onrequest" show="embed"/>
            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42732_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
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          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
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          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Laminated pedigree of the Pery family of Limerick, compiled by Sylvia Rosalind Pery, Countess of Limerick, widow of the 6th Earl of Limerick in March 2005 and updated in 2010.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
            <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.21ds-6a18.</p>
          </altformavail>
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          <did>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Laminated pedigree of the Earls of Limerick</unittitle>
            <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="IE" repositorycode="2135">P51/9/7</unitid>
            <unitdate normal="2016-01-01/2016-12-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">2016</unitdate>
            <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 sheet (outsize)    </physdesc>
            <langmaterial encodinganalog="3.4.3">
              <language langcode="eng">English</language>
            </langmaterial>
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            <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
              <famname id="atom_42735_actor">Pery family, Earls of Limerick</famname>
            </origination>
          </did>
          <bioghist id="md5-ac4f9bf03f1da5e87d68524f8fdba7ec" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
            <note>
              <p>The Earls of Limerick are descended on their maternal side from Edmond Sexten (1486-1555), who held the office of Mayor of Limerick in 1535 and was the first mayor of native Irish extraction.  Originally closely associated with the Earl of Kildare, Sexten changed allegiances and ingratiated himself to King Henry VIII.  He was given custody of Derriknockane Castle and remained active on the Crown’s behalf, carrying out much of this work at his own expense and at times pleading financial hardship to the Crown.  By way of compensation, Sexten was granted the dissolved priory of St. Mary’s in 1537.  St Francis’s Abbey came into his possession in the same year.  Bartholomew Striche, who succeeded Sexten as Mayor, made an attempt to overturn the grant of St Mary’s by alleging that the expenses which Sexten claimed had not been paid out of his own purse but at the expense of the city of Limerick, and that by implication the grant should therefore have fallen to the corporation.  In 1538, Sexten was committed to Dublin Castle for high treason on grounds dating back to his time as Mayor but was later released and continued to enjoy the favour of the Crown.  His grandson and namesake Edmond Sexten (1595-1636) was four times Mayor and five times High Sheriff of Limerick city.  He, too, was engaged in a series of disputes with Limerick Corporation, primarily concerning the immunity of the lands of the two dissolved abbeys mentioned above, and whether Sexten alone, or the parish generally, was responsible for the upkeep of the church of St John the Baptist, Limerick, whose tithes were appropriate to St Mary’s.  His only sister Susan Sexten married Edmond Pery of Limerick (1599-1655) and succeeded as sole heiress to the Sexten property.  Her son, Colonel Edmond Pery married Dymphna Stackpole, a wealthy heiress, and when Colonel Perry died in 1721, his son the Reverend Stackpole Pery succeeded to the Sexten, Pery, and Stackpole fortunes.  His second son, the Reverend William Cecil Pery (1721-1794) became Bishop of Limerick in 1784, and six years later was created Baron Glentworth.  The peerage title was derived from his maternal great-grandfather Sir Drury Wray of Glentworth, Lincolnshire.  Three of William Pery’s sisters married in to Limerick families of note: Dymphna to William Monsell of Tervoe, County Limerick; Lucy to Sir Henry Hartstonge of Bruff, County Limerick, Baronet and MP for that county; and Jane to Launcelot Hill of Limerick city.  William Pery’s only surviving son, Edmund Henry Pery (1758-1844) was created Viscount Limerick in December 1800 and the Earl of Limerick in February 1803.  He fell out with his eldest son and heir apparent because of the latter’s recklessness with money.  In order to protect the family’s future, the 1st Earl made a will in which he vested the estate in a trust and made his heirs tenants for life.  He was succeeded in the title by his grandson, William Henry Tennison, who did not mix much in society and who died from a sudden attack of bronchitis at the relatively early age of 56.  He was twice married, and was succeeded by his son William Hale John Charles Pery from his first marriage to Susanna Sheaffe.  In 1868, the 3rd Earl commissioned Edward William Godwin to design Dromore Castle in the Gothic Revival style near Pallaskenry, County Limerick as a country retreat.  The building was completed in 1874.  In the event, it was rarely used as a residence and eventually sold in 1939.  Like his father, the 3rd Earl was twice married.  With his first wife, Caroline Maria Gray, he had one son, William Henry Edmund de Vere Sheaffe, who succeeded him as the 4th Earl.  He married May Imelda Josephine Irwin but the marriage ended in a separation in 1897.  The couple’s only son Gerard, Viscount Glentworth was an RAF pilot and was killed in action near the end of the First World War in May 1918.  The title then passed to the 4th Earl’s half-brother, Colonel Edmond Pery from his father’s second marriage to Isabella Colquhoun. His eldest son Patrick succeeded to the title as the 6th Earl in 1967.  The current holder of the title is his son, Edmund Christopher, 7th Earl of Limerick.  For a more detailed pedigree of the Earls of Limerick and associated families, please refer to P51/9/5-7.</p>
            </note>
          </bioghist>
          <odd type="publicationStatus">
            <p>Published</p>
          </odd>
          <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
            <p>Laminated pedigree of the Earls of Limerick, descendants of the Pery family, compiled by Sylvia Rosalind Pery, Countess of Limerick, widow of the 6th Earl of Limerick in April 2005, and updated in May 2010 and in 2016.</p>
          </scopecontent>
          <altformavail encodinganalog="3.5.2">
            <p>Available digitally on the University of Limerick Digital Library at https://doi.org/10.34966/uldl.f586-nr89.</p>
          </altformavail>
        </c>
      </c>
    </dsc>
  </archdesc>
</ead>
