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Fitz
Gerald (Geraldins of
Florence
)
Sir
Maurice
Fitz Gerald[a]
,
First Baron of Offaly, b abt 1152 in
Florence
,
d bef
15
Jan 1203/04
.
He md Eve de Bermingham
abt 1185, daughter of Robert de
Bermingham. She was b abt 1165, d bef
Dec 1226.
Child of Gerald Fitz Maurice and Eve de
Bermingham was:
Sir
Maurice Fitz
Gerald [b],
Justiciar of
Ireland
,
Lord of Offaly, Knight,
b 1190, d 1257,
Youghal
,
Ireland
.
He md Juliane
abt 1232. She was b abt 1212.
Children of Maurice Fitz Gerald and
Juliane were:
- Sir
Maurice Fitz Maurice Fitz Gerald,
Lord of Offaly, b abt 1234. See
LINE
A
- Thomas
Fitz Maurice Fitz Gerald
b abt 1236. See LINE
B
LINE
A
Sir Maurice Fitz
Maurice Fitz Gerald [c],
Justiciar of
Ireland
,
Lord of Offaly,
b abt 1239,
Wexford
,
Ireland
,
d 1286,
Ross
,
Ireland
.
He md Maud
de Prendergast
abt 1260, daughter of Gerald de
Prendergast and Daughter de Burgh;
and [2] Emmeline Longespee.
Child of Maurice Fitz Gerald and Maud de
Prendergast was:
Juliane
Fitz Maurice
b abt 1263, prob
Dublin
,
Ireland
,
d aft 1309. She md Sir Thomas
de Clare,
Governor of London, Lord of Inchequin and
Youghae, 1275, Essex, England, son of
Sir Richard de Clare, Earl of
Gloucester and Hertford, Lord Clare, Knight,
and Maud de Lacy.
LINE
B
Thomas Fitz Maurice
Fitz Gerald [d]
b abt 1236,
Ireland
,
d 1271,
Ireland
.
The identity of his wife is not known.
Child of Thomas Fitz Gerald was:
Sir
John Fitz Thomas
Fitz Gerald [e],
Earl of Kildare, Lord of Offaly, b
abt 1258, Ireland, d 12 Sep 1316,
Laraghbryan, Ireland. He
md Blanche de la
Roche abt 1278, daughter of John
de la Roche. She
was b abt 1263,
Ireland
.
Child of John Fitz Gerald and Blanche de
la Roche was:
Joan
Fitz Gerald,
b abt 1282, of Fermoy,
Cork
,
Ireland
,
d bef
2
May 1320
.
She md Sir Edmund
Butler,
Justiciar
of
Ireland
,
Knight,
1302, son of Theobald le Boteler and Joan
Fitz John.
NOTES:

a.
Probably the eldest son of his father's (presumed)
second marriage,
he was the first baron of Offaly. He was
with his father at the siege of
Dublin
in 1171, and after his father's death, his
elder brother William gave him half the
cantred of Ophelan. By his marriage to Eve,
presumably the daughter of Robert de
Bermingham, he received the barony of Offaly.
His widow married secondly, Geoffrey Fitz
Robert, and after his death in 1211, she
married, thirdly, Geoffrey de Marsh (or
Marisco), sometime Justiciar of Ireland.

b.
He was knighted in Jul 1217, and as Maurice
FitzGerald, Lord of Lea, the younger, he was
one of the formal witnesses to a covenant of
dower made in the great
church
of
Naas
in Mary 1227. He was summoned in Oct 1229 to
London
to accompany the King's expedition to
Poitou
and
Gascony
,
and was appointed Justiciar of Ireland in
Sep 1232. He was several times summoned to
England
as Justiciar, to give counsel on the affairs
of
Ireland
,
but in Nov 1245, he was superseded in that
office by the appointment of John
FitzGeoffrey, a move which the King appears
afterwards to have regretted. He is said to
have married Juliane, but nothing more is
known of her. He died at the monastery of
Youghal, which he had founded.

c. In May 1262,
he was among the chief magnates in
Ireland
summoned to inform the King and Prince
Edward about the state of that country, and
was summoned again in Jun 1265. It had been
believed that his (only) wife was Emmeline
Longespee, but a recent discovery by Mr.
Douglas Richardson (to appear in one of his
upcoming publications), indicates Maurice
Fitz Maurice (Fitz Gerald) was first married
to Maud de Prendergast, and she was the
mother of Juliane Fitz Maurice. Go to SGM
site for details concerning this discovery.

d.
Youngest son of Maurice Fitz Gerald, the
Justiciar, he had, from his brother, Maurice,
a grant of lands in
Sligo
.
He died at his brother's
castle
of
Lough
Mask
in 1271.

e.
He first appears in records ca 1288, when as
John, son of Thomas, he was guardian of part
of the
Marches
of the English Pale, and in 1291 he had
protection while in
England
with the Archbishop of Dublin. He was also
engaged in suits concerning his kinsmen's
lands, which he appears to have bought from
the coheirs. In 1293, he built
Sligo
Castle
,
and in the same year and later, was keeper
of the castles of Roscommon and Randown. In
1294, he took the Earl of Ulster (Richard de
Burgh) prisoner and was also involved in a
dispute with another noble, William de Vesci.
In 1295, he was summoned to Parliament by
John Wogan the Justiciar, who also arranged
a truce for two years between the Earl of
Ulster and John and the other Geraldines,
which became a peace in 1298. John then gave
the Earl 3,000 marks and the Earl gave his
daughter in marriage to John's son. From
1295 to 1302, he was summoned by the King
for military service in
Scotland
and
Flanders
.
In 1307, he and Edmund Boteler dispersed the
robbers of Offaly who had burned
Lea
Castle
.
In 1309 he was called upon to cooperate with
the Earl of Ulster and other magnates in
assembling an Irish force by the following
midsummer to serve in
Scotland
,
and in 1311 he was summoned to assist the
King's commissioners in quieting discontents
in
Ireland
.
When Edward Bruce, brother of King Robert,
came to Ireland and was crowned King of
Ireland, John Fitz Thomas and others, whose
combined forces would have been sufficient
to overcome Bruce, intead fell out among
themselves and did nothing, but in Feb
1315/16, he joined with the other magnates
of Ireland in an obligation to maintain the
King's authority against his enemies, the
Scots. On 14 May of that year, for his
services to the late and present King, he
had grants of the castle and town of
Kildare
,
and being then in
England
,
was created Earl of Kildare.
SOURCES:
CP VII[200, 218-221], Vol X[10-17]; AR: Line
178[2-7], 178A[5-8]; GL: English Origins of
New England Families, Series 1, Volume 2, Origin
of the Hastings, by G. Andrews Moriarty,
p. 688, from an article originally appearing
in NEHGR, republished by Genealogical
Publishing Co.
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