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  1. Patrick Sarsfield, created by James II., in February, 1691, Earl of Lucan, Viscount Tully and Baron of Rosberry, came of the best Irish blood on both sides; his father's family being Norman, his mother's of the old Irish stock.

  2. 2nd son of Sir John Bingham, 5th Bt. MP, of Castlebar, co. Mayo, by his wife Anne Vesey, 1st dau. and cohrss. of Agmondisham Vesey, of Lucan, co. Dublin, by his first wife Charlotte Sarsfield, only dau. and hrss. of William Sarsfield, elder brother of Gen Patrick Sarsfield, created Earl of Lucan in 1691 by the deposed King James II

  3. When Marshall Patrick Sarsfield 1st Earl of Lucan was born about 1658, in Lucan, Celbridge, County Kildare, Ireland, his father, Patrick Sarsfield, Esq., was 30 and his mother, Anne O'More, was 30. He married Lady Honora Burke on 9 January 1689, in Portumna Castle, County Galway, Ireland. They were the parents of at least 1 son.

  4. In 1689, Patrick Sarsfield married the 15-year-old Honora Burke, daughter of William Burke, 7th Earl of Clanricarde; they had one son, James Patrick Sarsfield, 2nd Earl of Lucan. FactSnippet No. 2,345,979

  5. Alfred Webb. A Compendium of Irish Biography. 1878. Sarsfield, Patrick, Earl of Lucan, was born at Lucan about the middle of the 17th century. [An ancestor, William Sarsfield, Mayor of Dublin, was knighted by Sir Henry Sidney in 1566, for his services against Shane O’Neill. On the female side he is said to have been descended from Rury O’More.

  6. James Sarsfield, 2nd Earl of Lucan (1693-1719), was a French-born Jacobite of Irish descent. He was the son of Patrick Sarsfield, 1st Earl of Lucan and his wife Honora Burke . His father was a leading commander of the Jacobite Irish Army during the Williamite War in Ireland , and led them into exile in the Flight of the Wild Geese following the Siege of Limerick in 1691.

  7. Patrick Sarsfield, 1st Earl of Lucan, Irish: Pádraig Sáirseál, circa 1655 to 21 August 1693, was an Irish soldier, and leading figure in the Jacobite army during the 1689 to 1691 Williamite War in Ireland. While contemporaries universally acknowledged his courage, opinions of his judgement and intelligence were mixed. Nevertheless, his reputation and death meant in the 19th and early 20th ...