- Adam Loftus (Archbishop)
Adam Loftus (c.
1533 -April 5 ,1605 ) was Archbishop of Armagh, and later Dublin, andLord Chancellor of Ireland from 1581. He was also the first provost ofTrinity College, Dublin .Early life
Loftus was born in 1533, the second son of a "monastic bailiff", Edward Loftus, in the heart of the English
Yorkshire Dales . Edward died when Loftus was only 8, leaving his estates to his elder brother Robert Loftus.Edward had made his living through the Catholic Church, but Adam embraced the Protestant faith early in his development. As an undergraduate at
Trinity College, Cambridge , Adam reportedly attracted the notice of the young Queen Elizabeth, as much by his physique as through the power of his intellect, having shone before her in oratory. There is good reason to believe that this particular encounter may never have taken place; but they certainly met more than once and the Queen became his patron. The relationship was to last her entire reign, coming to Adam's rescue at times in his career when less tolerant patrons might have held back.Move to Ireland
Loftus accompanied
Thomas Radclyffe, 3rd Earl of Sussex toIreland as his chaplain in 1560. In 1563, he was consecrated archbishop of Armagh at the unprecedented age of 28 byHugh Curwen , Archbishop of Dublin. In 1565 the queen, to supplement the meagre income derivable from the archbishopric in a politically unstable country, appointed Loftus temporarily to the deanery of St Patrick's; and in the same year he became president of the new commission for ecclesiastical causes.To Dublin
Following a catastrophic clash with Shane O’Neill, the real power in the province during these years, he came to Dublin in 1564 and in 1565, while still holding the office of Archbishop of Armagh, was offered the Deanery of St. Patrick’s Cathedral “in lieu of better times ahead”.
In 1567 Loftus was made Archbishop of Dublin, where the queen expected him to carry out reforms in the Church. On several occasions he temporarily carried out the functions of Lord Keeper, and in August 1581 he was appointed Lord Chancellor of Ireland. Loftus was constantly occupied in attempts to improve his financial position by obtaining additional preferment (he had been obliged to resign the Deanery of St Patrick's in 1567). In other words, he was extraordinarily corrupt, even by the standards of the English in sixteenth-century Ireland.
In 1582, he acquired land and built a castle at Rathfarnham, which he inhabited from 1585 (and which has been recently restored to public view). Much has been written about Loftus during this time but between 1584 and 1591, he had a series of clashes with Sir
John Perrot on the location of an Irish University. Perrot wanted to use St. Patrick’s Cathedral as the site of the new University, which Loftus sought to preserve as the principal place of Protestant worship in Dublin (as well as a valuable source of income for himself). The Archbishop won the argument with the help of his patron, Queen Elizabeth I, and Trinity College was born at its current location, named after his old college at Cambridge (with Adam its first Provost in 1593) leaving the Cathedral unassailed.Death
Loftus died in Dublin in 1605 and was interred in the building he had helped to preserve for future generations, while many of his portraits hang today within the walls of the University which he helped found. Having buried his wife Jane (Purdon) and two sons (of their 20 children) in the family vault at St. Patrick’s, Adam Loftus died at his Episcopal Palace in Kevin Street “worn out with age” and joined his family in the same vault. Loftus' zeal and efficiency were commended by James I upon the king's accession.
References
*Ball FE, 1902: A History of the County of Dublin - Dublin: Greene's Bookshop; the HSP Library - Ir 94133 1: 6 volumes
*Ball FE, 1926: The Judges of Ireland 1221-1921 - London: John Murray pp. 214-217; 326-328
*Lee, S 1893: Dictionary of National Biography - ed. Sidney Lee vol XXXIV, London Smith Elder & co, Waterloo Place, 1893 pp 73-77
*Luce JV, 1992: Trinity College Dublin, the first 400 years –
*Prestwick J, 1783: Origin and Etymology of the Loftus Family – attributed to a Herald’s manuscript
*Ware J, 1739: The Whole Works of - Sir James Ware concerning Ireland, revised & improved - Vol I p. 94-95, 1739
*1911
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