- John Butler, 12th Baron Dunboyne
John Butler, 12th Baron Dunboyne (1731 –
7 May ,1800 ) was an Irishclergyman andaristocrat ,Roman Catholic Bishop of Cork. In order to advance his temporal title, he became,as of 2004 , the only authenticatedapostate in the Catholic hierarchy in Ireland.O'Connor (2004)]Early life
Butler was the third son of
Edmond Butler, 8th Baron Dunboyne (died 1732) and widow Anne Nagle, "née" Grace. The family was part of a wealthy network of landed Butlers acrossLeinster andMunster . However, the family was subject to theBritish government 's policy of curtailment ofcivil rights of Irish Catholics ("see, ").Raised a Roman Catholic, John early acknowledged a
vocation for the Church, his brothers, Pierce and Edmond, having chosen thearmy and left the family home to fight in theWar of the Austrian Succession . Butler commenced his studies at theIrish College inRome , managing to lose his left eye in unknown circumstances, and was ordainedpriest in 1755 in theBasilica of St. John Lateran . He returned to Ireland in 1758, having completed hisdoctorate , though his Catholic credentials entailed an interview before aJustice of the Peace inWhitehaven . Butler returned to theDiocese of Cashel , being appointedparish priest ofArdmayle in 1759. While he was establishing his place in the Church hierarchy, becoming anarchdeacon and secretary to the bishop, he was also bolstering his secular role in the Butler family network.Bishop of Cork
The post of Bishop of Cork fell vacant in 1763 and Butler won immediate support as the leading candidate, being appointed by
Pope Clement XIII in 1763. The years following his appointment marked a gradual improvement in the civil disabilities of Catholics in Ireland and the relaxation afforded the Church the opportunity finally to implement the decrees of theCouncil of Trent in respect of the Irish hierarchy. Butler led the changes but was careful to use his secular network and status to maintain relationships with theProtestant establishment. For fear of Protestant sentiment, Butler stalledNano Nagle 's establishment of theUrsulines in Cork until 1771 and published a condemnation of the 1766 Corkcoopers' riots . ["Hibernian Chronicle", 2 July 1766]Stole fee s and other dues were resented and sometimes provided a pretext forWhiteboy violence towardsAnglican clergy. Butler issued a declaration, "Statuta synodalia pro dioecesi Corcagiensi" (1768), that involvement in the Whiteboys was areserved sin . He supported theTest Act 1774 and gave substantial financial backing to the "Catholic Committee ".Baron Dunboyne
Butler inherited the title of Baron Dunboyne in December 1785 on the death of his nephew
Pierce Edmond Creagh Butler, 11th Baron Dunboyne . Butler was childless and the Barony threatened with extinction if he had no heir but he had taken the priest's mandatoryvow of celibacy .In December 1786, he resigned as bishop and asked the pope for a dispensation from his vow of celibacy. No dispensation was given. In despite of the refusal, in 1787 he married Maria (1764/5-1860), daughter of Theobald Butler, and took the oath of allegiance, abjuration, and supremacy.
He moved to his ancestral home at
Dunboyne ,County Meath , where the couple parented a daughter who died young, and then toDublin . Dunboyne, and the Catholic chapel, were burned in the 1798 rising.In 1800, an aged and infirm Butler wrote a letter of repetenance to the pope, executed a will, and made his
confession to Catholic priest Fr. William Gahan. He died in Dublin and was buried in the Augustinianfriary atFethard ,County Tipperary .Testamentary litigation
Butler left his property to
St Patrick's College, Maynooth and litigation from his family was swift. The legality of the will was challenged as the Penal Laws deprived Catholics of the right to make a will and a sequence oflegal action s, such as "Butler v. Moore " (1802), [Nolan (1913)] ensued before a compromise between the college and the family in 1808. The compromise led to the Dunboyne establishment at the college to endow scholarships.References
Bibliography
*cite book | author=Costello, C. | title=Bishop Dunboyne's Dilemma: Faith or Fatherhood? - The Story of John Butler, Catholic Bishop of Cork, 1763-1787 | year=2000 | publisher=The Woodfield Press | id=ISBN 0-9528453-9-3
*Nolan, R. S. (1913) " [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/13649b.htm The Law of the Seal of Confession] ", "Catholic Encyclopaedia "
*O'Connor, T. (2004) " [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/4196 Butler, John, styled twelfth Baron Dunboyne (1731–1800)] ", "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ", Oxford University Press, accessed 9 Aug 2007 ODNBsub
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