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richard_prior [2018/01/15 15:51] judithrichard_prior [2020/03/21 18:08] (current) judith
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 ====== Richard Prior ====== ====== Richard Prior ======
  
-**Richard Prior**, Colonial Thomas Prior’s eldest son, inherited his father’s Irish lands and an estate in the northern English county of [[wp>Derbyshire|Derbyshire]] on the death in 1704 of his sister Isabella Stubber and her husband.((John & John B. Burke//A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain & Ireland: M to Z//, London: Henry Colburn Publisher, 1846, p.1075.))\\ +**Richard Prior**, Captain Thomas Prior’s eldest son with estates at RathdowneyEly and, after his sister Isabella's deathDerbyshire. \\
  
-In 1685, the Catholic [[wp>James_II_of_England|James II]] succeeded his more pragmatic brother Charles II and in 1689 passed an [[wp>Patriot_Parliament|Act of Attainder]]. This Act not only reversed the land grants to Protestants such as the Priors, but condemned over 2,000 of them to defend themselves from the charge of high treason. Richard Prior and other Protestants choose to flee, forfeiting their land. Richard fled to Cambridge, to property there that he had inherited from his father as well as some 40 acres in Ely. In 1690, James II’s loyalist army was defeated at the [[wp>Battle_of_the_Boyne|Battle of the Boyne]] and the Act subsequently repealed. Richard continued to live in Cambridge and on his death his portion of the Rathdowney estate passed to Thomashis oldest surviving brother and the most famous of the family. By then it appears to have been heavily mortgaged.((Teddy Fennelly, //Thomas Prior. His Life, Times and Legacy//, Ireland: Arderin Publishing, 2001, pp.2,13. He gives Richard's date of death as 1726; other sources state 1736.))+In 1685, the Catholic [[wp>James_II_of_England|James II]] succeeded his more pragmatic brother Charles II and in 1689 passed an [[wp>Patriot_Parliament|Act of Attainder]]. This Act not only reversed the Irish land grants to Protestants such as the Priors, but condemned over 2,000 of them to defend themselves from the charge of high treason. Richard Prior and other Protestants choose to flee, forfeiting their land. Richard fled to Cambridge, to property there that he had inherited from his father as well as some 40 acres in Ely.\\ 
 + 
 +In 1690, James II’s loyalist army was defeated at the [[wp>Battle_of_the_Boyne|Battle of the Boyne]] and the Act of Attainder was consequently repealed.\\ 
 + 
 +Richard continued to live in Cambridge and died without issue on his death in 1726 or 1736. Richard left his brother [[thomas_tom_prior|Thomas Prior]] the 40 acres in Ely as well as property in Cambridge and his portion of the Rathdowney estate, although by then the latter appears to have been heavily mortgaged. ((Teddy Fennelly, //Thomas Prior. His Life, Times and Legacy//, Ireland: Arderin Publishing, 2001, pp.2,13,15,81While one source states that he appointed 'his loving nephew Thomas Prior' his executor and trustee, this appears to be a mistake as he was succeeded by his brother Thomas and he doesn't appear to have had a nephew Thomas Prior.)) 
  
-There remains some confusion about the Prior family at this point - Fennelly states that in 1726, Richard Prior died, having appointed his  'his loving nephew Thomas Prior' his executor and trustee. Richard also left Thomas Prior some 40 acres in Ely as well as property in Cambridge. My understanding is that Thomas was his brother.((Teddy Fennelly, //Thomas Prior. His Life, Times and Legacy//, Ireland: Arderin Publishing, 2001, p.15.)) 
  
  
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