Edmund Boyle, 8th Earl of Cork

General Edmund Boyle, 8th Earl of Cork and Orrery KP (21 October 1767 – 29 June 1856), styled Viscount Dungarvan from 1768 to 1798, was an Irish soldier and peer. He became Earl of Cork and Orrery in 1798 on the death of his father Edmund Boyle, 7th Earl of Cork and was appointed a Knight of the Order of St Patrick on 22 July 1835.[1] His mother was Anne daughter of Kelland Courtenay (c. 1707 – 1748), MP for Truro and then Huntingdon,[2] by Elizabeth, sister to John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich.

He married (1795) his first cousin Isabella-Henrietta, daughter of William Poyntz of Midgham (1734–1809) by Isabella (died 1805), daughter and eventual co-heiress of Kelland Courtney of Painsford, in Ashprington, Devon (Kelland's father, William Courtney (1678–1716), MP for Mitchell, had married Susannah one of the three co-heiresses of John Kelland (died 1712), before that Painsford was with the Somaster family), and Trethurfe, Cornwall, distant scion of John Courtenay (of Tremere) (Tremeer)).

Meanwhile, Lord Cork's younger brother, Vice-Admiral Sir Courtenay Boyle (1770–1844), KCH, married (1799) his sister-in-law and first cousin, Carolina-Amelia Poyntz (died 1851).

Isabella-Henrietta and Carolina-Amelia's brother, and thus Lord Cork's brother-in-law, was the MP William Stephen Poyntz.

References

  1. Rayment, Leigh. "Knights of the Order of St Patrick". Retrieved 13 December 2008.
  2. The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1715–1754, ed. R. Sedgwick, 1970

External links

Military offices
New regiment Colonel of the 16th Garrison Battalion
1803–1805
Regiment disbanded
Peerage of Ireland
Preceded by
Edmund Boyle
Earl of Cork and Orrery
1798–1856
Succeeded by
Richard Boyle
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