Richard II O'Donovan

General Richard O'Donovan II, The O'Donovan of Clancahill, born 1764 or 1768, was the son of Jane Becher, daughter of John Becher, and Daniel V O'Donovan, The O'Donovan of Clancahill.

Gaining the rank of General in the service of the 6th (Inniskilling) Dragoons, O'Donovan fought in the Napoleonic Wars, in the Flanders Campaign and in Spain.[1] He became an intimate acquaintance of the English Prince Regent, and saved the life of the Prince Frederick, Duke of York and Albany during the retreat of the English Army from Holland.[2]

O'Donovan held the Chiefship of Clancahill in 1778. He married a Welsh lady, Emma Anne Powell, daughter of Robert Powell, but they were without issue. Richard O'Donovan then overturned his father's will and left his entire estates, including the Manor of Bawnlahan, to her family, to the immense displeasure of his own, it being the very last of the O'Donovan family's by that time 600-year-old estates in Carbery still in existence. He died in 1829, but to this day is remembered with anger. The Chiefship of Clancahill then passed to the cadet line, descendants of Teige, younger brother of Donal III O'Donovan.

Technically the Manor of Bawnlahan was erected in the later 17th century by Donal IV, but it was a descendant of the earlier Manor of Rahine erected by Donal II, on lands conquered by his father Donal of the Skins from a rival sept, the O'Donovans of Sliocht Íomhair. Thus they had been in the possession of the greater family since the 13th century.

Notes

  1. thePeerage.com
  2. O'Hart, p. 201

References

Preceded by
Daniel V O'Donovan
O'Donovan
Lord of Clancahill

1778–1829
Succeeded by
Morgan O'Donovan
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