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Hugh Tyrrel : ウィキペディア英語版
Hugh Tyrrel
Hugh Tyrrel (Anglo-Norman: ''Huge Tyrel''; died 1199) was an Anglo-Norman noble and crusader; he played a prominent part in the Norman invasion of Ireland, became the first baron of Castleknock and took part in the Third Crusade.
He was born in Hampshire, England, the son of Hugh Tyrrel the elder, who held substantial lands in England, and was lord of Poix-de-Picardie in France. Their ancestor Walter Tirel (died after 1100) became notorious as the killer (whether the killing was intentional or not is still a matter of debate) of King William Rufus. On the death of his elder brother Walter, in about the year 1170, Hugh succeeded to all his father's estates.
==Invasion of Ireland==
In 1169 when Richard de Clare, 2nd Earl of Pembroke, nicknamed Strongbow, invaded Ireland on behalf of Henry II of England, Tyrrel accompanied him.〔Ball, F. Elrington ''History of the Parishes of Dublin'' Alexander Thom and Co Dublin 1920 Vol.6 pp.8-9〕 By 1172 he was described as one of the right-hand men of Hugh de Lacy, Lord of Meath, who conferred on him the feudal barony of Castleknock. He built Castleknock Castle, possibly on the site of an earlier fortification.
When de Lacy left Ireland to join the King in France, he made Tyrrel Constable of Trim Castle. In 1173 the Lordship of Meath was invaded by Ruaidrí Ua Conchobair, High King of Ireland, and Trim Castle was besieged.〔Otway-Ruthven, A.J. ''History of Medieval Ireland'' Barnes and Noble reissue 1993 p.55〕 A poet records Tyrrel's urgent appeal to Strongbow: "Through me the baron sends you word, Old Hugh Tyrrel of Trim, That you aid him in every way".〔Ball p.9〕
Tyrrel was forced to evacuate Trim, but Ruaidrí soon withdrew and Tyrrel quickly reoccupied the castle and strengthened its defences; the same poet records: "Hugh Tyrrel went to Trim, And refortified his fortress, And safeguarded it with great honour".〔Ball pp.8-9〕
Despite their earlier friendship Tyrrel and de Lacy quarreled in 1185: de Lacy accused Tyrrel of despoiling the monastery of Armagh and carrying away its valuables. Ball considers the story most unlikely, noting that Tyrrel was renowned as a benefactor, not a despoiler of religious houses: in particular he made a substantial grant of lands in present-day Phoenix Park to the Order of St. John of Jerusalem, whose Irish house was at Kilmainham.〔Ball p.9〕

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