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Walter Spring : ウィキペディア英語版
Walter Spring

Walter Spring the Unfortunate (1620 – c.1678) was an Anglo-Irish Roman Catholic landowner involved in the Irish Confederate Wars.〔James Carmody, 'The Abbey of Killagha, Parish of Kilcoleman, County Kerry', ''The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland'', Fifth Series, Vol. 36, No. 3, 291〕
==Biography==
Spring was the son of Edward Spring, a lawyer. He was the grandson of Walter Spring, who had served as High Sheriff of Kerry, and the great-grandson of Captain Thomas Spring, Constable of Castlemaine.〔Joseph Jackson Howard, ‘Spring’, ''The Visitation of Suffolk'' ( Whittaker and Co, 1866), 165-206.〕 He inherited the family estates in County Kerry from his father, including Killagha Abbey, where he was born and brought up.〔Michael C. O'Laughlin, ''Families of Co. Kerry, Ireland'' (Irish Roots Cafe, 1994), 137.〕
Unlike the previous generations of his family, Walter Spring was raised as a Catholic. His control of the strategic fortress at Castlemaine and the lands surrounding Milltown made him an important figure in Kerry. He attended the 1642 Kilkenny meeting of Catholic gentry which established the Association of the Confederate Catholics of Ireland and was active in helping to organise the war effort on behalf of the Catholic rebels. During the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland, Spring’s fortified manor house at Killagha Abbey was attacked by soldiers of the New Model Army armed with canon, leading to its destruction. Cromwell seized Spring’s extensive estates and granted Killagha to one of his supporters, Major John Godfrey.〔James Carmody, 'The Abbey of Killagha, Parish of Kilcoleman, County Kerry', ''The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland'', Fifth Series, Vol. 36, No. 3, 291〕
Following the defeat of the Confederacy, Spring retained only a small portion of his estate. In order to protect it, he occasionally attended Protestant services. However, he was thought to still pose a significant threat by The Protectorate government and was transplanted to County Clare, where he had little influence, under the Act for the Settlement of Ireland 1652.〔James Carmody, 'The Abbey of Killagha, Parish of Kilcoleman, County Kerry', ''The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland'', Fifth Series, Vol. 36, No. 3, 291〕 This led to him being dubbed ‘The Unfortunate’ by both opponents and supporters.〔Michael C. O'Laughlin, ''Families of Co. Kerry, Ireland'' (Irish Roots Cafe, 1994), 137.〕〔Charles Smith, ''The Antient and Present State of the County of Kerry'' (1756), 57.〕 His remaining estates in Kerry were transferred to his son, Thomas.
Spring married Juliana Fitzgerald, a daughter of William FitzGerald, 11th Knight of Kerry. His son, Thomas Spring, was the grandfather of Thomas Spring Rice, 1st Baron Monteagle of Brandon.

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