THE 25-30 ISLANDS OF ANNALY GRANTED TO THE BARONS DELVIN & EARLS
WESTMEATH
A Historical and Legal Explanation
The Barons Delvin—later the Earls of Westmeath—were granted or confirmed in possession of an
extraordinary number of islands in Lough Ree, one of Ireland’s largest inland lakes. These grants came through
several Crown patents issued between 1552 and 1620, as well as inheritances from monastic dissolutions. The number of
islands under Nugent control was unusually high for any feudal lord in Ireland and is one of the strongest
indicators that the Crown was transferring the spiritual and temporal authority of the O’Farrell princes to the Barons Delvin.
Keep in mind that Annaly was part of old Westmeath until Longford was separated and Baron Delvin granted
the Earldom over all ancient Westmeath.
Below is the breakdown.
I. PRIMARY ISLAND GRANTS
1. Inchcleraun (Inis Clothran) — “The Holy Island”
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A major early Christian monastic island
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The seat of St. Diarmaid and numerous monastic houses
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Multiple churches (up to 7 ruins remain)
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Considered a sacred “royal island” within Annaly
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Included burial grounds and ecclesiastical sites
Inchcleraun was explicitly granted or confirmed to the Nugents in the Tudor
patents, which transferred many monastic lands after the Dissolution.
2. Inchmore (Inis Mór) — “The Great Island”
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The largest island in the entire Lough Ree system
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Historically inhabited
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Contained abbeys, ringforts, and medieval settlements
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A key fishing and landing site
Inchmore appears in Crown grants connected to lands and fisheries that formerly belonged to
monastic houses and O’Farrell septs.
3. Saints’ Islands Cluster
The saints’ islands near Inchmore and Inchcleraun include:
Many of these were associated with dissolved monastic properties and fell under Crown control
before being assigned to local feudal lords such as Delvin.
II. SECONDARY AND ASSOCIATED ISLAND GRANTS
The Tudor and Stuart patents conveyed rights that included:
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“all islands within the said waters”
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“all fisheries, weirs, and islands adjacent to said manors”
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“all lakes, watercourses and islands thereto belonging”
This broad language is typical of Crown grants intended to transfer:
These would include:
Historical maps of Lough Ree list 30+ islands, many of which were ecclesiastical or monastic in nature.
Not all were individually named in grants—but grants of “all islands in the said lake” are legally comprehensive.
III. TOTAL NUMBER OF ISLANDS ASSOCIATED WITH NUGENT AUTHORITY
Known islands explicitly connected or reasonably included in Nugent grants:
At minimum:
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Inchcleraun
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Inchmore
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Inchbofin
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Hare Island
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Quaker Island
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Friars’ Island
= 6 major documented islands
Likely included by legal formula (“all islands, fisheries, and waters”)
An additional ~20–25 islands in the Lough Ree system belong to the same
monastic/manorial holdings.
Full Approximate Count:
About 25–30 islands fell under the territorial and feudal jurisdiction of the
Barons Delvin in the Annaly portion of Lough Ree.
This matches:
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monastic orbit,
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ecclesiastical dissolution lands,
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O’Farrell inheritance lands seized by the Crown,
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and the broad wording of Nugent patents transferring “all islands.”
IV. WHY SO MANY ISLANDS WERE GRANTED
1. Monastic Dissolution
Many Lough Ree islands were monastic.
When the abbeys were dissolved (1530s–1540s), their islands became Crown property and were reassigned to loyal
nobles.
2. Transfer of Spiritual Authority
The islands were holy places, full of churches, hermitages, cemeteries, and relic sites.
Granting these to Delvin was equivalent to transferring:
which was necessary to replace the O’Farrell princes.
3. Strategic Control
Lough Ree was:
Control of islands = control of the lake = control of Annaly.
4. Rights Over Fishing and Lakebed
Island ownership inherently includes:
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adjacent waters,
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fishing rights,
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eel weirs,
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salmon fisheries,
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landing places.
The Crown used island grants to consolidate complete water jurisdiction in Nugent hands.
V. CONCLUSION
Based on historical records, Crown patents, and feudal legal principles, the Barons Delvin
were granted at least 6 major islands explicitly, and by legal extension likely 20–30 total islands in the Lough Ree and Annaly region. These islands
carried:
The number of islands granted is one of the strongest indicators of the spiritual and temporal succession intended by the Crown when transferring the
Honour and Seignory of Annaly to the Nugent line.
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