James Keating (cleric)
Sir James Keating was an Irish cleric and statesman of the fifteenth century. He was Prior of the Irish house of the Knights Hospitallers, which was based at Kilmainham, Dublin, and a member of the Privy Council of Ireland.
Despite his political eminence and clerical office, he was a man of ruthless character and violent temper, who once tried to murder a judge, and was later directly responsible for the death of his intended replacement as Prior.
After a long and turbulent career, described by one historian as amounting to "thirty years of outrage, rapine and fraud", he was finally removed from the office of Prior of Kilmainham in 1488 for his treason in supporting the Lambert Simnel Rebellion, and died in poverty a few years later.
Biography
He was born in Bree, County Wexford, to a prominent landowning family who are recorded in County Wexford from about 1250. He was the grandson of Sir Henry Keating, knight. Little is known of his early life. He joined the Order of Knights Hospitallers, of which his family had been generous benefactors, rose rapidly through its ranks and in 1461 became Prior of the Order's Irish house at Kilmainham, in succession to Sir Thomas Talbot, having taken the trouble of travelling to Rhodes in 1459 to canvass support for his appointment from his superiors.Attempted murder of Sir Robert Dowdall
Soon after his appointment as Prior, he committed a crime which might well have ended his career, and even his life. At Pentecost 1462 Sir Robert Dowdall, the Chief Justice of the Irish Common Pleas, went on a pilgrimage to the "holy well" at Clonliffe, in north Dublin. Keating attacked him with a sword, seemingly with every intention of killing him. The motive for the attack is unknown, although crimes of violence, even among the ruling class, were not uncommon in that era. Twenty years earlier another Irish judge, James Cornwalsh, Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer, had been murdered in the course of a private war over possession of a castle: his killers were later pardoned for the crime. Likewise, when Patrick Segrave was murdered by Patrick White and others in 1455, all the killers were pardoned. was a notably turbulent and litigious individual, who clashed with James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormonde and with Sir William Welles, the Lord Chancellor of Ireland, whom he was accused of kidnapping. Prior Richard de Wirkeley, in the previous century, was another violent and controversial character who headed the Kilmainham house.Ball p.81Keating was arrested and arraigned for trial before the Irish Parliament on a number of charges, including attempted murder, but the charges were dropped on condition that he pay Dowdall 100 marks in damages. He probably owed his immunity from punishment to the influence of the powerful Anglo-Irish magnate Thomas FitzGerald, 7th Earl of Kildare, later Lord Chancellor of Ireland, who acted as Keating's patron.
Prior of Kilmainham
For the next few years, he seems to have run the Order House smoothly enough. He was later accused of bankrupting it: in his defence, he pointed out that in 1467 his superiors in Rhodes had increased the annual payment due to the Order's central fund from the Kilmainham house from £40 to £70 without consulting him. At a Chapter meeting of the Order in Rome, he pleaded without success for a reduction of the annual payment. He argued that the increase took no account of the Irish House's ability to pay, and insisted that he had been simply unable to find the extra money.The charge of fraud made against him by later historians seems to be based on his general bad character, rather than on any specific crime. He succeeded in having some of the property alienated by his two predecessors restored.
Politics
As Prior of Kilmainham, he was entitled to sit in the Parliament of Ireland and on the Irish Privy Council, and thus he was able to play a key role in Irish politics. During the Wars of the Roses, the dynastic struggle between the rival branches of the Plantagenet dynasty, Keating in common with almost all the Anglo-Irish nobility favoured the House of York over the rival House of Lancaster. The victory of York over Lancaster, in the year Keating became Prior, increased his political standing. However, he was in temporary disgrace in 1467, when King Edward IV sent the notoriously ruthless John Tiptoft, 1st Earl of Worcester to be Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. Worcester held a Parliament at Drogheda where he proceeded to deal mercilessly with his enemies, including the Earl of Kildare, who fled abroad, and Keating, who was briefly imprisoned and subjected to a heavy fine.Lord Grey as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland
His fortunes improved greatly after the House of Lancaster, which had briefly regained the throne in 1470-1, was finally crushed at the Battle of Tewkesbury in May 1471. Among the defeated Lancastrians who were executed for treason after Tewkesbury was Sir John Langstrother, Prior of the English Hospitallers. Keating by contrast was commended by the victorious Yorkists for his loyalty to their cause. The Lancastrians during their brief restoration had also indirectly strengthened his political position by executing his enemy, Worcester, who was a committed Yorkist and perhaps the most hated man in England.Though not a founder member, Keating was later elected one of the knights of the Brotherhood of Saint George, the short-lived military order set up in 1470 for the defence of the Pale. In 1471 the Irish Parliament gave him leave to go abroad for two years, for what purpose is unclear. In 1474 he was a party to the charter establishing the Dublin Smith's Guild, one of the earliest of the Guilds of the City of Dublin, and ranked third in precedence. Ironically his lifelong enemy Sir Robert Dowdall was another of the founders.
In 1478 he clashed again with the English Crown when King Edward IV, in an effort to strengthen his control of Ireland, sent Lord Grey of Codnor to Ireland as Lord Lieutenant. The Anglo-Irish nobles, led by the immensely powerful Gerald FitzGerald, 8th Earl of Kildare and his father-in-law Baron Portlester, simply refused to recognize his authority: Keating, who had assumed the role of Constable of Dublin Castle, apparently without any legal right to it played a key role in these events by refusing Lord Grey entry to the Castle. After a few months of political deadlock, the King yielded and Grey returned to England, leaving Keating and his allies triumphant. He was allowed to retain the office of Constable of Dublin Castle, despite the rival claim of Richard Archbold, on condition that he repair the drawbridge, which he had destroyed to impede Grey's entry.