Edwin Richard Wyndham-Quin, 3rd Earl of Dunraven and Mount-Earl, KP, PC, FRAI, FSA, FRGS, FRS (19 May 1812 – 6 October 1871), styled Viscount Adare from 1824 to 1850, was an Irish peer, Conservative Member of Parliament, and archaeologist.
The son of Windham Quin, 2nd Earl of Dunraven, he succeeded to the Earldom on the death of his father in 1850. Along with George Petrie, Lord Dunraven is credited with "laying the foundations of a sound school of archaeology" in Ireland.[1]
Family
Born on 19 May 1812, in Westminster, Dunraven was the eldest son of Windham Henry Quin (1782–1850), later the second earl, and of Caroline Wyndham, the daughter and heiress of Thomas Wyndham of Dunraven Castle, Glamorganshire. From her father she inherited the Wyndham estate in Glamorganshire and also property in Gloucestershire.
In 1815, Dunraven's father, Windham Henry Quin, assumed the additional name of Wyndham in right of his wife. He represented County Limerick in the Westminster parliament from 1806 to 1820.
Wyndham-Quin was educated at Eton and at Trinity College Dublin, graduating BA in 1833.[4] In 1824, when his father inherited the earldom, he gained the courtesy title of Viscount Adare.[5]
As Viscount Adare, Dunraven sat as the Conservative MP for Glamorganshire from the 1837 General Election to 1851. While in the House of Commons he became a Roman Catholic and his political activity largely aimed at safeguarding religious education in Ireland.[6]
He subsequently became one of the commissioners of education in Ireland. In 1850, he succeeded his father as Earl of Dunraven and Mount-Earl in the peerage of Ireland and retired from the House of Commons the next year. In 1852, he joined James Henthorn Todd on the Brehon Law Commission which set about translating the Senchus Érenn, a collection of early Irish laws.[7]
Dunraven was deeply interested in intellectual pursuits. For three years he studied astronomy under William Rowan Hamilton in the Dublin observatory, and acquired a thorough knowledge both of the practical and theoretical sides of the science. He investigated the phenomena of spiritualism, and convinced himself of their genuineness. His son, later, the fourth earl, prepared for him minute reports of séances which Daniel Dunglas Home conducted with his aid in 1867–8. The reports were privately printed as Experiences in Spiritualism with Mr. D. D. Home, with a lucid introduction by Dunraven, in 1869 and subsequently withdrawn.[10]
Dunraven's chief interest was in archaeology. He was associated with George Petrie, Stokes, and other Irish archæologists in the foundation of the Irish Archaeological Society in 1840, and of the Celtic Society in 1845. In 1849 and 1869 he presided over the meetings of the Cambrian Archaeological Association held at Cardiff and Bridgend, and in 1871 was president of a section of the Royal Archæological Institute. In 1862 he accompanied Montalembert[11] on a tour in Scotland, and five years later travelled in France and Italy, with the view of making a special study of campaniles. But Irish archæology mainly occupied him. He is said to have visited every barony in Ireland, and nearly every island off the coast. He was usually attended by a photographer, and Dr. William Stokes and Miss Margaret Stokes were often in his company.
After Petrie's death in 1866, Dunraven took it upon himself to complete his book, Notes on Irish Architecture. He spent four years travelling and working on this; two lengthy folios were published after his death, under the editorship of Margaret Stokes, with a preface by the fourth Earl of Dunraven, and notes by Petrie and Reeves. The work was illustrated by 161 wood engravings, from drawings by G. Petrie, W. F. Wakeman, Gordon Hills, Margaret Stokes, Lord Dunraven, and others, besides 125 fine plates. The first part dealt with stone buildings with and without cement, and the second part with belfries and Irish Romanesque.
His mother died in 1870. As an appendix to her book Memorials of Adare Manor, Dunraven compiled a minute and exhaustive treatise on the architectural remains in the neighbourhood of Adare. Part of this, dealing with the round tower and church of Dysart, was reprinted in the second volume of the 'Notes'. At the expense of Dunraven, many of these half-ruined buildings were restored and made available for religious purposes. He also contributed valuable papers to the Royal Irish Academy.
Montalembert dedicated to him a volume of his Monks of the West.
Dunraven died at the Imperial Hotel, Great Malvern, on 6 October 1871, and was buried at Adare on 14 October.
He was a man of quick perceptions and great power of application, a zealous Roman Catholic, and a highly popular landlord.
Marriage
He married on 18 August 1836, Augusta Charlotte Goold (died 1866), the third daughter of Thomas Goold, Esq., of Rossbrien, Dromadda and Athea, a Master in the Court of Chancery (Ireland) and his wife Elizabeth Nixon.[12] They were distant cousins, as Thomas's mother was an aunt of the first Earl. They had at least eight children, two sons being stillborn. His first wife died in 1866.[citation needed]
Lady Emily Anna Wyndham-Quin (21 January 1848 – 1940)
Secondly, 27 January 1870, to Anne, daughter of Henry Lambert, esq., of Carnagh, Wexford,[14] who, after his death, married Hedworth Jolliffe, 2nd Baron Hylton.
A portrait of his first wife, who died on 22 November 1866, was painted by Hayter, and engraved by Holl. Their son, the fourth earl, under-secretary for the colonies in 1885–1886 and again in 1886–1887, became an active Irish politician and yachtsman.[citation needed]
There are portraits at Adare Manor of the first Earl of Dunraven by Batoni, and of the third earl and countess by T. Philipps, as well as busts of the first and second earls.[5][9]
Earl of Dunraven (1873), "On an Ancient Chalice and Brooches Lately Found at Ardagh, in the County of Limerick", The Transactions of the Royal Irish Academy, 24 Antiquities, Royal Irish Academy: 433–455, JSTOR30079267