Boate family

The Boate (also called Boot or de Boot) family was a prominent family of Dutch origin which later became strongly associated with Ireland. The family produced two distinguished doctors/ writers and an Irish High Court judge. One branch of the family settled in Tipperary where they became substantial landowners.

History

Godefrid or Godefroy Boot, knight, of Gorinchem (c.1570-1625) married Christine van Loon.[1][2] They had two sons, Gerard and Arnold. Both brothers studied at the University of Leiden, where they qualified as doctors. They moved to London, and subsequently to Ireland. Arnold was personal physician to Robert Sidney, 2nd Earl of Leicester, and later to James Ussher, Archbishop of Armagh; he was also Surgeon General to the Irish Army, and his experiences as an army doctor provided the material for two of his books. The brothers collaborated on a work on philosophy, Philosophia Naturalis Reformata, a refutation of Aristotle [3] and Arnold supplied the material for Gerard's best-known work, The Natural History of Ireland. Arnold's great interest was in Hebrew studies, on which he published several works. His most famous book was The Character of a Truly Virtuous and Pious Woman, an elegy to his wife Margaret, daughter of the Irish judge Thomas Dongan.[4] Both brothers were members of the Hartlib circle, the circle of writers who corresponded with Samuel Hartlib on religion, science and philosophy.

Due to the disturbed conditions in Ireland following the Irish Rebellion of 1641 Arnold moved to Paris, where he died in 1653. Gerard moved to Ireland to take up a medical post in Dublin, where he died in 1650: in consideration for the substantial sums of money which Gerard had donated for the suppression of the Irish Rebellion his widow, Katherine Menning, was granted certain lands in Tipperary.[5]

Since Arnold's only surviving child, as far as is known, was a daughter, Mariana, the Godfrey Boate who was described as a clerk in Chancery is likely to have been the son of Gerard and Katherine Boate. This Godfrey was the father of Godfrey Boate junior, who became a High Court judge,[6] and whose conduct of a trial for seditious libel so enraged Jonathan Swift that on the judge's death in 1722 he wrote a mocking and vindictive Elegy for Judge Boat. Godfrey had no sons and the Boate lands passed by inheritance into the Hemsworth family.

Notable family members

Notable works by members of the Boate family

References

  1. Biographies of Arnold and Gerard Boot in the Nieuw Nederlandsch Biografisch Woordenboek, vol. 4, p. 113
  2. Gilbert, John Thomas "Gerard Boate" Dictionary of National Biography 1885-1900 Vol.5 p.284
  3. Gilbert p.284
  4. Gilbert , John Thomas "Arnold Boate" Dictionary of National Biography 1885-1900 Vol.5 p.283
  5. Gilbert p.284
  6. Ball, F. Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221-1921 John Murray London 1926 Vol.2 p.85
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