Ferdinando Warner

Life
1703-1768; English born; miscellaneous writer and historian of Ireland; LLD 1754, and vicar of Ronde, Wiltshire, 1730, St. Michael’s, Queenhithe, London, 1747; Barnes, Surrey, 1758; author of a History of Ireland, 2 vols (London 1763-67), for which he received materials from Charles O’Conor with a view to remedying the account of Catholic massacres of Protestants in the Rebellion of 1641 and other matters prejudicial to Catholic relief in the period, but disappointed O’Conor with his version of these events; also wrote dogmatic and liturgical tracts, a church history. DNB [FDA]

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Notes
Russell K. Alspach, Irish Poetry from the English Invasion to 1798 (Philadelphia: Pennsylvania UP [1943] 1959), p.97. Notes that Keating was one of his sources, ‘but the beauty and charm of the tales told by Keating flee the dusting imagination of Warner’; Alspach quotes Warner, ‘The original of the quarrel was an Ulster gentleman’s stealing a young lady, whom Connor, to defeat the prophecy of a Druid at her birth about the disturbances she should occasion, had kept confined and guarded; and although he had given hostages for their safe return as a testimony of his pardon, yet he caused the lover and his two brothers to be assassinated; whose friends, and the hostages themselves resenting this perfidy, took up arms against him, as it has been said; and retreating into Connaught they interested the Queen and people of that province in their cause.’ (History of Ireland, 1763, I, p.206; Alspach, 1959, p.97); Alspach identifies the account of the rules and regulations of the Fianna with that in Keating (Warner, 1763, I, pp.249-56; Alspach, p.98).

Joseph Leerssen, Mere Irish & Fíor Ghael (1986), Charles O’Conor responded to the arrival of Ferdinando Warner [vide supra], who was now in the good graces of the Dublin Society, and likely to be recipient of a public subscription towards a general History of Ireland, by communicating to him papers to offset the Protestant interpretation of 1641 and other parts of Irish history, notable John Curry’s Historical Memoirs. [386-87] Charles O’Conor’s letter to Curry, remarking on his encouragements to Warner, is to be found in his Letters, ed, CE &RE Ward, 2 vols. (Ann Arbor, Mich.; Irish Am. Cult. Inst./Univ. Microfilms 1980). In his History of Ireland (London 1763), Warner allow himself the usual Anglo-Irish condescension, ‘they [the native Irish] are yet so far from being civilised, especially in villages distant from cities, and where the English manners have not prevailed, that their habitations, furniture, and apparel are as sordid as those of the savages in America. ... laziness ... a cynical content in dirt and beggary &c [verbatim quoting Berkeley].’ Preparatory to publishing a second volume - in fact never completed - Warner issued a separate History of the rebellion and civil war in Ireland ([1767] 2nd ed. 1768), diminishing the reputed number of massacre victims and condemning the penal laws, but not absolving Catholics. And note also that Curry commenced to write a history in reply but was asked to suspend his work by O’Conor when the latter began to supply Thomas Leland with material. [Joseph Leerssen, Mere Irish & Fíor Ghael, 1986, p.389ff.] Further, Ferdinando Warner, then preparing his history, issued an attack on Macpherson called Remarks on the history of Fingal (London 1762) in which he was evidently primed by Charles O’Conor, who wrote to Curry speaking of presenting Warner with ‘unanswerable arguments’. Warner had at first had ‘credulity enough to think the epic poem of Fingal a translation’. (See O’Conor’s letter to Curry, 4 June 1762) [401]. And ftn 402, Concerning the introduction of Christianity [in his History], Warner took a non-papal line, apart from which O’Conor felt that Warner ‘has the merit of casting our antiquities into a good historical mould’ (O’Conor to Curry, 23 July 1763, Letters, Vol. 1, 164). [Page refs. to Joseph Leerssen, Mere Irish & Fíor Ghael, 1986]. FDA1 references confined to notes at 1054, 1060n, 1061n.


Tobias Smollett, who collected material with a view to writing a history of Ireland, reviewed Warner’s History for the Critical Review for May 1763, ‘Had this writer studied to increase the number of those who are but too apt to ridicule the Irish nation, he could not have done it more effectually than by telling us (as in fact he does) in his preface, that they employed the author of Warner’s Ecclesiastical, to write their Civil History; that they invited him from London to Dublin for that purpose; and even paid him for his trouble’; ‘To do the Doctor justice, however, his narrative and apologies are sometimes not destitute of plausibility, though they are always of historical precision; and his style and manner are such as we may call historical romance ... (Critical Review, 15, May 1763, pp.361-67; cited in See Robert Ward and Catherine Ward, eds., Letters of Charles O’Conor, 1988, p.155, n.4., & 156, n.1.)

The poems ‘Rich and rare were the gems she wore &c, by Thomas Moore, was printed with a quotation from Warner’s History of Ireland [Vol. 1, Bk. 10, ‘A young lady of great beauty, adorned with jewel and a costly dress undertook a journey alone, from one end of the kingdom to the other, with a wand only in her hand, at the top of which was a ring of exceeding value; and such an impression had the laws and government of this monarch (Brian) made on the minds of all the people, that no attempt was made upon her honour, nor was she robbed of her clothes or jewels’]. Moore, ‘On she went, and her maiden smile/In safety lighted her round the Green Isle;/And blest forever was she who relied/Upon Erin’s honour and Erin’s pride.’ END] SEE James Plunkett, The Gems She Wore, A Book of Irish Places (1972)

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