HERE • LYETH • THE • BODY OF • ALDERMAN • ROBERT BLAKENEY • WHO • DEPAD THIS • LIFE • ON • WENSDAY THE 12™ • DAY • OF • OCTOBR 1731- ANNO • AETATS • SVAE 72
The stone is a fine armorial wall plaque bearing the achievement of arms of Blakeney. The Ins. is cut in low relief, as the arms. Many of the letters are conjoined. Cat. No. 350. The Blakeney tomb in the North Transept is probably one of the most charming slabs in the church with its grinning leopards' or lions' heads. The false relief script with prominent serifs was cut with the aid of ruled layout lines. Drawing by Alberto Sanchez. Robert Blakeney held the office of sheriff in 1700 and 1701 and was mayor in 1713. (Hardiman (1820), 221-2) He was very prominent in the local politics of the town. The Blakeney family "... formerly resided in Norfolk, where they were in possession of considerable landed property and settled in Ireland in the reign of Elizabeth. The first Blakeney mentioned in Burke's Tended Gentry is John Blakeney, A.D., 1671, who married Sarah, daughter of Dudley Persse of Roxborough, Dean of Kilmacduagh. The family in turn married into the families of Ormsby, Browne, Taylor, Stafford, St. George, Ross Mahon, Denis, etc." (Maguire (1953), 127)