Sent to Spain in 1602,[3] Philip O'Sullivan Beare was educated at Compostela by Vendamma, a Spaniard, and John Synnott, an Irish Jesuit.[4] He served in the Spanish army.
In 1621, he published his Catholic History of Ireland, a work which is described as "deliberately polemical",[5] and in the Catholic Encyclopedia as "not always reliable, but valuable for the Irish wars of the author's own day".[6] He also wrote a Life of St. Patrick (in 1629),[7] a confutation of Gerald of Wales and a reply to James Usher's attack on his History.[6]
He died in Spain c. 1636.[8][a] In a letter from Peter Talbot he was described as the "Earl of Birhaven" who left "daughter of twelve years to inherit his titles in Ireland and his goods".[9]
O'Sullivan Beare, Philip, Zoilomastix. Spain. 1625. Translated into English by Denis O'Sullivan 2009, titled The Natural History of Ireland. Cork: Cork University Press.
Footnotes
^ abWhile a number of sources (including Webb's 1878 Compendium of Irish Biography) suggest that Philip O'Sullivan Beare died in 1660,[9] this is questioned by several sources (including in Byrne's 1903 translation of Ireland under Elizabeth).[10] The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography suggests that O'Sullivan Beare died "in or after 1634".[1] The Dictionary of Irish Biography states that he died in 1636.[3]
Webb, Alfred (1878). A Compendium of Irish Biography. M. H. Gill & Son. Archived from the original on 27 November 2018. Retrieved 27 December 2024 – via libraryireland.com.
O'Sullivan Beare, Philip (1903), Ireland under Elizabeth, translated by Byrne, Matthew J., p. xv, Webb says (Compendium of Irish Biography), O'Sullivan died in 1660, relying on a letter from Peter Talbot to the Marquis of Ormonde [..] Mr. Webb does not show how he identifies the Earl of Birhaven [..] I should imagine the letter refers to the cousin, the son of The O'Sullivan Bear