410 



Richard Nagle, Attorney- General to King James II., was of 

 this family, as is Sir Richard Nagle, of Jamestown, in the 

 county of Westmeath. 



" Joceline de Angulo, above mentioned, had a grant of the 

 barony of Navan from Sir Hugh de Lacy, and thus, as stated 

 in the inscription, became the first Baron of the Navan, and 

 one of the magnates of the palatine honour of Meath. 



" Gilbert de Angulo, his son, second Baron, rebelled 

 against King John, but, having submitted, had a pardon under 

 the great seal, now on record on the Close Roll of the year 

 1207 in the Tower of London. 



"William de Angulo, son of Gilbert, was included in his 

 father's pardon, and paid 300 marks for a writ of restitution of 

 his lands, as appears in an entry on the Close Roil in the 

 Tower of London for the year 1210. 



" Philip de Angulo, son of William, had livery of his 

 lands in 1215. Walter de Lacy, then lord of Meath, granted 

 and confirmed to him his lands, &c., in Meath, to which grant 

 Geoffrey de Montemarisco (or De Marisco), Lord Justiciary 

 of Ireland, was a witness. This Philip is the person alluded 

 to in the inscription as " aliquando Baro de Novan" there 

 having been no other Philip Baron of the Navan. 



"John Nangle, Baron of the Navan, who died in 1517, 

 married Elinor, daughter and heir of Sir Thomas Dowdall, 

 Knight, and this marriage is noted by the quartering of the 

 arms of Dowdall on the stone No. I. 



" Patrick Nangle, Baron of the Navan, the grandson of 

 Martin, became a Protestant, and married Mary, daughter of 

 Sir Richard Bolton of Brazil, Knight, Lord Chancellor of 

 Ireland, and had an only daughter, wife of Dudley Loftus, 

 Esq., LL. D., Judge of the Prerogative Court of Armagh. 

 He was succeeded in his barony by his brother, George Nan- 

 gle, who died in 1676, leaving a son, John Nangle, Baron of the 

 Navan, living, 1685, having two sons, Thomas and Jasper, 

 and four daughters. 



