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 sub an. iii. 15, 17). After the defeat at Thurles the earl was forced to shut himself up in Waterford ; he sent for Raymond to come to his help, and appointed him constable in place of Hervey (the order of these events is uncertain ; that adopted here, which is also followed in the article on Raymond Fitzgerald, is that of the ' Expugnatio ; 'the order followed in the ' Song of Dermot ' is on the whole represented in the article on Richard de Clare, 'Strongbow ; ' see Expuynatio, p. 308 n. 2, and p. 310 n. 2). Hervey received from the earl a grant of O'Barthy, of which the present barony of Bargy, co. Wexford, forms a part, was outwardly reconciled to his rival Raymond, and married Nesta, daughter of Maurice Fitzgerald (d. 1176) [q. v.], and Raymond's first cousin. Nevertheless in 1175 he sent messages to the king, accusing Raymond of a design to make himself independent of the royal authority, and was evidently believed by Henry.

Hervey's power in Ireland was probably shaken by the death of his nephew, Earl Richard, in 1176, and we find him in England in 1177, when he witnessed a charter of Henry II at Oxford, at which date his lands between Wexford and Waterford were made to do service to Waterford, then held by William Fitz Aldhelm (Gesta Henrici II, i. 163, 164). In 1178 he made a grant of lands in present co. Wexford to the convent of Buildwas, Shropshire, for the foundation on them of a Cistercian house (the date is determined by the attestation of Felix, bishop of Ossory). These lands included Dunbrodiki, or Dunbrothy, in the barony of Shelburne, and there a few years later was founded the convent called ' de portu S. Marise.' In 1179 he became a monk of Christ Church, Canterbury (Annals ap. Chartularies of St. Mary's Abbey, ii. 304 ; Giraldus dates his retirementabout 1183 ; see Expugnatio, p. 352), making a grant to that house of lands and churches in Ireland. Many of these have been identified (Kilkenny Archæological Journal, I 1855, iii. 216) ; they were in 1245 transferred by the convent to the abbot of Tintern, co. Wexford, for 625 marks, and an annual rent of ten marks, with the obligation of maintaining a chaplain at St. Brendan's chapel at Bannow, to pray for the souls of Hervey and other benefactors (Liters Cantuar. iii. Pref. xl. sq. 361, 362). Giraldus says that Hervey was not a better man after his retirement than he had been before. A Hervey, cellarer and chanter of Christ Church, was excommunicated by Archbishop Baldwin for his share in the great quarrel between the archbishop and the convent, and was alive in 1191 (Epistolæ Cantuar. ed., pp. 308, 312, 315, 333), but he could scarcely have been Hervey de Mount-Maurice, who is described as 'con versus et benefactor' in the records of his obit on 12 March (MSS. Cott. Nero C. ix. i. if. 5, 6, Galba E. iii. 2, fol. 32). M. de Montmorency-Morres asserts, apparently without any ground, that he died in 1205, and says that his nephews, Geoffrey [see under ] and Richard, bishop of Leighlin, transported his body from Canterbury to Dunbrothy, where they erected a tomb of black Kilkenny marble to him in the conventual church. Of this tomb and the recumbent figure upon it he gives two engravings ; it was overthrown in 1798, and has since perished (Genealogical Memoir of Montmorency, plates 1 and 2). Hervey left no legitimate children (Expugnatio, pp. 345, 409). He is described by Giraldus as a tall and handsome man, with blue and prominent eyes, and cheerful countenance ; he was broad-chested, and had long hands and arms, and well-shaped legs and feet. Morally, Giraldus says he belied his appearance ; he was extremely lustful, envious, and deceitful, a slanderer, untrustworthy, and changeable, more given to spite than to gallant deeds, and fonder of pleasure than of profitable enterprise (ib. pp. 327, 328). From this estimate and from other evil things that Giraldus says of Hervey large deductions should be made, for Giraldus wrote in the interest of his relatives, the Geraldines, and speaks violently of all who opposed them. As, then, Hervey was the rival and enemy of Raymond Fitzgerald, he and his doings are represented in the ' Expugnatio ' in a most unfavourable light. Even Giraldus, however, allows that Hervey was one of the four principal conquerors of the Irish (ib. p. 409).