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  1. Edward Cecil Guinness, 1st Earl of Iveagh, KP, GCVO, FRS (10 November 1847 – 7 October 1927) was an Anglo-Irish businessman and philanthropist. A member of the prominent Guinness family, he was the head of the family's eponymous brewing business, making him the richest man in Ireland.

  2. Guinness, Edward Cecil (1847–1927), 1st earl of Iveagh, businessman and philanthropist, was born 10 November 1847 at St Anne's, Clontarf, Co. Dublin, youngest of three sons of Sir Benjamin Lee Guinness (qv), brewer, of Dublin, and Elizabeth, third daughter of Edward Guinness of Dublin.

  3. 11 de ago. de 2023 · Today the house, acquired in 1894 by Edward Guinness, the 1st Earl of Iveagh, a few years after floating his family’s brewing company on the London Stock Exchange, is unoccupied and in...

  4. He opened one of Ireland’s earliest public swimming pools, the Iveagh Baths. Edward was rewarded by being made a baronet of Castleknock in 1885 (the location of his country residence, Farmleigh). He was subsequently made Baron Iveagh, of Iveagh in the County of Down, in 1891, the historic title of the Clan Magennis.

  5. Edward Cecil Guinness, 1st Earl of Iveagh (1847–1927), who was a remarkable Anglo-Irish businessman, philanthropist, and key member of the renowned Guinness family, which was renowned for its brewing business.

  6. Motto. Spes mea in Deo ("My hope lies in God") Earl of Iveagh (pronounced / ˈaɪvi / EYE-vee —especially in Dublin—or / ˈaɪvɑː / EYE-vah [2] [3]) is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom, created in 1919 for the businessman and philanthropist Edward Guinness, 1st Viscount Iveagh. [4]

  7. ; Farmleigh was bought in 1873 by Edward Cecil Guinness (1st Earl of Iveagh), the great-grandson of Arthur Guinness, founder of the Guinness brewery. Edward’s main residence at the time was 80 St. Stephen’s Green (now Iveagh House, the headquarters of the Department of Foreign Affairs) and he viewed Farmleigh as ‘a rustic retreat’.