Richard Talbot, earl of Tyrconnell (born 1630—died August 14, 1691, County Limerick, Ireland) was an Irish Jacobite, a leader in the war (1689–91) waged by Irish Roman Catholics against the Protestant king William III of England.
The son of Sir William Talbot, a Roman Catholic lawyer and politician, Richard fought with the royalist forces in Ireland during the English Civil Wars between the royalists and parliamentarians. In November 1655 he was arrested in London for plotting to overthrow Oliver Cromwell’s Protectorate, but he soon escaped to Flanders. During the reign of Charles II (1660–85), Talbot became a close associate of the king’s Catholic brother James, duke of York, and, when York ascended the throne as James II in 1685, Talbot was created earl of Tyrconnell and appointed to the Privy Council in England. In March 1686 James made him lieutenant general of the Irish army and in February 1687 lord deputy of Ireland, in which capacity he pursued a strongly pro-Catholic policy.
Although James II was deposed by William of Orange (later King William III) in 1688, Tyrconnell continued to rule Ireland in James’s name. He commanded troops against William, but the Jacobite cause in Ireland was doomed by the time Tyrconnell died. James had made him marquess and duke of Tyrconnell in March 1689, but the title was recognized only by the Jacobites.