Owen Roe O'Neill
Owen Roe O'Neill (Irish: Eoghan Ruadh Ó Néill), c. 1585 – 6 November 1649, was a Gaelic Irish soldier and one of the most famous of the O'Neill dynasty of Ulster in Ireland. O'Neill left Ireland at a young age and spent most of his life as a mercenary in the Spanish Army serving against the Dutch in Flanders during the Eighty Years' War. Following the Irish Rebellion of 1641, O'Neill returned and took command of the Ulster Army of the Irish Confederates. He is known for his victory at the Battle of Benburb in 1646.
Owen Roe O'Neill Eoghan Ruadh Ó Néill | |
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Litograph copy of a contemporary painting of O'Neill. | |
Born | 1585 |
Died | 6 November 1649 Cloughoughter Castle, County Cavan, Kingdom of Ireland |
Resting place | The Abbey, Cavan, Ireland |
Nationality | Irish |
Other names | Eoghan Ruadh Ó Néill |
Occupation | Mercenary, Soldier |
Known for | Irish General |
Title | Commander of the Ulster Army |
Predecessor | Sir Felim O'Neill of Kinard |
Successor | Bishop Heber MacMahon |
Spouse(s) | Rosa Uí Néill |
Parent(s) | Art MacBaron O'Neill |
O'Neill's later years were marked by infighting amongst the Confederates, and he led his army to seize power in the capital of Kilkenny. His troops clashed with rival forces of the Confederacy, leading to O'Neill forming a temporary alliance with Charles Coote's English Parliamentary forces in Ulster. He initially rejected a treaty of alliance between the Confederates and the Irish Royalists, but faced with the Cromwellian invasion he changed his mind. Shortly after agreeing an alliance with the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland Ormond, in which he was promised an Earldom, he died on Tuesday, 6 November 1649.
Early life
O'Neill was the illegitimate son of Art MacBaron O'Neill, a son of Matthew O'Neill, 1st Baron Dungannon and younger brother of Hugh O'Neill, Earl of Tyrone, who held lands in County Armagh. His alleged great-grandfather was Conn O'Neill, 1st Earl of Tyrone, the most powerful figure in Ulster and the first O'Neill to take a title from the Crown as part of the surrender and regrant policy of the Tudor era. Through Conn, he was descended from Thomas FitzGerald, 7th Earl of Kildare, the leading Anglo-Irish noble of the era, member of the Earls of Kildare, who more or less ruled Ireland in the 15th and early 16th centuries.
His year of birth is unknown but was likely to have been around 1585. It is also not certain exactly where he was born, but it was probably near Loughgall in County Armagh where his father's estates were and where O'Neill spent much of his youth.[1] His mother was the daughter of Hugh Connolly O'Reilly, lord of Breifne O'Reilly in County Cavan.
O'Neill was educated by Franciscan monks who not only educated him in Latin but also in the art of war. He later fought against the English in the Nine Years' War, with the Irish war effort led by his great-uncle Hugh O'Neill. He would have been only a teen at the time and it is unknown what his role would have been, but it may have fueled his deep hatred for the English later in his life.[2]
Several of his elder brothers also took part in the rebellion, some of whom died fighting. Another, Brian MacArt O'Neill, was hanged for manslaughter in 1607. One of his nephews was Daniel O'Neill, a Protestant who became a noted Cavalier in England during the 1640s. Another of his nephews, Hugh Duff O'Neill fought in the Confederate Wars and famously inflicted massive casualties on Oliver Cromwell's New Model Army during the Siege of Clonmel in 1650.[3]
In Spain
As a young man O'Neill left Ireland (likely in 1607 during the Flight of the Earls).[4] He grew up in the Spanish Netherlands and served for 40 years in the Irish regiment of the Spanish army. Most of his combat was in the Eighty Years' War against the Dutch Republic in Flanders and against the French in the Franco-Spanish War. He distinguished himself notably at the Siege of Arras in 1640, where he commanded the Spanish garrison and held out for 48 days with 2,000 men (many of whom were fellow Irishmen), against a French army of 35,000.[5] Throughout his career O'Neill was known to be an expert in defensive warfare.
Like many Irish officers in Spanish service, O'Neill was very hostile to the English Protestant invasion of Ireland. In 1627, he was involved in petitioning the Spanish monarchy to invade Ireland using the Irish Spanish regiments. O'Neill proposed that Ireland be made a republic under Spanish protection to avoid in-fighting between Irish Catholic landed families over which of them would provide a prince or king of Ireland. This plan came to nothing.[6]
However, in 1642, O'Neill planned to return to Ireland with 300 veterans to aid the Irish Rebellion of 1641, apparently at the invitation of one of the organizers of the rebellion Rory O'Moore. He was given money by the Pope, with which he bought a frigate, the St. Francis, and also purchased weapons and canons to arm the ships. The ship, often described as the flagship of the Confederate naval forces during the war, was the first to fly the Confederate flag. He was joined by several of his countrymen and his sons. They managed to evade several English vessels which were specially deployed to intercept O'Neill. Upon landing in Ulster he was met by Sir Phelim O'Neill who escorted him to the Irish-held fort of Charlemont.[2]
Twelve more ships from Continental Europe carrying experienced Irish officers along with weapons and supplies for the Irish war effort would land in Ireland later, reviving the rebellion, and adding considerable knowledge and experience to the Catholic ranks, which would prove extremely valuable.[7]
Return to Ireland
The rebellion had broken out in Autumn 1641, with the rebel leaders issuing the Proclamation of Dungannon declaring their aim of enhancing Catholic rights while declaring their continued loyalty to King Charles I. Despite a failed attempt to seize Dublin Castle, the rebels enjoyed success across Ulster and the uprising spread to other parts of the country. However, the rebels then suffered several defeats to the Royal Irish Army and the Scottish Covenanter Army in Ireland and by the time Eoghan Rua arrived the rising was increasingly in trouble.
The subsequent war, known as the Irish Confederate Wars, was part of the Wars of the Three Kingdoms – civil wars throughout Britain and Ireland. Because of his military experience, O'Neill was recognised on his return to Ireland, at Doe Castle in County Donegal on 8 July 1642,[8][9] as the leading representative of the O'Neills and head of the Ulster Irish. Sir Phelim O'Neill resigned the northern command of the Irish rebellion in Eoghan Rua's favour and escorted him from Lough Swilly to Charlemont.
Upon arrival in Ireland, he received a letter from an English parliamentarian general by the name of Leslie, telling O'Neill that he was sad O'Neill, as an experienced officer, was committing himself to such a cause and that he should return to Spain. O'Neill responded that his cause in Ireland was far more honourable than an English general fighting against his own King.[7]
But distrust between the kinsmen was complicated by differences between Owen Roe O'Neill and the Catholic Confederation which met at Kilkenny in October 1642. Phelim professed to be acting in the interest of Charles I; O'Neill's aim was complete Independence of Ireland as a Catholic country, while the Old English Catholics represented by the council desired to secure religious liberty and an Irish constitution under English rule.[10] O'Neill wanted the Plantation of Ulster overturned and the recovery of the O'Neill dynasty's lands. The majority of Confederate military resources were directed to Thomas Preston's Leinster Army. Preston, an Old English Catholic, was also a Spanish veteran but he and O'Neill had an intense personal dislike of each other.
Mainly because Preston had been given the available military resources, O'Neill was outnumbered by the Scottish Covenanter army that had landed in Ulster in 1642. He did, however, have a large number of experienced officers who had travelled with him from Flanders.The Irish Ulster Army was poorly trained and undisciplined, so O'Neill set out to transform the army into a respectable force. Following a defeat at the Battle of Clones, O'Neill had to abandon central Ulster and was followed by thousands of refugees, fleeing the revenge of the Scottish soldiers who inflicted terrible attacks on Irish civilians, persuaded by British propaganda alleging atrocities against Protestants in the rebellion of 1641.[11] To O'Neill the devastation of Ulster made it look, "not only like a desert, but like hell, if hell could exist on earth". O'Neill stopped the killings of Protestant civilians, for which he received the gratitude of many Protestant settlers. From 1642–46 a stalemate existed in Ulster, which O'Neill used to train and discipline his Ulster Army. This poorly supplied force nevertheless gained a bad reputation for plundering and robbing friendly civilians around its quarters in northern Leinster and southern Ulster.
Campaigns of 1643-45
With a stalemate in Ulster following the Battle of Clones, the Confederate Supreme council ordered O'Neill and the Ulster Army to join Thomas Preston's Leinster Army in campaigns against Royalist strongholds in the midlands. Despite the animosity between O'Neill and Preston (which often led to difficulties when they campaigned together), the campaign was successful, with several royalist strongholds in the Midlands, especially in the Counties of Meath and Westmeath being captured or destroyed. They also raided much of the area for supplies.[7]
In one famous battle, O'Neill's army was confronted by a British force under the command of Lord Moore. According to legend, O'Neill simply went over to a cannon, took aim, and blew off Lord Moore's head. After losing their commander, the British force retreated without a fight.
After the midlands campaign, O'Neill was ordered to return to Ulster with Lord Castlehaven to conduct offensive operations against the territory held by the Covenanters. These attacks descended into a series of skirmishes but, despite being relatively unsuccessful, provided an important experience to the troops of the Ulster Army. O'Neill was deeply irritated that Castlehaven had been put in charge of the army instead of him, especially when the campaign failed. O'Neill later accused Castlehaven of cowardice, a dispute that was brought before the Supreme Council. At one point, O'Neill even considered leaving and returning to Spanish service, but was ultimately compelled not to with the arrival of weapons and reinforcements sent by the Papacy.[2]
O'Neill returned to Ulster, where the Ulster Army set up winter headquarters at the town of Belturbet in County Cavan. The army, now better trained and experienced than ever before, emerged a transformed force in the spring of 1646, and prepared to destroy the Covenanters.[7]
Battle of Benburb
In 1646 O'Neill, with substantial Gallowglass numbers and additionally furnished with supplies by the Papal Nuncio, Giovanni Battista Rinuccini, attacked the combined Protestant Laggan Army militia and Scottish Covenanter army under Major-General Robert Monro, who had landed in Ireland in April 1642. On 5 June 1646, despite being outnumbered and outgunned, O'Neill utterly routed Monro at the Battle of Benburb,[5] on the Blackwater killing or capturing 3,000 Scots. However, he was summoned to the south by Rinuccini,[12][13] and so was unable to take advantage of the victory, and allowed Monro to remain unmolested at Carrickfergus.[10]
Upon receiving the news of the Confederate victory, the Pope, delighted at the news of a Catholic triumph over the Protestants, sent O'Neill the sword belonging to his great uncle, the Hugh O'Neill, Earl of Tyrone, who had led the rebellion against the English in the Nine Years' War. After the defeat in the conflict, he had fled Ireland during the Flight of the Earls in an attempt to gain support from Catholic powers in Continental Europe, where he died in Rome in 1616.[4]
Campaigns of 1647
By 1647, the Confederate council was becoming increasingly concerned that the Royalist garrison in Dublin was planning to hand the city over to the Parliamentarians rather than let it fall into the hands of the Irish. For this reason, O'Neill and Preston were ordered to join forces to capture the city before any Parliamentarian forces could arrive. This was the largest army ever put together by the Confederates.[7]
O'Neill and Preston set up camp between Lucan and Celbridge. Neither man was the overall commander, with both holding equal levels of command. However neither man trusted the other, and their personal dislike of each other led to constant argument and bickering between the two. For a month or so they could not agree on a plan of action and in this time the city was handed over to the Parliamentarians under the command of Michael Jones. The Royalist commander of Dublin, Ormond, said he "preferred English rebels to Irish ones". Afterwards, both generals retreated.[7][4]
O'Neill then went on the campaign throughout northern Connacht, particularly against English strongholds in County Sligo. This campaign had mixed success, but O'Neill was recalled to Leinster after Preston was defeated by the Parliamentarians near Trim, County Meath. O'Neill drove Jones and his army back to Dublin while the Leinster army regrouped.[7][14]
O'Neill, who was still in northern Leinster, was again called to Preston's aid when the Leinster army was almost destroyed by Jones at the Battle of Dungans Hill. As the remainder of Preston's army retreated, O'Neill arrived in just time to mount a successful rearguard action and annihilated the Parliamentarian advanced guard pursuing Preston. However, with the Leinster army now severely damaged, Leinster was in a precarious position. Afterwards, O'Neill returned to southern Ulster.[14]
Factionalism and disillusionment
In March 1646 a treaty was signed between Ormond and the Catholics, which would have committed the Catholics to sending troops to aid the Royalist cause in the English Civil War. The peace terms, however, were rejected by a majority of the Irish Catholic military leaders and the Catholic clergy including the Nuncio, Rinuccini. O'Neill led his Ulster army, along with Thomas Preston's Leinster army, in a failed attempt to take Dublin from Ormond. The Irish Confederates suffered heavy military defeats the following year at the hands of Parliamentarian forces in Ireland at Dungans Hill and Knocknanauss, leading to a moderation of their demands and a new peace deal with the Royalists. This time O'Neill was alone among the Irish generals in rejecting the peace deal and found himself isolated by the departure of the Papal Nuncio from Ireland on 23 February 1649.[15]
So alienated was O'Neill by the terms of the peace the Confederates had made with Ormond that he refused to join the Catholic/Royalist coalition and in 1648 his Ulster army fought with other Irish Catholic armies. He made overtures for alliance to Monck, who was in command of the Parliamentarians in the north, to obtain supplies for his forces, and at one stage even tried to make a separate treaty with the English Parliament against the Royalists in Ireland.
With O'Neill aligned with the Papal Nuncio, Rinuccini had the power to excommunicate those who supported the treaty with the Royalists, at which point more than 2,000 men deserted from Preston's Leinster Army and joined O'Neill's forces. O'Neill later relieved Parliamentarian commander Charles Coote, who was under siege in Derry but the Covenanters, in return for a herd of 2,000 cattle.
However, upon hearing of Oliver Cromwell's landing in Ireland and the subsequent Sack of Drogheda, and failing to obtain any better terms from the Parliamentarian forces, he turned once more to Ormond and the Catholic confederates, with whom he prepared to co-operate more earnestly when Cromwell's arrival in Ireland in August 1649 brought a war of horror.[10]
Death and legacy
O'Neill died on 6 November 1649[16] at the O'Reilly stronghold of Cloughoughter Castle on an island in Lough Oughter in County Cavan.[5] One belief was that he was poisoned by a priest who was working for the English, another that he died from an illness resulting from an old wound. However it is now widely believed by he died from complications to do with gout, which he had complained about several days before his death.[7][2]
Given O'Neill well-known excellent defensive abilities, and immense experience in siege warfare, he could have been a serious threat to the Cromwell's invasion, and that would be reason enough to assassinate O'Neill. However, there is no evidence to support this, and it is generally accepted now that he died of gout.[14] Under cover of night he was said to have been brought to the Franciscan abbey in Cavan town for burial. Local tradition is that he was buried at Trinity Abbey, on an island in Lough Oughter. His death was a major blow to the Irish of Ulster and was kept secret for some time.[5]
After his death, the command of the Ulster army fell to his son Henry Roe until a replacement was found. Catholic nobles and gentry met in Ulster in March to appoint a commander to succeed O'Neill. Their choice was Heber MacMahon, Bishop of Clogher. The Ulster army was unable to prevent the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland, despite a successful defence of Clonmel by O'Neill's nephew Hugh Duff O'Neill and was destroyed at the Battle of Scarrifholis in Donegal in 1650. Its remnants continued guerrilla warfare until 1653 when they surrendered at Cloughoughter Castle in County Cavan. Most of the survivors were transported to serve in the Spanish Army.
In the 19th century, O'Neill was celebrated by the Irish nationalist revolutionaries the Young Irelanders as a patriot. Thomas Davis wrote a song about O'Neill, "The Lament for Owen Roe", first published in the Young Ireland newspaper The Nation. Drawing on an older tune composed by Toirdheallbhach Ua Cearbhalláin O'Carolan (English: Turlogh O Carolan], it portrays his death as an assassination and the main cause of the subsequent defeat to Cromwell's English Republican forces. Its first verse is:
“Did they dare, did they dare, to slay Owen Roe O’Neill?”
“Yes, they slew with poison him they feared to meet with steel.”
“May God wither up their hearts! May their blood cease to flow,
May they walk in living death, who poisoned Owen Roe.”
Tommy Makem composed a song "The Battle of Benburb" which commemorates O'Neill's 1646 victory over the Scottish Covenanters.
Commemoration
O'Neill is commemorated in the names of several Gaelic Athletic Association clubs in Northern Ireland, including (in Armagh) Eoghan Ruadh Middletown; (in Derry) CLG Eoghan Rua, Coleraine; (in Dublin) St Oliver Plunketts/Eoghan Ruadh GAA, and (in Tyrone) Brackaville Owen Roes GFC; Owen Roe O'Neill's GAC, Leckpatrick; Dungannon Eoghan Ruadh Hurling Club, in Down, Kilcoo Owen Roes GAC and the defunct Benburb Eoghan Ruadh GAC
The Irish Army opened a new barracks in 1990, to replace the old military post in Cavan Town since 1707?, and named it "Dún Uí Néill" (O'Neill's Fort or Fort of O'Neill). A & Sp companies of the 29th Infantry Battalion conducted border patrols and Aid To Civil Power operations from here. It was subsequently closed in 2012 during Defence Forces restructuring.(J. Doherty)
Citations
- Casway p.9-10
- Gardiner (2020).
- Lenihan, Pádraig, 1959- author. (6 May 2016). Consolidating conquest : Ireland 1603-1727. ISBN 978-1-138-14063-9. OCLC 949987356.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- Casway, Jerrold I. (1984). Owen Roe O'Neill and the struggle for Catholic Ireland. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 0-8122-7895-X. OCLC 9392864.
- Bréifne (2006). Egan, Terry (ed.). A Travel Guide to Bréifne: the Lost Kingdom of Ireland. Belfast: The Stationery Office Ltd. p. 10. ISBN 978-0-337-08747-9.
- Ó Fiaich (2001).
- Webb (2020).
- Casway 1896, p. 62: "Owen skirted the northern coast of Scotland and arrived safely around 8 July at Doe Castle ..."
- Taylor 1896, p. 112: "... landed at Doo Castle ..."
- One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "O'Neill". Encyclopædia Britannica. 20 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 110–111.
- Bowcott (2011).
- Hayes-McCoy 1990, p. 197: "He [Owen Roe O'Neill] listened to the nuncio's plea, 'quitted the opportunity of conquest in Ulster' and marched south."
- Coffey 1914, p. 178: "Now seemed the time to follow up the victory of Benburb and subdue the whole North of Ireland, but it was not to be for letters from the Nuncio cause O'Neill to withdraw from the North and move South ..."
- Lenihan, Pádraig, 1959- (2001). Confederate Catholics at war, 1641-48. Cork University Press for the Irish Committee for Historical Sciences. ISBN 1-85918-244-5. OCLC 55646363.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
- O'Sullivan 1983, p. 278: "... on the morning of the 23rd February 1649, Rinuccini quitted 'the place of his refuge' and went on board."
- Taylor 1896, p. 235: "... on the 6th of November 1649, the news was borne to a doomed Ireland that the greatest of her sons was dead."
References
- Bowcott, Owen (2011). "How lies about Irish 'barbarism' in 1641 paved way for Cromwell's atrocities". The Guardian. Guardian News & Media Limited. Retrieved 8 July 2020.
- Casway, Jerrold (1896), Owen Roe O'Neill and the Struggle for Catholic Ireland, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, ISBN 081227895X
- Coffey, Diarmid (1914), O'Neill and Ormond - A Chapter of Irish History, Dublin: Maunsel & Company
- Gardiner, S. R. (2020). "O'Neill, Owen Roe". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 8 July 2020.
- Hayes-McCoy, Gerard Anthony (1990), Irish Battles: A Military History of Ireland, Belfast: The Appletree Press, ISBN 0-86281-250-X
- Ó Fiaich, Tomás (2001). "Republicanism and Separatism in the Seventeenth Century". Wayback Machine. Internet Archive. Archived from the original on 17 August 2016. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
- O'Sullivan, Mary D. (1983) [1942], Old Galloway: the history of a Norman colony in Ireland, Galway: Kennys Bookshops and Art Galleries
- Taylor, John Francis (1896), Owen Roe O'Neill, London: T. Fisher Unwin
- Webb, Alfred (2020). "Owen Roe O'Neill". Library Ireland. Retrieved 8 July 2020.
Further reading
- Casway, Jerrold I. (2004), "O'Neill, Owen Roe [Eoghan Ruadh O'Neill] (c. 1583–1649)", in Matthew, Colin; Harrison, Brian (eds.), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, 41, New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 851–856, ISBN 0-19-861391-1
- Casway, Jerrold I. (2004), "O'Neill, Sir Phelim Roe [Felim Ruadh] (1603–1653)", in Matthew, Colin; Harrison, Brian (eds.), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, 41, New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 856–860, ISBN 0-19-861391-1
- Davis, Thomas, Lament for the Death of Owen Roe O'Neill
- Dunlop, Robert (1895), "O'Neill, Phelim 1604?–1653", in Lee, Sidney (ed.), Dictionary of National Biography, 42, New York: MacMillan & Co, pp. 204–208
- Gardiner, Samuel Rawson (1895), "O'Neill, Owen Roe 1590?–1649", in Lee, Sidney (ed.), Dictionary of National Biography, 42, New York: MacMillan & Co, pp. 201–204
- Lenihan, Padraig, Confederate Catholics at War
- de Mesa, Eduardo ‘The career of Owen Roe O’Neill in the Spanish Army of Flanders (1606-1642): documentation held in Spanish archives’, Archivium Hibernicum. Irish Historical Records, 67 (2014), pp. 7-24.
- Ó Hanrachain, Tadhg, The Catholic Reformation in Ireland
- Rankin, Deana, Between Spenser and Swift – English Writing in seventeenth century Ireland
- Sadlier, J. (1860), The Confederate Chieftains: A tale of the Irish rebellion of 1641, New York: D. & J. Sadlier
- Wheeler, James Scott, Cromwell in Ireland