BBC History Magazine

Elizabeth I’s Irish nemesis

Hiram Morgan tells the story of the Irish earl Hugh O’Neill, a brilliant warrior and slippery negotiator who ran rings around Elizabeth I’s greatest generals and almost ended English rule in Ireland

- Hiram Morgan is an Irish historian who teaches at University College Cork. He is author of Tyrone’s Rebellion: The Outbreak of the Nine Years War in Tudor Irelandd (Royal Historical Society, 1993)

Hiram Morgan follows the exploits of Irish rebel Hugh O’Neill, who ran rings around the Tudor queen’s generals

In the dying days of the 16th century, one man drove Elizabeth I to distractio­n, wrecked the career of one of her most celebrated captains, brought her nation close to bankruptcy, and threw the very survival of her administra­tion in Ireland into grave doubt. That man was Hugh O’Neill, Earl of Tyrone. His story is one of the most remarkable in the history of Anglo-Irish relations – and the Nine Years’ War empowered by O’Neill’s uprising threatened England’s hold on the island.

When Hugh was born, in around 1550, Ireland was a divided island, one whose history had been shaped by its English neighbour. Henry II had launched a concerted invasion of Ireland in 1171, setting the scene for four centuries of considerab­le English influence, culminatin­g with Henry VIII’s decision to have himself declared King of Ireland in 1541.

As Elizabeth I ascended the throne in 1558, there were effectivel­y two Irelands: the ‘English Pale’ around Dublin and the south, containing English-style towns; and the predominat­ely Gaelic west and north, dominated by powerful clans such as the O’Neills and O’Donnells. Suspicious of English attempts to exert control over them, the Gaelic Irish became ever-more restive in the late 16th century. This unrest was to heavily influence Hugh O’Neill’s early years. His father Matthew, Baron of Dungannon, was assassinat­ed by his own half-brother Shane in 1558, and Hugh’s elder brother Brian was killed by another dynastic competitor in 1562. Hugh, taken into crown wardship near Dublin, was at first happy to work with the English occupiers, accepting the role of maintainin­g a troop of soldiers to protect the borders of the Pale. But his attempts to increase his power in Ulster soon brought him into conflict with the authoritie­s.

Double alliance

Hugh’s political ambitions stemmed from the O’Neill family heritage as Ulster overlords. His grandfathe­r Conn O’Neill had been made Earl of Tyrone by Henry VIII, though internecin­e fighting between Conn’s heirs had temporaril­y robbed Hugh of power. To remedy this situation, he decided to build an alliance with historic rivals, the O’Donnells of Tirconnell. In 1574 O’Neill divorced his first wife and married Siobhan, daughter of Sir Hugh O’Donnell. Then, in 1587 – the same year he was confirmed as Earl of Tyrone – he betrothed his daughter Rose to Sir Hugh O’Donnell’s heir, ‘Red Hugh’.

As a strategy for extending O’Neill’s power

Hugh O’Neill’s escalating demands forced Elizabeth back on the offensive – with disastrous consequenc­es for the English Queen Elizabeth, pictured around 1580, struggled to cope with the Irish rebellion

in Ulster, the double alliance was a masterstro­ke. However, it signalled a potential threat to English plans to establish control of Ulster. And so, in an attempt to block the marriage, the Dublin authoritie­s abducted Red Hugh (having lured him aboard a ship with the promise of wine) and held him hostage in Dublin.

Hugh O’Neill described his intended son-in-law’s detention in Dublin Castle as “most prejudice that might happen unto me”. Red Hugh languished in the castle for over four years till 1592 when, using a silk rope supplied by accomplice­s outside, he slipped out through a privy. Back in Ulster with his father-in-law, together they subdued local opponents and began secretly swearing in confederat­es to thwart English control.

Sleight of hand

Hugh O’Neill was a supremely canny operator – a master at wrong-footing his opponents with sleight of hand – reflected in his initially low-key campaign for the territory of Fermanagh in Ulster. When an English sheriff was imposed there in 1593, O’Neill was determined to resist – but by stealth. He fought a proxy war, pretending to be a supporter of the crown while directing a military campaign against it. When his brother Cormac defeated an English attempt to resupply its garrison at Enniskille­n, Hugh absolved himself of responsibi­lity by claiming he was unable to control his followers. Yet he was reported as arriving soon afterwards to divide up the spoils.

Meanwhile, Hugh was in the process of converting the traditiona­l axe-wielding gallowglas­ses (a class of elite mercenary warriors) into musketeers, and sending Catholic clerics to ask Spain for aid.

Such smoke and mirrors could work for only so long. In June 1595 O’Neill was declared a traitor for conspiring with Spain – and he was forced to swap subterfuge for open conflict. Abandoning pretences of aiding the English, he joined with O’Donnell in leading Ireland’s Gaelic lords in a campaign that later become known as the Nine Years’ War. That year O’Neill launched attacks at Blackwater Fort, an English garrison in the heart of Tyrone, and then against Sir Henry Bagenal, the marshal of the queen’s army in Ireland, at Clontibret in southern Ulster. Veterans in that English expedition were stunned by how well armed and discipline­d O’Neill’s army was.

An increasing­ly anxious Queen Elizabeth now sent in renowned soldier Sir John Norris. He was flushed with recent successes against Spanish armies in Brittany, but was defeated at Mullaghbra­ck near Armagh. The English, fearing a protracted struggle and Spanish interventi­on, offered the Irish confederat­ion de facto control of most of Ulster and North Connaught, and tacit toleration of Catholicis­m (banned since Elizabeth’s accession). But soon after the Irish agreed, Spanish agents arrived in Tirconnell, urging O’Neill to escalate the war.

Spanish king Philip II, eager to keep England distracted to prevent its resources being committed elsewhere, now provided the Irish with money and munitions to continue the war and spread their actions into other provinces. In a stop-start campaign of truces and talks, O’Neill kept upping the ante. By December 1597 he was demanding “free liberty of conscience” for all Irishmen, and reciting abuses against the Irish going back 30 years. Soon he was calling the entire English presence in Ireland into question.

These escalating demands forced Elizabeth back onto the offensive – with disastrous consequenc­es for the English. On 14 August 1598 O’Neill’s army killed Bagenal and crushed his army at Yellow Ford, the heaviest defeat ever suffered by the English in Ireland.

It’s been argued that this was the moment at which O’Neill should have struck the deci-

The Dublin authoritie­s abducted Red Hugh, having lured him aboard a ship with the promise of wine A statue of O’Neill’s ally Red Hugh O’Donnell in Donegal Town

sive blow against the English – marching on Dublin, which was virtually defenceles­s. He didn’t, instead lingering in the north, more concerned with preventing an English amphibious landing behind his lines at Derry.

Neverthele­ss his confederat­ion extended its control to Ireland’s midlands before entering Munster and overthrowi­ng the plantation there. With only Ireland’s towns in English hands – and their Catholic inhabitant­s viewed with great suspicion by the crown – Elizabeth’s grip on the island was rapidly being loosened.

The queen’s response was to dispatch the largest English army ever to set foot in Ireland, headed by Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex. Elizabeth instructed Essex to confront O’Neill on the battlefiel­d. Instead, he marched his 17,000 men fruitlessl­y around the Midlands, Munster and south Leinster. Worse still, he resolved to negotiate with O’Neill in person.

Outfoxed by his wily adversary – who ran rings around him in negotiatio­ns – Essex agreed a truce that many in England considered not only a humiliatio­n but a gross derelictio­n of duty. Returning to London in September 1599, Essex’s reputation was severely damaged. He was put on trial and executed for treason in 1601.

Wicked policies

Meanwhile, Hugh O’Neill’s campaign to eject the English from Ireland was going from strength to strength. Having seen off England’s greatest captain, O’Neill made a play that English officials had long been fearing. He could not win the towns by force of arms; instead, he issued a proclamati­on appealing to their inhabitant­s as fellow Catholics and Irishmen. “I will employ myself to the utmost of my power in their defence and for the extirpatio­n of heresy, the planting of the Catholic religion, the delivery of our country of infinite murders, wicked and detestable policies by which this kingdom was

hitherto governed, nourished in obscurity and ignorance, maintained in barbarity and incivility and consequent­ly of infinite evils which are too lamentable to be rehearsed.”

This remarkable rhetoric turned the language of English colonialis­m on its head. O’Neill followed up the proclamati­on with 22 articles that would have converted Ireland into a self-governing Catholic country under nominal English sovereignt­y. Sir Robert Cecil, Elizabeth’s secretary of state, seeing the proposal on its arrival in London, dismissed it as fanciful with a single word: “Ewtopia.”

Crucially, O’Neill’s exhortatio­n failed to convince Ireland’s English-speaking townsmen, who suspected that he was masking an ambition for kingship with a feigned concern for their immortal souls. When they rejected his overtures, he pleaded unsuccessf­ully with Rome to excommunic­ate them. Pope Clement VIII did, though, appoint him ‘CaptainGen­eral of the Catholic Army in Ireland’.

Too little, too late

The tide was turning. Essex’s replacemen­t, the more capable Lord Mountjoy, at last brought England’s superior resources to bear. O’Neill’s only hope of realising his ambitions now appeared to be the landing of a Spanish Armada in Ireland. Mountjoy fought a year-round war, using scorched-earth tactics to devastate O’Neill’s agricultur­al base. Then the long-awaited expedition to Derry finally landed, snatching much of Tyrone and Tirconnell out of the grasp of their lords.

As a result, when Spain did finally commit forces to Ireland, it proved too little, too late. The Spanish landed in Kinsale and Castlehave­n, County Cork, which the English had retaken, so O’Neill and O’Donnell had to march the length of the country to join forces with them. When the two sides met in battle at Kinsale on Christmas Eve 1601, the Irish were beaten. It was a decisive blow to O’Neill. “Today this kingdom is lost,” he declared.

The war dragged on for another 15 months, until O’Neill finally surrendere­d to Mountjoy at Mellifont in 1603, unaware that Elizabeth was already a week dead. His long campaign to oust the English from Ireland was over – a remarkable but ultimately doomed endeavour.

For all O’Neill’s brilliance, the Nine Years’ War ended with Ireland completely under English rule for the first time in its history. Though pardoned at Mellifont, O’Neill was unable to bear the humiliatio­n of English power and the imposition of Protestant­ism. In 1607, he and the other Ulster lords departed Ireland in the so-called Flight of the Earls. Neither Elizabeth’s successor, James VI and I, nor the Spanish, now at peace with England, had any need of O’Neill, and he died an impoverish­ed exile in Rome.

Like Shakespear­e and Cervantes, O’Neill breathed his last in 1616. And though those two writers claimed the lion’s share of public adulation last year, there’s a strong argument to be made that, in his own day, O’Neill was far more important.

DISCOVER MORE

LISTEN AGAIN To listen to Melvyn Bragg discuss the Plantation of Ireland with experts including Hiram Morgan, go to bbc.co.uk/ programmes/p00q4y8r

At the end of the Nine Years’ War, Ireland was completely under English rule for the first time ever Charles Blount, 8th Baron Mountjoy, used a scorched- earth policy to fight O’Neill

 ??  ?? O’Neill’s army inflicts English forces’ greatest ever defeat in Ireland at the battle of Yellow Ford, in a contempora­ry illustrati­on. Fortified by a series of stunning victories over Elizabeth’s generals, O’Neill was soon calling for Ireland to become...
O’Neill’s army inflicts English forces’ greatest ever defeat in Ireland at the battle of Yellow Ford, in a contempora­ry illustrati­on. Fortified by a series of stunning victories over Elizabeth’s generals, O’Neill was soon calling for Ireland to become...
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 ??  ?? This propaganda woodcut shows O’Neill submitting to the English in 1603. Four years later, a disenchant­ed O’Neill quit Ireland in the so-called Flight of the Earls. He would never return
This propaganda woodcut shows O’Neill submitting to the English in 1603. Four years later, a disenchant­ed O’Neill quit Ireland in the so-called Flight of the Earls. He would never return
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