| Irish Rebellion of 1641 | |||||||||
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| Part of theIrish Confederate Wars | |||||||||
Felim O'Neill of Kinard, leader of the rebellion | |||||||||
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| Belligerents | |||||||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||||||
TheIrish Rebellion of 1641[a] was an uprising inIreland, initiated on 23 October 1641 byCatholic gentry and military officers. Their demands included an end to anti-Catholic discrimination, greater Irish self-governance, and return ofconfiscated Catholic lands. Planned as a swiftcoup d'état to gain control of theProtestant-dominatedcentral government, instead it led to the 1641–1653Irish Confederate Wars, part of the widerWars of the Three Kingdoms.
Despite failing to seizeDublin Castle, rebels underFelim O'Neill quickly over-ran most ofUlster, centre of the most recentland confiscations. O'Neill then issued theProclamation of Dungannon, a forgery claiming he had been authorised byCharles I of England to secure Ireland against his opponents inEngland andScotland. ManyRoyalistAnglo-Irish Catholics responded by joining the uprising, and the rebellion spread throughout Ireland.
In November, rebelsbesieged Drogheda and defeated a government relief force atJulianstown. Especially in Ulster, thousands of Protestant settlers were expelled ormassacred, and Catholics killed in retaliation. By April 1642, Royalist troops heldDublin,Cork, and large areas around them, with much of Ulster occupied by a ScottishCovenanter army andlocal Protestant militia. This left approximately two thirds of Ireland under rebel control.
In May 1642, Ireland's Catholic bishops met atKilkenny, and declared the rebellion ajust war. Along with members of the Catholic nobility, theycreated an alternative government known asConfederate Ireland. For the next ten years, the Confederacy fought a four-sided war against Irish Royalists, Scottish Covenanters and EnglishParliamentarians.
The roots of the 1641 rebellion derived from the colonisation that followed theTudor conquest of Ireland, and the alienation of theCatholic gentry from the newly-Protestant English state in the decades following. Historian Aidan Clarke writes that religion "was merely one aspect of a larger problem posed by the Gaelic Irish, and its importance was easily obscured; but religious difference was central to the relationship between the government and the colonists".[1] During the decades between the end of the Elizabethan wars in 1603 and the outbreak of rebellion in 1641, the political position of the wealthier landed Irish Catholics was increasingly threatened by the English government of Ireland. As a result, both theGaelic Irish, and theOld English communities increasingly defined themselves as Irish and were viewed as such by the newcomers.[2]
The pre-Elizabethan population ofIreland is usually divided into the native Irish and Old English, many of whom were descendants of medieval English andAnglo-Normans settlers. These groups were historically antagonistic, with English settled areas such asthe Pale aroundDublin,Wexford, and other walled towns being fortified against the rural Gaelic clans.[3] By the 17th century, the cultural divide between these groups, especially at elite social levels, was narrowing; many of the Old English spokeIrish, patronisedIrish poetry and music, and have been described as being "More Irish than the Irish themselves". Writing in 1614, one author claimed that previously the Old English "despised the mere Irish, accounting them a barbarous people, void of civility and religion and [each viewed] the other as a hereditary enemy" but cited intermarriage "in former ages rarely seen", education of the Gaelic Irish and "the late plantation of New English and Scottish [throughout] the Kingdom whom the natives repute a common enemy; but this last is the principal cause of their union".[4] In addition, the native population became defined by their shared Catholicism, as opposed to the Protestantism of the new settlers.[5][b]

The Tudor conquest of the late 16th and early 17th century led to thePlantations of Ireland, whereby Irish-owned land was confiscated and colonised with British settlers. The biggest was thePlantation of Ulster, which utilised estates confiscated from the northern lords whowent into exile in 1607. Around 80% of these were distributed to English-speaking Protestants, with the remainder going to "deserving" native Irish lords and clans.[6] By 1641, the economic impact of the plantations on the native Irish population was exacerbated because many who retained their estates had to sell them due to poor management and the debts they incurred. This erosion of their status and influence saw them prepared to join a rebellion, even if they risked losing more.[7]
Many of the exiles, such asEoghan Ruadh Ó Néill, served in the Catholic armies ofFrance andSpain, particularly theArmy of Flanders. They formed a small émigré Irish community, militantly hostile to the English-run Protestant state in Ireland, but restrained by the generally good relations England had with Spain and France after 1604. In Ireland itself, resentment caused by the plantations was one of the main causes for the outbreak and spread of the rebellion, combined withPoynings' Law, which required Irish legislation to be approved by thePrivy Council of England. The Protestant-dominated administration took opportunities to confiscate more land from longstanding Catholic landowners.[8] In the late 1630sThomas Wentworth, theLord Deputy of Ireland, proposed a new round of plantations designed to expand Protestant cultural and religious dominance.[9] Delays in their implementation caused by Charles' struggles with his political opponents in England and Scotland meant that Catholics still owned over 60% of land in 1641.[10]

Most of the Irish Catholic upper classes were not opposed to the sovereignty of Charles I over Ireland but wanted to be full subjects and maintain their pre-eminent position in Irish society. This was prevented by their religion and the threat of losing their land in the Plantations. The failedGunpowder Plot of 1605 had led to further legal discrimination against Catholics.[11]
The ProtestantChurch of Ireland was the only approved form of worship, although it was a minority even among Irish Protestants, many of whom were Presbyterians. Both they and the majority Catholic population were required to paytithes to the church, causing great resentment, while practicing Catholicism in public could lead to arrest, and non-attendance at Protestant service was punishable byrecusant fines. Catholics could not hold senior offices of state, or serve above a certain rank in the army. ThePrivy Council of Ireland was dominated by English Protestants. The constituencies of theIrish House of Commons gave Protestants a majority.[12]
In response, the Irish Catholic upper classes sought 'The Graces', and appealed directly first toJames I and then his sonCharles, for full rights as subjects and toleration of their religion. On several occasions, they seemed to have reached an agreement under which these demands would be met in return for raising taxes. However, despite paying increased taxes after 1630, Charles postponed implementing their demands until 3 May 1641 when he and the English Privy Council instructed theLords Justices of Ireland to publish the required Bills.[13]
The advancement of the Graces were particularly frustrated during the time that Wentworth wasLord Deputy. On the pretext of checking of land titles to raise revenue, Wentworth confiscated and was going to plant lands in countiesRoscommon andSligo and was planning further plantations in countiesGalway andKilkenny directed mainly at the Anglo-Irish Catholic families.[14] In the judgement of historian Pádraig Lenihan, "It is likely that he [Wentworth] would have eventually encountered armed resistance from Catholic landowners" if he had pursued these policies further.[15] However, the actual rebellion followed the destabilisation of English and Scottish politics and the weakened position of the king in 1640. Wentworth was executed in London in May 1641.[16]
From 1638 to 1640Scotland rose in a revolt known as theBishops' Wars against Charles I's attempt to impose Church of England practices there, believing them to be too close to Catholicism. The King's attempts to put down the rebellion failed when the EnglishLong Parliament, which had similar religious concerns to the Scots, refused to vote for new taxes to pay for raising an army. Charles therefore started negotiations with Irish Catholic gentry to recruit an Irish army to put down the rebellion in Scotland, in return for granting longstanding requests for religious toleration and land security. Composed largely of Irish Catholics from Ulster, an army was slowly mobilised atCarrickfergus opposite the Scottish coast, but then began to be disbanded in mid-1641. To the Scots andParliament of England, this seemed to confirm that Charles was a tyrant, who wanted to impose his religious views on his kingdoms, and to govern again without his parliaments as he had done in 1628–1640. In early 1641, some Scots and English Parliamentarians even proposed invading Ireland and subduing Catholics there, to ensure that no royalist Irish Catholic army would land in England or Scotland.[17]
Frightened by this, and wanting to seize the opportunity, a small group of Irish Catholiclanded gentry (some of whom wereMembers of Parliament) plotted to takeDublin Castle and other important towns and forts around the country in a quickcoup in the name of the King, both to forestall a possible invasion and to force him to concede the Catholics' demands. At least three Irishcolonels were also involved in the plot, and the plotters hoped to use soldiers from the disbanding Irish army.[18]
Unfavourable economic conditions also contributed to the outbreak of the rebellion. This decline may have been a consequence of theLittle Ice Age event of the mid 17th Century. The Irish economy had hit a recession and the harvest of 1641 was poor. Interest rates in the 1630s had been as high as 30% per annum. The leaders of the rebellion like Phelim O'Neill andRory O'Moore were heavily in debt and risked losing their lands to creditors. What was more, the Irish farmers were hard hit by the bad harvest and were faced with rising rents. This aggravated their desire to remove the settlers and contributed to the widespread attacks on them at the start of the rebellion.[19] Acreditor of O'Neill's, "Mr Fullerton of Loughal ... was one of the first to be murdered in the rebellion".[20]
The rebellion was planned by a small group of Catholiclanded gentry and military officers, many of whom were Gaelic Irish fromUlster who had lost lands and influence in the post 1607 Plantation. Due to take place on Saturday 23 October 1641,[c] armed men led byConnor Maguire andRory O'Moore were to seizeDublin Castle and itsarsenal, then hold it until help came from insurgents in neighbouringCounty Wicklow. Meanwhile,Felim O'Neill and his allies were to occupy strategic points in Ulster.[22]
The English garrison of Ireland was only about 2,000 strong and scattered around the country,[22] but the plot relied on surprise rather than force to achieve their objectives, after which they would issue their demands, in expectation of support from the rest of the country.[23] The plan to seize Dublin Castle was foiled when one of the ringleaders, Hugh Og MacMahon, revealed details to his foster-brother, a Protestant convert named Owen O'Connolly. He promptly informed one of the Lord Justices, and MacMahon and Maguire were arrested,[24] while the remaining plotters slipped out of Dublin.[22] Warnings of an imminent rising had also been communicated to Dublin bySir William Cole.[25]
Despite this failure, the rebellion in Ulster went ahead and Felim O'Neill and his allies, includingRory Maguire, quickly captured positions throughout the province, includingDungannon,Charlemont Fort,Newry,Tandragee,Portadown,Mountjoy Castle,Castleblaney andCarrickmacross. Those that did not surrender, such asEnniskillen Castle, were besieged and within two days the insurgents held most of countiesArmagh,Tyrone,Fermanagh andMonaghan.[26] TheProclamation of Dungannon, issued by O'Neill on 24 October, stated they had taken up arms only to defend their freedoms and meant no harm to the king's subjects.[27] This was followed on 4 November by the Newry declaration which claimed Charles had approved the rising to secure Ireland against his opponents in England.[28]
Although the declaration is now accepted as a forgery,[29] many of the Anglo-Catholic gentry were dismayed by indiscriminate anti-Catholic measures taken by the Dublin authorities, including those who had initially condemned the rebellion. The suspension of the Irish Parliament on 17 November deprived them of the political means to resolve these issues and the declaration provided cover for moderates such as Nicholas Plunkett to make common cause with the rebels.[30] Rumours also circulated that radical Protestants were seeking to replace Charles I with his exiled German nephew theElector Palatine, paving the way for increased repression of Irish Catholics.[31]
The influential Lords of the Pale joined the rising in early December, while rebels inCavan were led byPhilip O'Reilly, the localMember of Parliament, and Mulmore O'Reilly, theHigh Sheriff.[32]Dundalk was occupied,[33] while an army under Brian McMahon moved south from Ulster towards Dublin and on 21 Novemberbesieged Drogheda from the north. Others advanced throughCounty Meath and blockaded the town from the south, then defeated a relief force sent from Dublin atJulianstown on 29 November, inflicting over 600 casualties.[34] On 28 November, around 8,000 rebels besiegedLisnagarvey but after losing some 300 men in an unsuccessful assault, they set fire to the town and retreated.[35] This setback and the stubbornness displayed by the town's defenders allegedly made a deep impression on the attackers, since it showed hopes of a quick and relatively painless victory in Ulster were over optimistic.[36]
Further south, the rebellion spread into countiesLeitrim,Longford, Wicklow,Wexford,Tipperary andKildare.[37] The Dublin government called it "a most disloyal and detestable conspiracy" by "some evil affected Irish Papists", which was aimed at "a general massacre of all English and Protestant inhabitants".[38] In December, troops led byCharles Coote, Governor of Dublin Castle, andWilliam St Leger,Lord President of Munster, attacked rebel-held areas in counties Wicklow and Tipperary respectively, expeditions characterised by "excessive and indiscriminate brutality" against the general Catholic population.[39] This provoked many into joining the insurgency, including previously peacefulMunster where St Leger had imposed a brutalmartial law regime.[40]
When the rebellion began, Phelim O'Neill sought to exploit divisions between English and Scots settlers by offering the latter protection, hoping thereby to gain their support. This strategy initially contributed to the rapid spread of the revolt, in part because the Dublin government was uncertain who to trust and thus delayed a coordinated response.[41] The situation changed when it became clear the rising had been only partially successful, while the breakdown of state authority prompted widespread attacks by the Catholic peasantry on Protestants, regardless of nationality.[42][d] They were soon joined by members of the gentry; O'Neill's authority was largely confined to County Armagh and even there was not total, his own brother being one of those who took part in these actions.[42]
A contemporary Catholic source wrote that O'Neill "strove to contain the raskall multitude from those frequent savage actions of stripping and killing" but "the floodgate of rapine, once being laid open, the meaner sort of people was not to be contained".[44] It has been argued the initial purpose of the attacks was economic and killings occurred only when the victims resisted.[45] They intensified as the rebellion progressed, particularly in Ulster where many had lost land in the post 1607 Plantations,[46] while attacks on local Protestant clergy were in part due to resentment at the relative wealth of the Church of Ireland in that province.[47] Other factors included religion and culture; in County Cavan, rebels justified the rising as a defensive measure against a Protestant threat to "extirpate the Catholic religion",[48] reinstated originalIrish language place names and banned the use of English.[46]

Following their repulse at Lisnagarvey in November, rebels killed about 100 Protestants atPortadown by forcing them off the bridge into theRiver Bann, and shooting those who tried to swim to safety.[e] Known as thePortadown massacre, it was one of the bloodiest such events to take place in Ireland during the 1640s.[50] In nearbyKilmore, English and Scottish men, women and children were burned to death in the cottage in which they were imprisoned, while in Armagh as a whole, some 1,250 died in the early months of the rebellion, roughly a quarter of the local settler population.[51] InCounty Tyrone, modern research has identified three blackspots for the killing of settlers, the worst being nearKinard, "where most of the British families planted... were ultimately murdered".[52] Elsewhere atShrule inCounty Mayo, Protestant prisoners were killed by their Catholic escorts, despite attempts by their officers to intervene.[53]
Killings of Catholics also took place, including the murder of two dozen atIslandmagee by members of the Carrickfergus garrison in November 1641.[53] The arrival of aCovenanter army in Ulster in April 1642 led to further such atrocities,William Lecky, a 19th-century historian of the rebellion, concluding "it is far from clear on which side the balance of cruelty rests".[40] The Scots executed Irish prisoners taken in a skirmish near Kilwarlin woods outsideDromore, whileJames Turner records that after retaking Newry, local Catholics were lined up on the banks of the Newry River and killed "without any legal process".[54] OnRathlin Island, Scottish soldiers fromClan Campbell were encouraged by their commanding officerSir Duncan Campbell to kill the local CatholicMacDonnells, who were related to the Campbells' enemies in Scotland,Clan MacDonald. They threw scores of MacDonnell women over cliffs to their deaths.[55] The killings were brought under some degree of control byOwen Roe O'Neill, who in July 1642 was given command of Irish forces in Ulster and hanged several rebels for attacking civilians. Though still brutal, the war thereafter was fought according to the code of conduct both O'Neill and the Scottish commanderRobert Monro had learned as professional soldiers in mainland Europe.[56]
Contemporary pamphlets published in London contained lurid details of the massacres and suggested over 200,000 Protestants (more than the entire settler population) had lost their lives.[57] These figures were recognised even then as wildly exaggerated and in November 1641 Parliament jailed a publisher who admitted paying for fictitious atrocity tales.[31] Recent research suggests around 4,000 were killed in the attacks, with thousands more expelled from their homes,[58] many of whom died of exposure or disease, leading to an upper estimate of around 12,000 deaths.[59] This represents around 10% of the total settler population in Ireland, though in Ulster the ratio of deaths would have been somewhat higher, namely around 30%.[60] They were used to support the view of the rebellion as a Catholic conspiracy to wipe out all Protestants in Ireland,[61] a narrative constructed in theDepositions, a collection of victim reports gathered between 1642 and 1655 and now housed inTrinity College Dublin.[62][63] In 1646, these accounts were summarised inThe Irish Rebellion, a book byJohn Temple,[64] in which he urged the military re-conquest of Ireland and segregation of Irish Catholics from British Protestants.[65]
In the long term, the 1641 massacres intensified existing sectarian animosity on both sides, although modern historians argue the killings had an especially powerful psychological impact on the Protestant community.[66][f] Dr. Mary O'Dowd wrote they "were very traumatic for the Protestant settler community in Ulster, and left long-term scars within that community".[68] Contemporary Protestant accounts depict the rebellion as a complete surprise; one stated that it was "conceived among us and yet we never felt it kick in the womb, nor struggle in the birth".[69] Many argued Catholics could not be trusted and in Ulster, Protestants commemorated the anniversary of the rebellion for over two hundred years. According to historian Pádraig Lenihan, this "helped affirm communal solidarity and emphasise the need for unrelenting vigilance [against] the masses of Irish Catholics surrounding them [who] were and always would be, unregenerate and cruel enemies".[70]

Although Charles, the English Parliament and Scottish Covenanter government all agreed the rebellion should be crushed, doing so was delayed by political tensions. Charles was inEdinburgh when he received news of the uprising on 28 October and immediately urged the Scots to send troops toUlster, once approved by their colleagues in England.[g] On 4 November, Parliament voted to send weapons and gunpowder to Ireland and recruit 8,000 men to suppress the rising but the situation was complicated since any such army would be legally controlled by the king.[71] A series of allegedRoyalist military conspiracies in 1641 and rebel claims that Charles supported their actions heightened fears he would turn it against his opponents in England and Scotland, rather than the Irish.[72]
The Covenanters urged the English Parliament to fund a Scottish army rather than recruiting their own, arguing it could reach Ireland more easily and would be independent of both Charles and his Parliamentary opponents.[73] In the meantime, Charles sent weapons, gunpowder and a small number of Scots volunteers to Ireland at his own expense, but had insufficient money to finance an expedition on his own.[74]James Butler, 1st Duke of Ormond, a member of one of the leadingOld English families and Protestant convert, was made commander of Royal forces in Ireland and recruited three infantry regiments from the refugees flooding into Dublin.[71] Several prominent Ulster Scots were also commissioned to raise troops, includingRobert Stewart and his brother William, who formed theLaggan Army.[75]
Many politicians and officials in Dublin and London opposed Scottish intervention in Ulster, seeing a well-armed and independent Presbyterian army as a threat to the status quo, and Parliament continued recruiting English regiments.[76] On 21 December, theLords approved a Scottish army of 10,000 but the Covenanter government insisted they should also be given control of the three largest ports in Ulster, Carrickfergus,Coleraine andDerry, along with land grants. These demands were rejected by theCommons, leading to further delay and allowing the rebellion to spread. With the situation deteriorating, in February 1642 the two sides put aside their differences and agreed to send 2,500 Scots to Ulster.[77]
Parliament now adopted two measures intended to manage concerns over control of the forces needed for Ireland and how to raise funds for it as quickly as possible, both of which had significant consequences. On 15 March, theMilitia Ordinance brought the military andcounty militia under the control of Parliament, rather than the king.[78] When Charles refused to give it hisroyal assent, Parliament declared the legislation in force regardless, marking a major step on the road to civil war. On 19 March, theAdventurers' Act invited members of the public to provide loans which would be repaid with land confiscated from the rebels.[79] This need to ensure these were repaid and maintain government credit was one of the factors behind theCromwellian conquest of Ireland in 1649.
In the first few months of 1642, Ormond regained much of the Pale, relieved Drogheda, re-took Dundalk and defeated a rebel force atKilrush on 15 April.[27] On the same day, the Covenanter army led byRobert Monro landed at Carrickfergus and recaptured Newry on 1 May.[27] By mid-1642, Protestant forces in Ireland totalled 40,000 infantry and 3,600 horse,[80] but the outbreak of theFirst English Civil War in August 1642 ended the flow of reinforcements and money from England and a military stalemate ensued.[81]

By early 1642, there were four main concentrations of rebel forces; in Ulster under Felim O'Neill, in the Pale around Dublin led by Viscount Gormanston, in the south-east, led by the Butler family – in particular Lord Mountgarret, and in the south-west, led byDonagh MacCarthy, Viscount Muskerry. In areas where British settlers were concentrated, aroundCork, Dublin,Carrickfergus andDerry, they raised their own militia in self-defence and managed to hold off the rebel forces.[82]
Within a few months of the rebellion's outbreak, almost all of the Catholic gentry had joined it, including the Anglo-Irish Catholics. There are three main reasons for this. First, local lords and landowners raised armed units of their dependents to control the violence that was engulfing the country, fearing that after the settlers were gone, the Irish peasantry would turn on them as well. Secondly, theLong Parliament made it clear that Irish Catholics who did not demonstrate their loyalty would have their lands confiscated under theAdventurers' Act, agreed on 19 March 1642.[83] Charles was also forbidden by parliament to pardon those accused of rebellion.[84]
Thirdly, it looked initially as if the rebels would be successful after they defeated a government force atJulianstown in November 1641. This perception was soon shattered when the rebelsfailed to take nearbyDrogheda, but by then most of the Catholic gentry had already committed themselves to rebellion.[85] The Catholic gentry around Dublin, known as the "Lords of the Pale", issued their Remonstrance to the king on 17 March 1642 atTrim, County Meath.
Hugh O'Reilly (archbishop of Armagh) held asynod of Irish bishops atKells, County Meath on 22 March 1642, which legitimised the rebellion as war in defence of the catholic religion.[86]
On 10 May 1642, Archbishop O'Reilly convened anothersynod atKilkenny. Present were 3 archbishops, 11 bishops or their representatives, and other dignitaries.[87] They drafted theConfederate Oath of Association and called on all Catholics in Ireland to take it. Those who took the oath swore allegiance toCharles I and vowed to obey all orders and decrees made by the "Supreme Council of the Confederate Catholics". The rebels henceforth became known as Confederates. The synod re-affirmed that the rebellion was a "just war".[88] It called for the creation of a council (made up of clergy and nobility) for eachprovince, which would be overseen by a national council for the whole island. It vowed to punish misdeeds by Confederate soldiers and to excommunicate any Catholic who fought against the Confederation. The synod sent agents to France, Spain and Italy to gain support, gather funds and weapons, and recruit Irishmen serving in foreign armies.[89]
Lord Mountgarret was appointed president of the Confederate Council,[90] and a General Assembly was held in Kilkenny on 24 October 1642, where it set up aprovisional government.[91] Present were 14Lords Temporal and 11Lords Spiritual from theParliament of Ireland, along with 226 commoners.[92] The Assembly elected a Supreme Council of 24, which controlled both military and civilian officers. Its first act was to name the generals who were to command Confederate forces:Owen Roe O'Neill was to command the Ulster forces,Thomas Preston the Leinster forces,Garret Barry the Munster forces and John Burke the Connaught forces.[93] A National Treasury, a mint for making coins, and a press for printing proclamations were set up in Kilkenny.[94]
The Confederation eventually sided with theRoyalists in return for the promise of self-government and full rights for Catholics after the war. They werefinally defeated by the English Parliament'sNew Model Army from 1649 through to 1653 and land ownership in Ireland passed largely to Protestant settlers.[95]