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THE BATTLE OF BENBURB
by Mike McCormack
The 17th century dawned in Ire-land during the
9-years war of the northern Chieftains against the Crown. By 1602 that
conflict was over; Red Hugh O'Donnell had been poisoned, the Irish had
capitulated, and Queen Elizabeth was dead. Against the treachery that
threatened their heirs and families, the noblest Chieftains of the north
- The O'Neill, the O'Donnell, and the Maguire - left Ireland forever in
what be-came known as the Flight of the Earls.
The Irish were leaderless, the Clan system had been broken, the great
Gaelic Houses destroyed, and a foreign power had been established in
possession of the land. The conquest of Ireland was finally complete; or
so it appeared. Beneath it all, the bards kept the heritage alive.
Outlawed poets started hedge schools; Priests said Mass at stone altars
in the glens; the music, the language, and the learning survived - but
the British were determined to stop even that limited existence of
Celtic culture. After the flight of the earls, James I of England,
declared that the recently de-parted northern Chieftains had been
conspiring to rebel, and their estates were forfeit to the Crown.
Four million acres of Ulster were given to men called Undertakers - that
is, any loyal Englishman who agreed to undertake the dispossession of
the Irish. Soldiers, drapers, fish-mongers, vintners, haberdashers,
anyone seeking free land became the new owners of Ulster. A contemporary
writer named Stewart, son of a Presbyterian minister, wrote that they
were "for the most part the scum of both nations, who from debt or
fleeing justice came hither hoping to be without fear of man's laws.”
They hunted the Irish like animals, drove them into the woods,
mountains, and moors where thousands perished of starvation within
sight of lands that their clans had owned from time immemorial. Before
their eyes, an alien nation was planted on the fair face of Ireland’s
proudest province.
But the Irish would not starve and die in their own fertile land. Their
rage grew daily until a leader emerged in the person of Rory Og O'Moore.
He had patiently worked for years among the leading Irish families,
Irish Generals in the Continental armies, and other Irish exiles to
oust the British. Then, on the night of October 21, 1641, the remnants
of the northern clans burst forth sweeping the terrified Undertakers
before them. Descendants of the old Clans O'Neill, Magennis, O'Hanlon,
O'Hagan, MacMahon, Maguire, O'Quinn, O'Farrell, and O'Reilly burst forth
from the hills and, in a few hours, made Ulster their own again. A few
days later, Phelim O'Neill was proclaimed head of an Ulster army, and by
early 1642, Leinster and Munster joined the fight for freedom; still
later, Connaught joined. The Crown, poured men and arms into Ire-land to
fight the rebels. The Irish gentry formed the Confederation of Kilkenny
to direct the resistance, and, believing that the new King,
Catholic-born Charles I, was a friend of Ire-land, they confirmed their
stand for ‘faith, country, and King’. The Irish Chieftains yielded for
the sake of unity.
In England, a struggle between King Charles and his Puritan Parliament
developed into a civil war. As his situation grew worse, King Charles
began to court the Confederation. Futile negotiations frustrated the
fighting spirit of the Irish, and they began to suffer defeat after
de-feat until, in despair, they considered coming to terms with the
English. Suddenly, from the Boyne to the sea, Ulster shook with the
news: Owen Roe is come!
On July 6, 1642, with 100 officers in his company, Owen Roe O'Neill,
landed in Donegal. A mere boy when he had left Ire-land with his uncle,
Hugh O'Neill, during the Flight of the Earls, he had won distinction as
a military commander in the Irish Brigade of the Spanish Army. A trained
soldier and military leader, he had returned to lead the fight for
Ireland's freedom. He was given command of the northern army which he
rebuilt, and began to challenge the English on the field of battle. In
short order, he regained all that had been lost due to the
procrastination of the Confederation, but jealous of his growing power,
they hampered his efforts at every turn.
Then, on June 5, 1646, England sent their best field commander, General
Monroe, against Owen Roe. This would silence the young upstart forever.
Monroe had 6,000 men and a full compliment of field artillery. O'Neill
had only 5,000 men and no artillery. The two armies met at the junction
of the river Oonah and the Blackwater adjacent to the village of Benburb
- a place that would live forever on the lips of the storytellers, for
it was here, in one masterful battle, that Owen Roe proved his
superiority and the superiority of his army. Monroe’s men were fresh,
and he set them up so that he would have the ad-vantage of the sun at
his back. O’Neill kept Monroe’s nerves and the nerves of his men on edge
for several hours in that hot sun while his men harassed them with hit
and run skirmishing raids. Finally, when the sun had shifted to behind
his back, O’Neill gave the word “Sancta Maria,” and launched a
whirl-wind attack. His cavalry captured Monroe’s guns, and his infantry
overwhelmed the English legions driving them into the river. In one
short hour, O’Neill had wiped out the pride of the British army; 32
standards were taken; Lord Ardes and 32 officers were captured; cannon,
baggage, and 2-months provisions were taken; and 1,500 horses were now
in Irish possession. 3,300 of Monroe’s army lay dead on the field, while
Owen Roe lost but 70. Ulster had been won by Owen Roe O’Neill. The
Confederation, fearing his growing power, would eventually turn on
O’Neill, and everything would be lost in the end. But for a brief while,
all of Ireland was talking about Owen Roe O’Neill and the Battle of
Benburb on June 5, 1646.
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