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A95614 The Irish rebellion: or, An history of the beginnings and first progresse of the general rebellion raised within the kingdom of Ireland, upon the three and twentieth day of October, in the year, 1641. Together vvith the barbarous cruelties and bloody massacres which ensued thereupon. / By Sir Iohn Temple Knight. Master of the Rolles, and one of his Majesties most honourable Privie Councell within the kingdom of Ireland. Temple, John, Sir, 1600-1677. 1646 (1646) Wing T627; Thomason E508_1; ESTC R201974 182,680 207

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particular safety as well as for the preservation of the whole Kingdome not only to contribute their best advice and councell but even all the Forces they could any wayes raise towards the beating of the Northern Rebels out of the Pale Severall Letters of Summons were accordingly writ and sent away to the Earle of Fingale the Lord Viscount Gormanston and the rest of the Lords of the Pale the tenour of them here ensueth AFter our very hearty commendations to your Lordships for as much as we have present occasion to conferre with you A Coppy of the Letter written by the Lords Iustices and Councell to the Lords of the Pale concerning the present estate of the Kingdome and the safety thereof in these times of danger We pray and require your Lordship to be with us here on the eight day of this Month at which time others of the Peers are also to be here And this being to no other end we bid your Lordships very heartily farewell From his Majesties Castle of Dublin the third of December 1641. Your very loving friends William Parson Iohn Borlacy Ormondossory Ant Medensis R Dilbon Ad Loftus Ge Shirley I Temple Rob Meredith To our very good Lord George Earle of Kildare The like Letters eodem die to these severall Persons following Earle of Ormond Earle of Antrim Earle of Fingale Vis Gormanston Vis Netervile Vis Fitzwilliam Lo Trimbleston Lord Dunsany Lord Slaine Lord of Hoath Lord Lowth Lord Lambert These Letters were presently sent away But the Lords of the Pale being otherwayes engaged and having before or much about the time they came unto their hands though the Lords knew very little and that very uncertainly of it made that publike combination with the Vlster Rebels before mentioned durst no more adventure their persons within the City of Dublin But after their meeting at the Hill of Crofty appointed an other meeting at the Hill of Tarah and from thence they sent an Answer unto the Lords which as Mr Dowdall testifies was brought thither by the Lord of Gormanston ready drawn up and there only signed and so sent away The Copy of the Letter here followeth May it please your Lordships VVEe have received your Letters of the third of this instant The Answer of the Lords of the Pale to the Lords Iustices intimating that you had present occasions to confer with us concerning the present state of the Kingdome and the safety thereof in these times of danger and requiring us to be with you there on the eighth day of this instant we give your Lordships to understand that we have heretofore presented our selves before your Lordsips and freely offered our advice and furtherance towards the particulars aforesaid which was by you neglected which gave us cause to conceive that our Loyalty was suspected by you We give your Lordships further to understand that we have received certaine advertisement that Sir Charles Coot Knight at the Councell Board hath uttered some speeches tending to a purpose and resolution to execute upon these of our Religion a generall Massacre by which we are all deterred to wait on your Lordships not having any security for our safety from these threatned evills or the safety of our lives but doe rather think it fit to stand upon our best guard untill we heare from your Lordships how we shall be secured from these perils Neverthelesse we all protest that we are and will continue both faithfull advisers and resolute furtherers of his Majesties service concerning the present state of the Kingdome and the safety thereof to our best abilities and so with the said tender of our humble service we remaine Your Lordships humble Servants Fingale Gormanston Slane Dunsany Nettervill Oliver Lowth Trimblestown Dublin Decem. 7. Received 11. 1641. To the Right Honourable our very good Lords the Lords Iustices and Councell of Ireland In Answer to this Letter the Lords Iustices and Councell out of their unfained desires to give unto those Lords all due satisfaction and to remove those jealousies and great misunderstanding now grown up between them A Proclamation issued out by the Lords Iustices and Councell for the satisfaction of the Lords of the Pale thought fit by way of Proclamation to publish and declare to them and all others of his Majesties good Subjects of the Romish Religion That they never heard Sir Charles Coot or any other utter at the Board or elsewhere any such speeches tending to a purpose or resolution to execute upon those of their profession or upon any other a generall Massacre or any Massacre at all and that they never intended so to dishonour his Majesty and this State or wound their own consciences as to entertaine the least thought of acting so odious impious and detestable a thing upon any persons whatsoever and that if any proofe can be made of any such words spoken by any person whatsoever that he shall be severely punished And therefore that they did pray and require the said Noblemen to attend them at the Board on the 17. day of December that they might conferre with them And for the security of their repaire unto them they did thereby give to all and every of those Noblemen the word and assurance of the State that they might then securely and safely come unto them without danger of any trouble or stay whatsoever from them who neither had nor have any intention to wrong or hurt them But now it began to appeare unto the Lords Iustices and Counsell how farre they were engaged with the Northern Rebels By the Examinations taken of some English who made their escape out of those parts the newes of their solemne contract and Association beforementioned was brought up to Dublin And they then well enough discerned the maine obstruction in their comming the cause of their tergiversations and what good reason they had to finde out excuses to palliate their disloyalty They then expected no other fruits of their Proclamation then what it produced Neither indeed had it any other effect and operation among them then that they did with great boldnesse and confidence by way of Answer thereunto write back a Letter to the Lords Iustices wherein they pretend themselves so justly affrighted with Sir Charles Coot severity and deportment Severall pretences of the Lords of the Pale to colour their refusall to repaire to the Lords Iustices and Councell as that they dare not adventure themselves within the confines of his government They heavily impose upon him the inhumane acts perpetrated as they terme them in the County of Wiclow the Massacre of Santry and the burning of Mr Kings house and his whole substance at Clantarfe and with a little kind of cunning they seeme to pretend a breach of the publike faith but would transferre the blame from the Lords Iustices to Sir Charles Coot and therupon desire no sinister construction may be made of their stay and that they may have some Commissioners appointed to conferre with
therefore to give them full satisfaction hereby declare and publish to to all His Majesties good Subjects in this Kingdom That by the words Irish Papists VVe intended only such of the old meer Irish in the Province of Ulster as have plotted contrived and been actors in this Treason and others who adhere to them and that VVe did not any way intend or mean thereby any of the old English of the Pale nor of any other parts of this Kingdome VVe being well assured of their fidelities to the Crown and having experience of the good affections and services of their Ancestors in former times of danger and Rebellion And VVe further require all His Majesties loving Subjects whether Protestants or Papists to forbear upbraiding matter of Religion one against the other and that upon pain of his Majesties indignation Given at His Majesties Castle of Dublin 29 Octob. 1641. R. Ranelagh R. Dillon Ant. Midensis Ad. Loftus Geo. Shurley Gerrard Lowther I. Temple Fr. Willoughby Ia. Ware God save the King ¶ Imprinted at Dublin by the Society Of STATIONERS BUt to return now to the Northern Rebels who so closely pursued on their first plot as they beginning to put it in execution in most of the chief places of strength there upon the 23 of Octob. the day appointed for the surprizall of the Castle of Dublin had by the latter end of the same moneth gotten into their possession all the Towns Forts Castles and Gentlemens houses within the Counties of Tyrone Donegall The greater part of Vlster possessed by the Northern Rebels Fermanagh Armagh Cavan London Derry Monaghan and half the County of Down excepted the Cities of London Derry and Coleraigne the Town and Castle of Encikillin and some other places and Castles which were for the present gallantly defended by the British undertakers though afterwards for want of relief surrendred into their hands The chief of the Northern Rebels that first appeared in the execution of this Plot within the Province of Vlster were Sir Phelim O Neale The names of the chief Rebels in Vlster Turlogh O Neale his brother Roury Mac Guire brother to the Lord Mac Guire Philip O Rely Mulmore O Rely Sir Conne Mac Gennis Col. Mac Brian Mac Mahon these having closely combined together with severall other of their accomplices the chief of the severall Septs in the severall Counties divided their forces into severall parties and according to a generall assignation made among themselves at one and the same time surprized by treachery the Town and Castle of the Newry Severall Forts and other places suddenly surprized by the Rebels the Fort of Dongannon Fort Montjoy Carlemont Tonrages Caricke Mac Rosse Cloughouter Castle Blaney Castle of Monaghan being all of them places of considerable strength and in severall of them companies of foot or troops of Horse belonging to the standing army Besides these they took a multitude of other Castles Houses of strength Towns and Villages all abundantly peopled with Brittish in habitants who had exceedingly enriched the Countrey as well as themselves by their painfull labours They had made for their more comfortable subsistance handsome and pleasant habitations abounding with corn cattell and all other commodities that an industrious people could draw out of a good inland soile They lived in great plenty and some of them very well stored with plate and ready money They lived likewise in as great security being quiet and carelesse as the people of Laish little suspecting any treachery from their Irish neighbours The English well knew they had given them no manner of provocation they had entertained them with great demonstrations of love and affection No story can ever shew that in any Age since their intermixed cohabitation they rise up secretly to do them mischief And now of late they lived so peaceably and lovingly together as they had just reason most confidently to believe that the Irish would never upon any occasion generally rise up again to their destruction This I take to be one main and principall reason that the English were so easily over-run within the Northern Counties The great security and confidence of the English in the Irish a great cause of their sudden destruction and so suddenly swallowed up before they could make any manner of resistance in the very first begnnings of this Rebellion For most of the English having either Irish Tenants Servants or Landlords and all of them Irish neighbours their familiar friends as soon as the fire brake out and the whole Countrey began to rise about them some made their recourse presently to their Friends for protection some relying upon their Neighbours others upon their Landlords others upon their Tenants and Servants for preservation The English betrayed murdered by their Irish friends servants and tenants or at least present safety and with great confidence put their lives their Wives their Children and all they had into their power But these generally either betrayed them into the hands of other Rebels or most perfidiously destroyed them with their own hands The Priests had now charmed the Irish and laid such bloody impressions in them as it was held according to the maxims they had received a mortall sin to give any manner of relief or protection to any of the English All bonds and tyes of faith and friendship were now broken the Irish Landlords made a prey of their English tenants Irish tenants and servants a Sacrifice of their English Landlords and Masters one neighbour cruelly murdered by another the very Irish children in the very beginning fell to strip and kill English children all other relations were quite cancelled and laid aside and it was now esteemed a most meritorious work in any of them that could by any means or wayes whatsoever bring an Enlish man to the slaughter A work not very difficult to be compassed as things then stood The intermixture of the English among the Irish a main cause of their sudden destruction For they living promiscuously among the British in all parts having from their Priests received the Watchword both for time and place rose up as it were actuated by one and the same spirit in all places of those Counties before mentioned at one and the same point of time and so in a moment fell upon them murdering some stripping only or expelling others out of their habitations This bred such a generall terror and astonishment among the English as they knew not what to think much lesse what to do or which way to turn themselves Their servants were killed as they were ploughing in the fields Husbands cut to pieces in the presence of their Wives their Childrens brains dashed out before their faces others had all their goods and cattell seazed and carried away their houses burnt their habitations laid waste and all as it were at an instant before they could suspect the Irish for their enemies or any wayes imagine that they had it in their hearts or in their
be designed in England to Land at that Port. Whereupon the Lords finding that the said King continued still with Luke Nettervile and those other Gentlemen at Swoords that they carried themselves with such high contumacy as that disdaining to render any obedience to their Warrant they neither made their departure from that place disbanded their men nor so much as pretended to repaire to them according to their commands at the time prefixed therein It was thought high time to take some other course with them And therefore about foure dayes after the day first set down by the Lords for their appearing before them and the very next day after another Proclamation published for their immediate separation the Lords Justices and Councell made this ensuing Order directed to the Earle of Ormond Lievtenant Generall of his Majesties forces in Ireland By the Lords Iustices and Councell William Parsons Io Burlace A Warrant from the Lords Iustices and Councell for the suppressing of the Rebels of the Pale FOrasmuch as divers of the Inhabitants of Clantarfe Raheny and Kilbarrock have declared themselves Rebells and having robbed and spoyled some of his Majesties good Subjects are now assembled thereabouts in Armes in great numbers mustering and training of their Rebellious multitudes to the terror and danger of his Majesties good subjects as well at Land as at Sea which their boldnesse is acted in such manner as to put scornes and affronts upon this State and Government they acting such depredations even before our faces and in our own view as it were in despight of us It is therefore ordered that our very good Lord the Earle of Ormond and Ossory Lievtenant Generall of the Army doe forthwith send out a party of Souldiers of horse and foot to fall upon those Rebels at Clantarfe and thereabouts who in such disdainfull manner stand to out-face and dare us and to endeavour to cut them off as well for punishment as terror to others and to burn and spoyle the Rebels houses and goods And to prevent their further anoying of the shipping going out and comming in and lying in harbour those Souldiers are to bring up or cause to be brought up to the new Crane at Dublin such of the Boats and Vessels now lying there as they can upon the sudden and to burn spoyle and sinke and make unserviceable the rest Given at his Majesties Castle of Dublin December 14. 1641. Ormond Ossory Rob Dillon Cha Lambart Ad Loftus Jo Temple Cha Coote Fran Willoughby According to their Lordships directions the Earle of Ormond gave present order to Sir Charles Coot to march out privately with some Forces unto Clantarfe which he did without any noise and meeting there with no opposition Sir Charls Coot Marches out with some Forces to Clantarfe he only suffered his men to pillage the Town whereof they burnt some part as also part of Mr Kings house in which much of the goods were found that had been taken out of the Bark before mentioned And this was the first expedition that the Forces newly raised in Dublin made after the defeat of the 600 men in their passage to Tredagh As for the Massacre at Santry mentioned in the Answer from the Lords of the Pale The true Relation of the pretended Massacre at Santry and obtruded to the World as a just pretence to deterre them from waiting on the Lords at Dublin it was no other then this Information was given to some of the Officers of the Army that there had been a robbery newly committed by certaine Rebels at the house of one Smith called the Buskin within five miles of the City And that if a Party of Souldiers might be sent forth the Informer offered to bring them upon those Rebels as also upon other Rebels who had lately murdered one Mr Derick Huberts a Dutch Merchant at the Skirries whereupon two Officers with 40 foot were sent out with direction to fall upon those Rebels They went directly to Santry and there finding some strangers with weapons lodged in suspicious places they slew foure of them who as was conceived were criminall Offendours and one of them after upon further enquiry found to be a Protestant But how fairely soever this matter was carried The proceedings held by the Lords and chiefe Gentlemen of the English Pale after they had joyned with the Northern Rebels yet they resolved to make use of it for the present by way of justification of their disloyalty And having so farre publickly declared themselves they held it not fit to sit idle any longer but began to put the whole Circuite of the Pale into a posture of Warre and to make all such preparatives as might enable them by the powerfull assistance they had out of the North presently to take in Tredagh and afterwards to march up to Dublin and there make themselves Masters of that City and Castle A work as now it stood represented unto them not likely to prove lesse glorious then successefull and easie to be atchieved They had for this end many publike meetings among themselves as also with the cheife Comanders of the Northern Rebels In the first place they declared the Lord Viscount Gormanstone Generall of the Forces to be raised in the Pale Hugh Birne Lievtenant Generall the Earle of Fingale Generall of the horse Then they gave power to those Lords to nominate Captaines in severall Baronies to be respectively appointed out of them and likewise to raise souldiers in every such Barony viz. eight souldiers out of a Plowland land which containes according to the ancient estimation 120 Acres and every Plowland to maintaine the Souldiers to be set out by them The Barony of Duleek was assigned to the Lord of Gormanston the Barony of Screene and Desse to the Earle of Fingale the Barony of Slaine to the Lord of Slaine the Barony of the Navan to the Lord of Trimblestone Kells to the Lord Dunsany Ratogh and Dunboine to Sir Richard Barnewall of Crickestown Baronite and Patrick Barnwell of Kilbrew and by these persons severall Captaines were appointed and numbers of Souldiers raised according to the orders set down at the general meeting There were also Warranrs issued out by the Lord Gormanston whereby those persons appointed to raise the men and to furnish them with provisions for their entertainment were required upon paine of death to send them out Other Warrants were likewise sent out to other persons who were appointed Overseers for the threshing out of all the Protestants corne which was assigned generally through the Pale to be applyed towards the maintenance of their Army The next work was to make a constant provision of all manner of necessaries for the entertainment of such Forces as were already brought down out of the North as well as those raised in the Pale and set down at the siege of Tredagh And for this service they sessed the whole Country thereabouts and ordered what proportions of corne and numbers of cattell should be
in small vessels And then that upon landing of their men in Ireland there should be a 100 horse ready to joyn with every 1000 foot that they should send thither And that they should receive Instructions and Orders and in every thing obey the Scotish Generall 〈…〉 These propositions being taken into consideration in the House of Commons after they had duly considered of them and weighed the high necessities of this Kingdome that the Scots had 2500 men ready raised and that they could not so suddenly make provision any other way for the saving Ireland as by sending these Forces out of Scotland they readily condiscended unto them and having voted them severally they sent them up to the House of Peeres with their desires for a speedy concurrence in them These beginnings gave great hopes of the sudden reliefe of Ireland and it was now generally beleived that considerable Forces would be transported within a very short time out of Scotland for the defence of the Northern parts of this Kingdome especially considering with how much earnestnesse his Majesty in his Speech made to the Lords and Commons in Parliament on the 14 of December in this present yeare had pressed them to take to heart the businesse of Ireland and offered unto them whatsover his power paines or industry could contribute to the good and necessary work of reducing the Irish Nation to their true and wonted obedience But alas these great expectations were soone dashed The Forces designed for Ireland retarded and the Forces designed for Ireland as well out of England as Scotland strangely retarded by severall obstructions which daily arose in the transaction of the Irish affaires For first his Majesty in the same Speech wherein he conjured them by all that was deare to him or them to goe on chearefully and speedily for the reducing of Ireland did take notice of a Bill for pressing Souldiers for Ireland depending in the House of Peeres and declaring his dislike of putting it in that way told them he would passe it so were there a salvo jure put into it both for the King and people but withall told them that he thought him selfe little beholding unto him whosoever it was that began this dispute so farre trenching upon the bounds of his ancient and undoubted prerogative These passages in his Majesties Speech were deeply resented not only by the Lords who were more particularly concerned in them but by the House of Commons And therefore his Majesty had no sooner ended his Speech and left their House but that the Lords fell into consideration of the same and resolved that the King by taking notice of the debate in their House of the Bill concerning pressing of Souldiers had broken the fundamentall priviledges of Parliament And presently a Message was brought unto them likewise by Mr Hollis from the House of Commons to desire a conference with their Lordships by Committees of both Houses touching the Priviledges of Parliament At the conference they fully expressed the deep sence they had of the high injury offered unto them by his Majesty in invading their Priviledges and proceeded so farre as to come not only to Petition his Majesty and to desire that hee would be pleased to make known that person who had given him information so unduly of what had passed in their House but also to make a Protestation concerning their Priviledges This took up some time and the great misunderstanding even which then began to appear betwixt his Majesty and the Parliament had so strong an influence into the businesse of Ireland as notwithstanding the high necessities of this Kingdome and the great affections expressed by the Kingdome of England for our sudden reliefe here the resolutions were slow and the preparations went so heavily on as it was long before the House of Commons could finde meanes to enable the Lord Lieutenant to send so much as one Regiment away out of England for the defence of the Castle and City of Dublin then much distressed by the neare approach of the Rebels And now for the Forces to be sent out of Scotland into the Northern Parts of this Kingdome they meet with severall obstructions likewise The debate of the propositions presented by the Scotish Commissioners in the House of Peeres For first the Commissioners of Scotland had not power given them from the State there to Treat for the sending over a lesser number then 10000 men which the Lords here were very unwilling to condiscend unto But this obstacle was soone removed by the zealous affections of the House of Commons who as soone as the Propositions brought in by the Scotish Commissioners for the reliefe of Ireland were presented unto them voted their assent to Treat for the sending of the number of 10000 men out of Scotland according to the instructions given to the Commissioners by that Kingdome and sent up a Message to the House of Peeres by Sir Philip Stapleton Knight to lay before their Lordships the miserable estate of the Kingdome of Ireland and to let them know that the House of Commons conceived the best way for the preservation of it out of the hands of the Rebels was speedily to dispatch the Scots into the Province of Vlster and therefore desired that they would joyn with them in the Propositions received from the Scotish Commissioners Upon the receit of this Message the House of Peeres fell upon the said Proposition and after a long debate it was at length agreed that 10000 Scots should be sent into Ireland if the House of Commons would condiscend that at the same time there might 10000 English men bee as speedily sent likewise thither and thereupon desired a conference with the House of Commons that they might fully understand their resolution therein which being yeelded unto by the House of Commons The Lords at the conference pressed with much earnestnesse that they might be assured of the sending over of 10000 English at the same time that the Scots were to be sent away whereunto the House of Commons replyed that they were not to be capitulated withall that their actions were free as well without conditions as capitulations that they thought they had given sufficient certainty already of their resolution to send that number of English into Ireland and therefore desired that their Lordships would Vote the sending away of 10000 Scots by it selfe without any relation to the English spoken of by them This took up a large debate in the House of Peeres and was one maine cause of the slow proceeding on of the Treaty with the Scotish Commissioners I shall not undertake to determine at so great a distance from whence these obstructions grew but I am very sure wee could here easily finde that there were some such secret workings underhand against the good affections expressed by the House of Commons and by the Lords who were well affected to the service of Ireland as that this Treaty was very much retarded thereby and was not