|
|
The Curse of Cromwell
On 15 August 1649 Oliver Cromwell landed
at Ringsend, near Dublin, with an army of 3,000 battle-hardened Ironsides. The
civil war in England had ended, and King Charles I had been executed seven
months earlier. In Ireland, however, the Roman Catholics had been in revolt
since 1641 and held much of the island. They had generally taken the King's
side, though some had seen in England's turmoil a chance to restore Irish
independence. Cromwell entered Dublin as "lord lieutenant and general for the
parliament of England". A fanatical Protestant, he intended to offer no quarter
to papist rebels who had massacred English and Scottish settlers. In Ireland,
he could use confiscated land to pay off debts to his troops and to the
so-called "Adventurers" who had financed the parliamentary cause.
From Dublin Cromwell marched north to
Drogheda, which was defended by an English Catholic and royalist, Sir Arthur
Aston. When his surrender demand was ignored, Cromwell stormed the city and
ordered the death of every man in the garrison, describing this as "a righteous
judgment of God upon these barbarous wretches". The nearby garrisons of Dundalk
and Trim took flight. Having secured the route to Ulster, Cromwell turned on
the south eastern port of Wexford, this time slaughtering townspeople and
garrison alike. Neighbouring towns quickly submitted.
Cromwell's campaign ended with an
assault on Clonmel where, after stout resistance, the defenders withdrew by
night. In May 1650 he returned to England, leaving his son-in-law, Henry
Ireton, in command. Within two years Catholic resistance was at an end. Many
Irish soldiers were allowed to seek their fortunes in Europe. Catholic
land-owners were largely dispossessed, but some were given the option of
settling on less fertile land in Connacht. Cromwell himself had been in Ireland
a mere nine months, but his brutality left an indelible impression on the
native Irish. "The curse of Cromwell on you" became an Irish oath.
The rebellion of 1641 had made an equal
impression on the Protestant settlers in Ulster. The plantation of Ulster had
been entrusted to three classes of land-owner. From England and Scotland came
"undertakers", who were required to bring in their tenants. Secondly, there
were "servitors", who had served the Crown in Ireland, and who were allowed to
take Irish tenants as well as newcomers. Finally, some native Irish were
allowed to own land, if they were deemed trustworthy and agreed to adopt
English farming practices. In the event, too few immigrants were attracted to
Ireland, and the undertakers found they had to accept Irish tenants. This
intermingling of the two religious groups was to prove a dangerous cocktail.
The worsening conflict between King and
parliament in England encouraged the native Irish to seek to recapture their
forfeited lands. They were also impelled by a fear that if the Puritans
triumphed in England, the Catholic religion would be suppressed. On 23 October
1641 a series of uprisings in Ulster spread panic among the Protestant
settlers. Those who were not killed by the rebels fled for safety into the
defended towns, where plague and starvation soon took their toll. Modern
historians suggest that first accounts of the rebellion exaggerated the number
of deaths and the extent of atrocities committed by the native Irish. Wherever
the truth lies, the rebellion created in Protestant minds a distrust of their
Catholic neighbours which has survived to modern times.
The hostilities gradually spread
throughout Ireland, and in 1642 a Catholic government was formed in Kilkenny.
The rebels found an experienced commander in Owen Roe O'Neill, nephew of Hugh
O'Neill, who won a famous victory at Benburb in 1646. However, the Catholic
cause was always prone to internal dissension, and O'Neill died before he could
test his generalship against Cromwell.
|