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The Battle of Clontibret (1595) was fought in modern County Monaghan in Ulster in northern Ireland during the Nine Years War, between the crown forces of Queen Elizabeth and the rebel army of Hugh O'Neill, 3rd Earl of Tyrone. It ended in victory for Tyrone, and was the first severe set-back suffered by the English during the war. Monaghan (Irish: Contae Muineachán) is a county in the Republic of Ireland. ...
Ulster (Irish: Cúige Uladh, IPA: ) is one of the four provinces of Ireland. ...
The Nine Years War in Ireland took place from 1594 to 1603 and is also known as Tyrones Rebellion. ...
Elizabeth I (7 September 1533 â 24 March 1603 ) was Queen of England and Queen of Ireland from 17 November 1558 until her death. ...
Aodh Mór à Néill (anglicised as Hugh ONeill), (c. ...
Background
The opening campaigns of the Nine Years War centred on English attempts to maintain a string of garrisons along the southern border of the O'Neill's territory in Ulster. The rebel leader promptly besieged the English garrison at Monaghan castle, and Sir Henry Bagenal, commander of the English forces, marched out to its relief on the 25th of May (June 4 New Style) from Dundalk, via Newry. His army was made up of 1,750 troops, including some veterans and certain companies newly arrived from the Spanish campaign in Brittany, but there were many recruits in the ranks. Bagenal's men were predominantly infantry, armed with muskets and pikes; there was also a small number of horsemen raised in the Pale. Dundalk (Irish: Dún Dealgan) is the county town of County Louth in the Republic of Ireland, close to the border with Northern Ireland. ...
Traditional coat of arms This article is about the historical duchy and French province, as well as the cultural area of Brittany. ...
The Pale or the English Pale comprised a region in a radius of 20 miles around Dublin which the English in Ireland gradually fortified against incursion from Gaels. ...
The Battle The Battle of Clontibret was essentially a two day running fight, as Bagenal's column was ambushed on its way to and from Monaghan town. Monaghan (Muineachán in Irish) is a town in the Republic of Ireland, the administrative capital of County Monaghan. ...
The Irish fought sharply along the roads about Crossdall, around 4 miles (6.5 km) from Monaghan, firing on the English column with calivers (light muskets) from the surrounding woodland. However, they did not come to "push of pike" or hand to hand combat, and with the loss of 12 dead and 30 wounded the English reached the castle, which was re-supplied and reinforced with one company. Bagenal had misgivings about his supply of powder and lead, much of which had been used on the way, and could afford little enough for the garrison before starting back. The caliver was a firearm used in the 16th century. ...
Muskets and bayonets aboard the frigate Grand Turk The word musket also means a male sparrowhawk. ...
Two days later, on the 27th of May, Bagenal set out for Newry in a column, but by another route, past the townland of Clontibret and through Drumlin country, which abounded with hills, bogs and woods, making it ideal for an ambush. His force came under fire from the outset but fell into a major ambush at a pass near Clontibret. O'Neill's army - about 4000 strong - consisted of contingents from the O'Neill, MacMahon and Maguire clans, as well as Scottish mercenaries. He also deployed a greatly enlarged force of cavalry and musketeers (caliver-men). To Bagenal's puzzlement, the musketeers were turned out in red coats and acquitted themselves with expertise. Caliver fire from the flanks was fierce, and many English troops were killed or fell wounded while the Irish cavalry played around the fringes. O'Neill himself was almost killed in hand to hand combat with a Palesman named Seagrave, who led a cavalry charge on the Irish position. Seagrave had his arm chopped off by O'Neill's standard bearer O'Cahan, and was killed by O'Neill with a dagger thrust to the groin. Newry (Irish: Iúr Chinn Trá) is the fourth largest city in Northern Ireland, and ninth in all-Ireland. ...
Drumlin in Cato, New York A drumlin (Gaelic druim the crest of a hill) is an elongated whale-shaped hill formed by glacial action. ...
Bagenal's column was slowed to a painful crawl and, as night fell in the wilderness, the commander called his men to a halt and camped at a hilltop called Ballymacowen. It seemed that hundreds were missing, and there was tremendous fear that O'Neill would renew the attack under cover of darkness. No further assault was made, and a little after first light reinforcements from Newry arrived to relieve the column.
Aftermath According to intelligence received in the days following, O'Neill's failure to follow up had been caused by a lack of powder - ironic, given the state of Bagenal's own supplies - but the overall sense in government was of disquiet, and a bad job was made of hushing up the casualty figures. This of course gave fuel to the rumours of a severe defeat, and many people set greater store on the numbers put about by rebel supporters. Sir Ralph Lane, the muster-master-general, informed the queen's principal secretary, Lord Burghley, that "more men were hurt and killed in that late service than was convenient to declare". The casualty figures for both sides vary depending on sources. Bagenal admitted only 31 killed and 109 wounded on the second day of fighting, but his losses were almost certainly higher. The Irish annals claimed up to 700 English killed. Estimates of the rebel losses vary between 100 to 400 killed. Sir Ralph Lane (~1530 - 1603) was an English explorer of the Elizabethan era. ...
William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley (13 September 1521â4 August 1598), was an English politician, the chief advisor of Queen Elizabeth I for most of her reign (17 November 1558â24 March 1603), and Lord High Treasurer from 1572. ...
Three years later, Bagenal led another English force into an ambush of O'Neill's, at the battle of the Yellow Ford. On that occasion, he was killed and his command destroyed. Battle of the Yellow Ford - Wikipedia /**/ @import /skins/monobook/IE50Fixes. ...
References - G.A. Hayes McCoy, Irish Battles, Belfast 1989. ISBN 0-86281-250-X
- Cyril Falls Elizabeth's Irish Wars (1950; reprint London, 1996). ISBN 0094772207.
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