Randal MacDonnell, 1st Marquess of Antrim (1645 creation)
Randal MacDonnell | |
---|---|
Marquess of Antrim | |
Tenure | 1636–1683 |
Predecessor | Randal, 1st Earl of Antrim |
Successor | Alexander, 3rd Earl of Antrim |
Born | 1609 |
Died | 3 February 1683 (aged 74) Dunluce, Ireland |
Buried | Bonamargy Friary, Ballycastle |
Spouse(s) | |
Issue
childless | |
Father | Randal, 1st Earl of Antrim |
Mother | Alice O'Neill |
Occupation | chief of Clan MacDonnell, politician, military contractor |
Randal MacDonnell, 2nd Marquess of Antrim (1609–1683) was a Roman Catholic landed magnate in Scotland and Ireland, son of the 1st Earl of Antrim. He was also chief of Clan MacDonnell of Antrim. He is best known for his involvement, mostly on the Royalist side, in the Wars of the Three Kingdoms.
Birth and origins[]
Randal was born on 9 June 1609,[1][2] probably at Dunluce Castle, his parents' habitual residence. He was the eldest son of Randal MacDonnell and his wife, Alice O'Neill. His father, Lord of the Route[3] and Constable of Dunluce Castle, had been knighted by Lord Lieutenant Mountjoy in 1602.[4] His father was an important landowner in the north-eastern corner of the Ireland facing Scotland across the North Channel. His father's family, the MacDonnell of Antrim, were the Irish branch of the Scottish Clan Donald. The MacDonnels descended from the twelfth-century Scottish warlord Somerled and from Alexander MacDonald, 5th of Dunnyveg, a Scottish-Irish magnate, who was driven out of Scotland by James IV and fled to Ulster where the family was already established through a series of marriages. His Scottish lands were taken over by the rival Clan Campbell, although the MacDonalds continued to live there and looked towards the MacDonnell family for leadership. Recovering his Scottish lands remained an objective that his father pursued all his life without ever meeting it.
Randal's mother was described as "of good cheerful aspect, freckled, not tall but strong, well set, and acquainted with the English tongue."[5] She was born in 1583[6][7] as the daughter of Hugh O'Neill, Earl of Tyrone and his second wife, Siobhan (i.e. Joan) O'Donnell.[8][a] She was thus a member of the O'Neill dynasty, an ancient Gaelic family, the leaders of which were once kings and ruled all of Ulster. However, her father had left Ireland in the Flight of the Earls in 1607 and was then attainted by the Irish Parliament, losing his title and lands.[11]
Randal's parents were both Catholic. They had married in 1604 before the Flight of the Earls.[12] Unlike most of the Ulster Catholic elite, the MacDonnells benefited financially from the Plantation of Ulster, which brought large-scale Scottish and English settlement of Northern Ireland. In spite of this, and their good relations with their Protestant neighbours and tenants, the MacDonnell's remained staunch Catholics.
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He appears below as the elder of two brothers:
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Early life[]
On 28 May 1618 Randal's father was created Viscount Dunluce[20] and in 1620 1st Earl of Antrim by King James I of England.[21] By the latter creation Viscount Dunluce became a subsidiary title of the family, which was given as courtesy title to Randal, aged 11, the Earl's eldest son and heir apparent, who was therefore styled Viscount Dunluce.
Although the family was part of an increasingly Anglicised Irish elite, he was exposed to Gaelic culture, Gaelic language, and raised as a staunch Catholic. In 1613, when he was four, an arranged marriage was made for him with Lucy Hamilton, a daughter of James Hamilton, 1st Earl of Abercorn, but the wedding never took place.[22]
France and England[]
In 1625 Dunluce, as he was now, travelled to France to complete his education. After two years there he went to London, where he was presented at the court of Charles I. He was described as "a tall, clean-limbed, handsome man with red hair".[23] Dunluce spent the next ten years in England, with only occasional, brief visits to Ireland. In 1635 he began a career as a military contractor by agreeing to raise two regiments of Irish troops for service in the French army, but the plan was vetoed by the King.[24]
First marriage[]
After abandoning his long-standing fiancée Lucy Hamilton, Dunluce was linked with several other prospective marriages. In 1635 he married Katherine Manners, the widow of George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham,[25] who had been England's Chief Minister under both James I and Charles before his assassination in 1628. The Duchess was a devout Catholic and wealthy. She was close to Queen Henrietta Maria, and further enhanced Dunluce's status at court.[26] He became friends with leading British politicians including the Earl of Nithsdale, the Duke of Lennox and the Duke of Hamilton.
Dunluce planned to acquire large amounts of land in the , but this was blocked by Thomas Wentworth, the Lord Deputy of Ireland, who mistrusted Dunluce and was to become a major opponent of his.[27] Dunluce also made a failed attempt to recover some of the family's traditional lands in the West of the Scotland by purchasing them, but this also fell through.
Dunluce was emotionally very close to his wife, and became stepfather to her children including George Villiers, 2nd Duke of Buckingham. The couple lived a lavish lifestyle, and Dunluce ran up large debts in England which troubled him for the rest of his life.
Earl of Antrim[]
On 10 December 1636 Dunluce's father died in Dunluce Castle and was buried at the Bonamargy Franciscan Friary.[28][29] Dunluce succeeded as the 2nd Earl of Antrim. In his will his father had divided his estate between his two sons. Randal inherited the larger share of the land, consisting of the baronies of Dunluce and Kilconway,[30] whereas Alexander, his younger brother, inherited the Barony of Glenarm.[31]
In an effort to cut down on expenses Lord Antrim, as he was now, and his wife the countess relocated to Ireland in 1638.[32] Antrim set up home in his family's traditional seat of Dunluce Castle as one of the wealthiest men in Ireland. He oversaw nearly 340,000 acres of land, which was mostly sublet to tenant farmers.[33] Along with the family's traditional Scottish followers in the Western Isles, Antrim's tenants provided him with an important power base during the coming wars.
Scottish crisis[]
Antrim Plan[]
Due to his family connections there, Antrim took a strong interest in Scottish politics. By 1638 the King's attempts to introduce religious reforms there had led to protests, the signing of a Covenant and eventually armed resistance by the Protestant inhabitants in the Bishops' Wars. Antrim saw in the developing situation an opportunity both to assist the King and to regain his family's traditional lands in Scotland from his hereditary enemy Archibald Campbell, 1st Marquess of Argyll, who had joined the covenanters.[34] He proposed raising an Irish Catholic army from his tenants in Ulster and then crossing the North Channel to Kintyre and the Western Isles where they could link up with the Scottish MacDonalds, many of whom had refused to sign the covenant.
Antrim's proposed expedition would take place in conjunction with other landings and an invasion by the main English army under Charles. The expedition would divert Covenanter troops away from the King's army while in the process Antrim would be able to recover Kintyre, a peninsula in Western Scotland, for his family. Antrim also tied the project to the fears of the Irish government that the covenanters might invade northern Ireland where they enjoyed strong support amongst the Presbyterian settlers. He suggested that an Irish invasion of Scotland would pre-empt this threat.[35] Nonetheless Wentworth in Dublin was extremely sceptical about the plan. He rejected Antrim's appeals for money, supplies and weapons. Wentworth's refusal was likely due to his own plans for the regular Irish Army to launch a rival invasion from Ireland against Dumbarton and his mistrust of the Earl's motives.[36] Eventually, Wentworth was ordered to assist Antrim by the King.[37]
The growing crisis re-ignited the MacDonald-Campbell feud. In response, Argyll raised troops of his own in Scotland and attacked the MacDonalds who were arming in anticipation of Antrim's invasion, driving many into exile in Ireland. The threatened invasion by Irish Catholics also strengthened support in Scotland for the Covenanters, and further damaged the King's reputation there.[38]
New Irish Army[]
Based in Carrickfergus, Antrim began raising his army from December 1638 although it wasn't until April the following year that he formally received a commission from the King authorising him to do so. Antrim recruited his army from many of the leading Gaelic families of Ulster, but Wentworth blocked a plan to import experienced Irish mercenary officers from Europe to command them. The army was raised separately from the existing standing Irish Army, which was more heavily Protestant. The army was to consist of 5,000 infantry and 200 cavalry.[39]
Assembling the force took longer than expected, and by the time it was ready the First Scottish War had been ended by the Treaty of Berwick (1639). This settled relatively little and was closer to a ceasefire than a final agreement. A second war was widely expected, but Antrim had to postpone and then abandon his expedition. Nonetheless, sporadic fighting continued in western Scotland between local MacDonalds and Campbells.[40] Antrim and Wentworth both blamed the other for the delays with the expedition.
In 1640, the Scottish situation flared up again and the Covenanter Army now launched an invasion of England. Antrim's planned expedition was revived, but this time Wentworth himself oversaw the recruitment of an 8,000-strong "" which assembled at Carrickfergus. Like Antrim's earlier force, the army was made up mainly of Irish Catholics. By this time the Scots had , and were able to agree a favourable peace at the Treaty of Ripon before the Irish army had crossed to Scotland. This effectively left the new Covenanter government intact in Scotland, with Argyll one of its leading figures.
Antrim moved to Dublin during 1640, occasionally attending the Irish House of Lords and generally opposing the policies of Wentworth. In November 1640 Wentworth was recalled to London where he was and ultimately executed.
The future of the New Irish Army became a source of controversy once the Scottish crisis ended, as it was alleged that Charles I intended to ship them to England to enforce his will against the London Parliament with whom he was in dispute. Antrim's exact role remains controversial. He later claimed he was contacted by a messenger named Thomas Bourke, on the King's behalf, and encouraged to stop the New Irish Army from disbanding, to raise its strength to 20,000 and to equip it for operations in England. Antrim worked alongside other Irish supporters of the King such as Ormond and Castlehaven and kept in contact with Charles. Some of the other figures Antrim worked with at the time such as Lord Enniskillen were soon to take part in the Irish Rebellion. As the King's political situation in both England and Scotland seemed to improve in 1641, the need for Irish military intervention lessened. Nonetheless, Antrim worked hard to secure support for the King in Ireland, planning to get the Irish Parliament to declare for the King against the English Parliament should fighting break out in England.[41]
Antrim's plan to use Ireland to solve the King's English problems, was wrecked by the outbreak of the Irish Rebellion in October 1641.[42]
The New Irish Army remained unpaid in the wake of Strafford's execution, and were waiting to be shipped abroad for foreign service.
Irish Rebellion[]
Soon afterwards he returned to Ireland, and sought in 1641 to create a diversion, together with James Butler, 1st Duke of Ormonde, for Charles I against the parliament. He joined in his schemes Lord Slane and Sir Phelim O'Neill, later leaders of the rebellion, but on the outbreak of the Irish Rebellion of 1641 in the autumn he dissociated himself from his allies and retired to his castle at Dunluce (now in Northern Ireland). Although Sir Phelim O'Neill announced in the Proclamation of Dungannon that he had a commission from the King that authorized the rebellion, Antrim remained broadly neutral. He assisted the besieged Protestant garrison during the , persuading his Catholic tenants to abandon the campaign and sending supplies of food to the hard-pressed inhabitants.
His suspicious conduct, however, and his Roman Catholicism, caused him to be regarded as an enemy by the English party. In May 1642 he was captured at Dunluce Castle by the Scottish Covenanter general Robert Monro, and imprisoned at Carrickfergus.[43][44] Escaping thence he joined the queen at York.
In May 1643, having proceeded to Ireland to negotiate a cessation of hostilities between the English Royalists and Irish Catholic rebels, he was again captured with his papers and confined at Carrickfergus, thence once more escaping and making his way to Kilkenny, the headquarters of the Roman Catholic confederation.
He returned to Oxford in December with a scheme for raising 10,000 Irish for service in England and 2000 to join Montrose in Scotland, which through the influence of the duchess of Buckingham secured the consent of the king. On 26 January 1645 Antrim was elevated from Earl to Marquess of Antrim.[45] He returned to Kilkenny in February, took the Irish Confederate oath of association, and was made a member of the council and lieutenant-general of the forces of the Catholic confederacy. The confederacy, however, giving him no support in his projects, he threw up his commission, and with Ormond's help despatched about 1600 men under his kinsman Alasdair MacColla in June to Montrose's assistance in Scotland, sparking a Scottish civil war. Antrim subsequently returned to Oxford and was sent by the king in 1645 with letters for the queen at Saint-Germain-en-Laye.
He proceeded thence to Flanders and fitted out two frigates with military stores, which he brought to the Prince of Wales at Falmouth. He visited Cork and afterwards in July 1646 joined his troops in Scotland, with the hope of expelling Argyll from Kintyre; but he was obliged to retire by order of the king, and returning to Ireland threw himself into the intrigues between the various factions.
Late in 1647 he was appointed with and Geoffrey Browne by the Irish confederacy to negotiate a treaty with the Prince of Wales in France, and though he outmanoeuvered his companions by starting a week before them, he failed to secure the coveted lord-lieutenancy, which was confirmed to Ormond.[46]
Cromwell era[]
He now ceased to support the Roman Catholics or the king's cause; opposed the treaty between Ormond and the confederates; supported the project of union between O'Neill and the parliament; and in 1649 entered into communications with Cromwell, for whom he performed various services during the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland, though there appears no authority to support Carte's story that Antrim was the author of a forged agreement for the betrayal of the king's army by Lord Inchiquin[47] (Calendar State Papers Ireland, 1660–1662, pp. 294, 217; Cal. of Clarendon St. Pap., ii. 69, and Gardiner's Commonwealth, i. 153). Subsequently, he joined Ireton, and was present at the .
He returned to England in December 1650, and in lieu of his confiscated estate received a pension of £500 and later of £800, together with lands in County Mayo.[48]
Restoration[]
After the Restoration of Charles II to the throne in 1660, Antrim went to London to demonstrate his loyalty to the King. Before being able to meet Charles, he was imprisoned in the Tower of London, accused of collaboration with Cromwell and the English Republicans. Antrim was excluded from the Indemnity and Oblivion Act, which offered a pardon for offences that might have been committed during the previous two decades. His long-standing rival Argyll also came to London to swear his loyalty to Charles, and was likewise imprisoned before being taken back to Scotland, tried and executed for treason.[49]
From July 1660 until May 1661 Antrim remained in the Tower. He was investigated by the new Royalist authorities for several offences, particularly allegations that he had taken part in the 1641 Irish Rebellion and that he had publicly suggested Charles I had secret involvement with the rising. He was also accused of a variety of other crimes including specific charges of his dealings with Ireton and other Republican officers during the Irish campaigns. Although all but the first of these accusations were essentially true, Antrim was eventually released without being charged.[50]
Later life[]
Despite being cleared, he still faced serious battles to recover his Irish estates. He had to prove that he was innocent of any involvement in the Irish rebellion.
Subsequently, being called before the lords justice in Ireland, In 1663 he succeeded, despite Ormond's opposition, in securing a decree of innocence from the commissioners of claims. This raised an outcry from the adventurers who had been put in possession of his lands, and who procured a fresh trial; but Antrim appealed to the king, and through the influence of the queen mother obtained a pardon, his estates being restored to him by the Irish Act of Explanation in 1665[51][52]
Antrim was described by Clarendon as "of handsome appearance but of excessive pride and vanity and of a marvellous weak and narrow understanding." He married secondly Rose, daughter of Sir Henry O'Neill, but had no children, being succeeded in the earldom by his brother Alexander, 3rd Earl of Antrim.[53]
Death and timeline[]
Lord Antrim died on 3 February 1683. He had married twice but both marriages were childless.[54] The marquessate became extinct and Randal was therefore the first and last Marquess of Antrim of the 1645 creation. His brother Alexander succeeded him in the earldom as the 3rd Earl of Antrim.[55]
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Notes, citations, and sources[]
Notes[]
- ^ In the Dictionary of National Biography (DNB), Dunlop (1898) claims that Alice is a daughter of Hugh's fourth wife, but this seems impossible as her birth date falls into the time of Hugh's second marriage.[9] In the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, an update to the DNB, Canny (2004) mentions neither Alice nor Randall MacDonnell.[10]
- ^ Also see the list of siblings in the text.
Citations[]
- ^ Webb 1878a, p. 310, left column, line 9: "... [Randal] is stated to have been born 9th Jube 1609."
- ^ Jump up to: a b Lodge 1789, p. 207: "Randal, the second earl of Antrim, was born in the year 1609 ..."
- ^ Cokayne 1910, p. 174, line 16: "Randal Mac Sorley Mac Donnell of Dunluce, co. Antrim, 2nd but 1st surv.s. and h. of Sorley Boy Mac Donnell, Lord of the Route ..."
- ^ Cokayne 1910, p. 174, line 21: "He was knighted, 13 May 1602 by the Lord Deputy Mountjoy ..."
- ^ Webb 1878b, p. 416, right column, line 23: as quoted
- ^ Webb 1878b, p. [ 416, right column, line 20]: "Hugh's daughter Alice, born in 1583, married Sir Randal MacDonnell (1st Earl of Antrim)."
- ^ Cokayne 1910, p. 174, line 34: "[Alice] was living 19 Aug. 1663, and then aged 80."
- ^ Cokayne 1910, p. 174, line 29: "He [the 1st Earl] m. 1604 Alice, da. of Hugh (O'Neill), Earl of Tyrone [I. [Ireland]] by his 2nd wife, Johanna, da. of Hugh McManus O'Donnell"
- ^ Dunlop 1895, p. 196, right column, line 4: "She [Hugh's 4th wife] was the mother of ... several daughters, one of whom married Sir Randal MacDonnell, first earl of Antrim ..."
- ^ Canny 2004, p. 839, left column, line 19: "Dungannon [i.e. Hugh] formed further strategic alliances within Gaelic Ulster by negotiating marriages for ... his various daughters ..."
- ^ Meehan 1870, p. 402: "But the grand object for which this parliament met was not achieved till October 1614, when Sir John Everard ... brought in a bill for confiscating the vast territories of the fugitive earls ..."
- ^ Burke & Burke 1909, p. 104, left column, line 30: "His Lordship [the 1st Earl] m. [married] 1604, Alice, dau. of Hugh O'Neill, Earl of Tyrone, and had issue."
- ^ Debrett 1828, p. 688, line 34: "... Alexander, 3rd Earl, who d. 1699, leaving issue ..."
- ^ Jump up to: a b Ohlmeyer 2004, p. 307: "... and six sisters (Anne, Mar, Sarah, Catherine, Rose, and Ellis)."
- ^ Lodge 1789, p. 207, line 12: "Daughter Lady Ann, was first married to Christopher, Lord Delvin; and secondly to William Fleming, Baron of Slane ..."
- ^ Lodge 1789, p. 207, line 15: "Lady Mary, first in 1605 to Lucas, the second Viscount Dillon; and secondly to Oliver, the sixth Lord Louth."
- ^ Lodge 1789, p. 207, line 17: "Lady Sarah, first to Neile-Oge O'Neill of Killileagh in the county of Antrim, Esq. (son of Neile Mac-Hugh O'Neile, who, in Q.Elizabeth's wars in Ireland, was slain in the service of the Crown) by whom she had Henry O'Neile, born in 1625, and other children; secondly to Sir Charles O'Conor Sligo, Knt., who died at Sligo 14 May 1634, without issue; and thirdly to Donald Mac-Carthy More, Prince of his sept in the Province of Munster."
- ^ Lodge 1789, p. 207, line 25: "Lady Catherine, in 1639, to Edward Plunket, of Scatlecor, Esq. son and heir to Patrick, Lord Dunsany."
- ^ Lodge 1789, p. 207, line 27: "Lady Rose, to Colonel Gordon, who commanded a regiment in Major-General Robert Munroe's army in the North."
- ^ Jump up to: a b Cokayne 1910, p. 174, line 23: "On 28 May 1618 he was cr. Viscount Dunluce, co. Antrim [I. [Ireland]] ..."
- ^ Jump up to: a b Cokayne 1910, p. 174, line 25: "... on 12 Dec. 1620 he [Randal McSorley] was cr. [created] Earl of Antrim [I. [Ireland]] ..."
- ^ Paul 1904, p. 48, line 15: "Lucy or Lucrece, contracted by her father, when very young, to Randal, Lord Dunluce, afterwards Marquess of Antrim, but he not abiding by the contract, she never married; and by letters from Whitehall, 28 October 1627, the Earl of Antrim was ordered to pay £3000 to James, Earl of Abercorn for his son's failure to implement the contract."
- ^ Ohlmeyer 2004, p. 307, line 27: "In the spring of 1627 as Viscount Dunluce—described as 'a tall, clean-limbed, handsome man with red hair'"
- ^ Ohlmeyer 2001, p. 28.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Ohlmeyer 2004, p. 307"Undauntedly he married in April 1635, Katharine Villiers (née Manners), duchess of Buckingham (1603?–1649) ..."
- ^ Ohlmeyer 2012, p. 216, line 3: "The second earl of Antrim's marriage to the duke of Buckingham's widow brought him the patronage of Charles I himself, together with that of the queen and William Laud, the Archbishop of Canterbury ..."
- ^ Ohlmeyer 2001, pp. 55–60.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Burke & Burke 1909, p. 104, left column, line 41: "The [1st] Earl d. [died] 10 Dec. 1636, and was s. [succeeded] by his elder son ..."
- ^ Hill 1873, p. 246, line 9: "He died at Dunluce at the 10th of December, 1636, and his body, after lying for some time in state, was buried in the vault which he had built at Bunnamairge in 1621 ... "
- ^ Hill 1873, p. 246, line 24: "His elder son, Randal, got the baronies of Dunluce and Kilconway,"
- ^ Hill 1873, p. 247: "His younger son, Alexander, was bequeathed the barony of Glenarm,"
- ^ Ohlmeyer 2001, pp. 72–73.
- ^ Ohlmeyer 2001, pp. 33–48.
- ^ Stevenson 1981, p. 22: "The suggestion that Ireland could play a part in reducing the covenanters to obedience came first from the earl of Antrim who hoped (by thus helping the king) to regain former MacDonald lands in the Highlands and Isles that had fallen into the hands of the Campbells."
- ^ Stevenson 1981, p. 23: "Antrim would thus command an invasion of the Western Highlands by part of the Irish army and his own MacDonald forces, which would prevent the covenanters from drawing forces from this area to the border to oppose invasion from England."
- ^ Ohlmeyer 2001, pp. 81–82.
- ^ Ohlmeyer 2001, p. 83.
- ^ Stevenson 1981, p. 24: "And it was not only Campbells who were turned against the king by the news of Antrim's invasion plan; many other Scots were appalled that the king was ready to send an army of 'Irish' papists under a Catholic commander against good protestants."
- ^ Ohlmeyer 2001, pp. 82–85.
- ^ Ohlmeyer 2001, pp. 94.
- ^ Ohlmeyer 2001, pp. 96–99.
- ^ Ohlmeyer 2001, p. 99.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Webb 1878a, p. 310, left column, line 32: "In 1642, on the plea that some of his tenants had been engaged in the war, Munro seised his person and plundered Dunluce."
- ^ Gilbert 1879, p. (33): "... he [Munroe] seissed on the earle's bodie, plunders all the house, left a garrison of hise owne there, and the earle in the nature of a prisoner for some fewe weekes, and after caried his lordship to Carrigfergus, where he was close prisoner ..."
- ^ Jump up to: a b Cokayne 1910, p. 175, line 4: "... by Royal warrant dat. at Oxford 26 Jan. 1644/5, was cr. Marquess of Antrim [I. [Ireland]] ..."
- ^ Hill 1873, p. 274, footnote 53: "Towards the close of the year 1647, the Catholics met in Kilkenny, and agreed that, as all access to the captive king was forbidden, they would invite the prince his son to come to Ireland ... The commissioners appointed were the marquess of Antrim, lord Muskerry, and Mr. Geoffrey Browne."
- ^ Carte 1851, p. 509: "Something must be observed to explain the affair here mentioned between Antrim and Inchiquin ..."
- ^ Yorke 1910, p. 152, right column, line 32: "He returned to England in December 1650, and in lieu of his confiscated estate received a pension of £500 and later of £800, together with lands in Mayo."
- ^ Ohlmeyer 2001, p. 260.
- ^ Ohlmeyer 2001, pp. 258–259.
- ^ Yorke 1910, p. 152, right column, line 43: "... Antrim appealed to the king and through the influence of the queen mother obtained a pardon, his estates being restored to him by the Irish Act of Explanation in 1665."
- ^ Hallam 1872, p. 396, line 15: "Notwithstanding the rigorous proofs nominally exacted, more of the Irish were pronounced to be innocent than the commons had expected; and the new possessors having the sway of that assembly, a clamour was rised ..."
- ^ Yorke 1910, p. 152, right column, line 48: "He married secondly Rose MacDonnell, Marchioness of Antrim, daughter of Sir Henry O'Neill, but had no children, being succeeded in the earldom by his brother Alexander, 3rd Earl of Antrim."
- ^ Debrett 1828, p. 688: "... [Randal MacDonnell] was twice married but d. without issue 3 Feb. 1682."
- ^ Jump up to: a b Burke & Burke 1909, p. 104, left column, line 49: "He [the 1st Marquess] d. [died] 3 Feb. 1682, when the marquessate expired, but the other honours devolved on his brother ..."
- ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 44, line 16: "Charles I. ... acc. 27 Mar. 1625 ..."
- ^ Asch 2004, p. 146, right column, line 23: "Wentworth was appointed lord deputy on 12 January 1632 ..."
- ^ Gardiner 1904, p. 215: "On the 28th [October 1640] the Great Council was gathered together for the last time, to advise on the acceptance or rejection of the compact made at Ripon. Even Strafford did not venture to recommend the latter course now. The King's assent was therefore given ..."
- ^ Burke 1866, p. 577, left column, line 3: "He [Strafford] suffered death with characteristic firmness on Tower Hill, 12 May 1641."
- ^ Warner 1768, p. 6: "... the twenty-third October [1641] ... seized all the towns, castles, and houses belonging to the Protestants which they had force enough to possess;"
- ^ Coffey 1914, p. 152, line 16: "... [Rinuccini] landed at Kenmare October, 21st [1645]."
- ^ Duffy 2002, p. 114: "When the latter [O'Neill] scored a surprise victory at Benburn, on 5 June 1646, over the Ulster Scots led by General Robert Munro, it seemed that the confederates were in sight of victory ..."
- ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 44, line 17: "Charles I. ... exec. 30 Jan. 1649 ..."
- ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 44, line 39: "Charles II. ... acc. 29 May 1660 ..."
Sources[]
- Asch, Ronald G. (2004). "Wentworth, Thomas, first earl of Strafford (1593–1641)". In Matthew, Colin; Harrison, Brian (eds.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. 56. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 142–157. ISBN 978-0-1986-1408-1.
- Burke, Bernard (1866). A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire (New ed.). London: Harrison. OCLC 11501348.
- Burke, Bernard; Burke, Ashworth P. (1909). A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Peerage and Baronetage, the Privy Council, Knightage and Companionage (71st ed.). London: Harrison. OCLC 28297274. (for Antrim)
- Canny, Nicholas (2004). "O'Neill, Hugh [Aodh O'Neill], second earl of Tyrone (1583–1616)". In Matthew, Colin; Harrison, Brian (eds.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. 41. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 851–856. ISBN 0-19-861391-1.
- Carte, Thomas (1851) [1st pub. 1736]. The Life of James Duke of Ormond. 3 (New ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. OCLC 1086656347. – 1643 to 1660
- Coffey, Diarmid (1914). O'Neill and Ormond – A Chapter of Irish History. Dublin: Maunsel & Company. OCLC 906164979.
- Cokayne, George Edward (1910). Gibbs, Vicary (ed.). The complete peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, extant, extinct, or dormant. 1 (2nd ed.). London: St Catherine Press. OCLC 228661424. – Ab-Adam to Basing
- Debrett, John (1828). Peerage of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. 2 (17th ed.). London: F. C. and J. Rivington. OCLC 54499602. – Scotland and Ireland
- Duffy, Seán (2002). The Illustrated History of Ireland. New York: Contemporary Books. ISBN 0-8092-2437-2.
- Dunlop, Robert (1895). "O'Neill, Hugh, third Baron of Dungannon and second Earl of Tyrone 1540?–1616". In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. 42. New York: MacMillan and Co. pp. 188–196. OCLC 8544105.
- Fryde, E. B.; Greenway, D. E.; Porter, S.; Roy, I., eds. (1986). Handbook of British Chronology. Royal Historical Society Guides and Handbooks, No. 2 (3rd ed.). London: Offices of the Royal Historical Society. ISBN 0-86193-106-8. (for timeline)
- Gardiner, Samuel Rawson (1904). History of England from the Accession of James I to the Outbreak of the Civil War. 9. London: Longmans, Green & Co. OCLC 559091724. – 1639 to 1641
- Gilbert, John Thomas, ed. (1879). A Contemporary History of Affairs in Ireland from 1641 to 1652. 1. Dublin: Irish Archeological and Celtic Society. OCLC 831383411. – 1641 to 1648 (Aphorismical Discovery)
- Hallam, Henry (1872). Constitutional Historical of England. 3 (New ed.). London: John Murray. OCLC 834522161.
- Hill, Rev. George (1873). An Historical Account of the MacDonnells of Antrim. Belfast: Archer & Sons. OCLC 1046037789.
- Lodge, John (1789). Archdall, Mervyn (ed.). The Peerage of Ireland or, A Genealogical History of the Present Nobility of that Kingdom. 1. Dublin: James Moore. OCLC 264906028. – Blood royal, dukes, earls (for Antrim)
- Meehan, Rev. Charles Patrick (1870). The Fate and Fortunes of Hugh O'Neill, Earl of Tyrone. and Rory O'Donel, Earl of Tyconnel; their Flight from Ireland and Death in Exile (2nd ed.). Dublin: James Duffy. OCLC 17958027.
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- Ohlmeyer, Jane H. (2004). "MacDonnell, Randal, 1st Marquess of Antrim (1609–1683)". In Matthew, Colin; Harrison, Brian (eds.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. 35. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 307–310. ISBN 0-19-861385-7.
- Ohlmeyer, Jane H. (2012). Making Ireland English: The Irish Aristocracy in the Seventeenth Century. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-11834-6. – (Preview)
- Paul, Sir James Balfour (1904). The Scots Peerage, Founded on Wood's Edition of Sir Robert Douglas's Peerage of Scotland. 1. Edinburgh: David Douglas. OCLC 505064285. – Abercorn to Balmerino
- Stevenson, David (1981). Scottish Covenanters and Irish Confederates. Belfast: Ulster Historical Foundation. ISBN 1-903688-46-9. – Preview
- Warner, Ferdinand (1768). History of the Rebellion and Civil-War in Ireland. 1. Dublin: James William. OCLC 82770539. – 1641 to 1643
- Webb, Alfred (1878a). "MacDonnell, Randal, 2nd Earl and Marquess of Antrim". Compendium of Irish Biography. Dublin: M. H. Gill & Son. p. 310. OCLC 122693688.
- Webb, Alfred (1878b). "O'Neill, Hugh, Earl of Tyrone". Compendium of Irish Biography. Dublin: M. H. Gill & Son. pp. 410–416. OCLC 122693688.
- Yorke, Philip Chesney (1910). "Antrim, Randal MacDonnell". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. 2 (11th ed.). New York: The Encyclopædia Britannica Company. p. 152. OCLC 43740094.
Further reading[]
- Gilbert, John Thomas, ed. (1882a). History of the Irish Confederation and the War in Ireland 1641–1643. 1 (limited to two hundred copies ed.). Dublin: Printed for the editor by M. H. Gill & Son. OCLC 220683699. – History based on Richard Bellings memoirs
- Meehan, Rev. Charles Patrick (1882). The Confederation of Kilkenny (New revised and enlarged ed.). Dublin: James Duffy. OCLC 224157081.
- Hibernia Anglicana, by R. Cox (1689–1690) esp. app. xlix. vol. ii. 206
- Thomason Tracts (Brit. Mus.), E 59 (18), 149 (12), 138 (7), 153 (19), 61 (23)
- Murder will out, or the King's Letter justifying the Marquess of Antrim (1689)
- Hist. MSS. Comm. SerieS-- MSS. of Marq. of Ormonde.
- People of the Irish Confederate Wars
- 1609 births
- 1683 deaths
- Marquesses of Antrim