The English recovered and in 1601 under Mountjoy they finally broke the Gaelic rebellion at Kinsale, after O’Neill had been forced to leave his familiar Ulster territory to link up with a Spanish force which had landed in the south of Ireland. On 4 September, 1607, after continued harassment by Crown officials, many of Ulster’s Gaelic chieftains, including the Earls of Tyrone and Tirconnell, chose voluntary exile and sailed from Rathmullan for Europe. Most of their tenants would have been glad to see them go. This ‘Flight of the Earls’ gave the English government the opportunity to declare their lands forfeit, and some 750,000 acres were confiscated by the Crown.
When the Ulster chieftains fought against the English they were not fighting ‘for Ireland’ in the modern nationalistic sense but in their own interests and to preserve their ancient Gaelic way of life. The very idea of a republican form of government would have been repugnant to the old Irish system of law. In his Life of Hugh O’Neill (1845) the Young Irelander John Mitchel pointed out that: “Furthermore there was, in the 16th century, no Irish nation. Save the tie of a common language, the chieftain of Clan Connal (O’Donnell) had no more connection with the Lord of Clan Carrha (Cork), than either one had with the English Pale. The Anglo-Norman colony was regarded as one of the independent tribes of the island.”
It was at this time that a new provincial configuration of Ireland was effected with four ‘provinces’ divided up into counties. The eastern part of the Kingdom of Breffny (Cavan) was taken from Connaught and placed artificially in Ulster while the northern part of Louth, which had been one of the most ancient parts of Ulster, known originally as Muirtheimne and defended by the legendary hero Cúchulainn, was taken from Ulster and placed artificially into Leinster. The older boundaries were, however, remembered well into the 17th century. It is ironic that today staunch Irish nationalists have lost sight of that ancient demarcation, and instead speak of the new 9 County configuration drawn up by the Queen of England and Ireland’s administrators as if it had existed from time immemorial.
To be continued