Calvagh O'Donnell
Calvagh O'Donnell Calbhach Ó Domhnaill | |
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Shane O'Neill – a dispute that involved the intervention of the English government in Ireland on Calvagh's side.
LifeCalvagh O'Donnell was the eldest son of Manus O'Donnell by his first wife, Joan O'Reilly.[1][2] In the course of a quarrel with his father and his half-brother Hugh, Calvagh sought aid in Scotland from the Campbells, who with access to Scottish royal artillery were able to assist him in deposing Manus and securing the now very divided lordship of Tyrconnell for himself.[3] Hugh then appealed to Shane O'Neill, chief of the neighbouring O'Neill dynasty, to restore him at Calvagh's expense. Shane accordingly invaded Tyrconnell at the head of a large army in 1557, desiring to make himself supreme throughout Ulster, and encamped on the shore of Lough Swilly.[3] Calvagh, acting apparently on the advice of his father, who was his prisoner and who remembered the successful night attack on Conn O'Neill, 1st Earl of Tyrone, at Knockavoe in 1522, surprised the O'Neills in their camp at night and routed them with the loss of all their spoils.[3] Calvagh had at least two marriages, both reflecting his family's alliance with the Earls of Argyll. By 1555,[4] and perhaps as early as 1540,[5] Calvagh was married to a daughter of the 4th Earl of Argyll[6] whose name may have been Janet and who may have been the mother of his son, Conn.[7][8] By 30 May 1561 Calvagh was married to his last wife, Catherine Maclean, widow of the 4th Earl.[9] ![]() Calvagh was then recognized by the English government as lord of Tyrconnell; In 1566 Sir Henry Sidney by the queen's orders marched to Tyrconnell and restored Calvagh to his rights.[3] On 26 October, in the midst of his cavalry, Calvagh suddenly fell dead from his horse on the public road between Baile-aghaidh-chaoin and the church of Rath.[11][2] As his son Conn was a prisoner in the hands of Shane O'Neill, his half-brother Hugh MacManus was inaugurated The O'Donnell in his place. Hugh, who in the family feud with Calvagh had allied himself with O'Neill, now turned round and combined with the English to crush the hereditary enemy of his family; and in 1567 he utterly routed Shane at the battle of Farsetmore near Letterkenny with the loss of 1300 men, compelling him to seek refuge with the MacDonnells of Antrim, by whom he was treacherously put to death.[3]
DescendantsIn 1592 Hugh abdicated in favour of his son Williamite war in Ireland, afterwards deserting to the side of William III, from whom he accepted a pension.[3]
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