To write about violence in the 1641 Irish rising is to enter a historiographical and political minefield. Almost from the outset of the rising, the violence became the focus of debate. Employing early modern variants of the familiar language of the mob, Old English Confederate activists and apologists sought to blame ‘the rascal multitude’ and to locate their involvement in the politics (such as it was) of class. During the rising and in the near-contemporary histories that followed it, ‘the cultivated’, as Toby Barnard notes, ‘disowned the cruelties of their compatriots’.Footnote 1 Paradoxically, the New English administration and Protestant ‘histories’ also subscribed to a concept of the politics of the ‘many-headed monster’. But, attributing popular violence to Catholic cruelty and Irish bloodlust, they blamed a Catholic elite for leading or licensing the mob. This consensus has seen histories of the period continue to reproduce contemporary prejudice as fact. According to a 2008 book on seventeenth-century Ireland, the popular revolt ‘was a spontaneous, uncontrolled and sometimes murderous outburst by the lower classes of native society’.Footnote 2 When married with the familiar, but for Ireland more acute problem of locating sources to write histories of the early modern crowd, this helps to explain the limited work on patterns of popular protest before the eighteenth century and almost nothing on the possibilities of a popular politics either before or during the 1641 Rising. But recent work has begun to address this absence, opening up the possibility of recovering patterns of protest against which to re-assess the potentially rich evidence of popular violence to be found in the 1641 depositions.Footnote 3 This article seeks to contribute to that welcome development, offering a micro-historical analysis of popular violence in Galway in early 1642.
I
The 1641 depositions offer rich possibilities.Footnote 4 Their numbers alone — it has been estimated that there are some 8,000 depositions — offer a striking contrast to the pre-1641 record where the absence or near-absence of many classes of documentation means that evidence of earlier crowd actions and popular violence is thin and patchy. The depositions have been the focus of fine and, given the scale of the records, heroic work by both academic and local historians.Footnote 5 Much of this work continues to be marked by a concern to reassess the historical record of theft and violence, and to rescue it from the political uses to which the depositions were put from the outset, with the early selections in the contemporaneous ‘histories’ published by the English parliament's authority.Footnote 6
But despite the promise of the 1641 depositions, there remain problems of interpretation. The depositions were drafted from notes taken in response to interrogatories, which do not always survive but whose list of priorities, reflecting the shifting focus of successive commissions, constrained what might be deposed.Footnote 7 Where there were apparently no interrogatories to structure the depositions, the unstated agenda and attitudes shared by New English commissioners and deponents towards ‘Irish’ rebels doubtless influenced what was said and how it was recorded. Because of this, recent, often interdisciplinary, work has worried about the consequences of the power-saturated context within which ‘speech’ was produced and, therefore, about the relationship between text and event. In the recording of words spoken there is the problematic question of the slippage in reported speech between what was asked, what was (allowed to be) said and what was recorded, and in whose words.Footnote 8 These problems are, of course, most evident with the examinations embedded in the 1641 depositions, but taken in the early 1650s to be used by the High Court of Justice and by the Cromwellian delinquency commission.Footnote 9 Although Irish Catholics were more likely to be found testifying (sometimes for their lives) in the records of the 1652 commissions, the voices to be heard in the 1641 depositions were overwhelmingly Protestant and English. Speech, then, was mediated in the 1641 depositions by the structures of power (and their shifting agendas), and by issues of gender, ethnicity, social status (on which too little has yet been done) and confessional identities.
With notable exceptions, depositions dealing with violent acts can be surprisingly terse, especially when deponents were testifying from hearsay. Many, perhaps most, depositions describe violence as an immediate act — a stabbing or a killing — rather than narrating the episode as an event or detailing the interactions that led to the violence. Even when the depositions apparently offer more detailed descriptions of the violence, there is a slippage between textualised reporting and the complexity of the event itself. Few, if any, hint at the pre-existing relationship(s) between victim(s) and attacker(s) predating the outbreak of the rising that might help to explain the selection and treatment of victims.Footnote 10 Recovering the backstory to violence and contextualising acts of violence is rendered more difficult for early modern Ireland, given the well-known problem of the unevenness and thinness of sources, a product of both the 1922 destruction of much of the national archive and the relative underdevelopment of record-creating and record-keeping state institutions, especially in the provinces.
All this presents a problem perhaps more pressing than has yet been recognised in evaluating the evidence the 1641 depositions provide of violence. Rendering violence as an act suggests an immediacy of violence that has subtle (and not so subtle) consequences for its representation within the depositions. This is compounded by the other powerful trope of anti-popery that represented Catholics as inherently treacherous and cruel. Framed or read within the racialised trope of the ‘wild and barbarous Irish’, this could serve to render redundant any further need to explain the violence.Footnote 11
This article explores these problems by seeking to contextualise two episodes of violence at Galway in March and April 1642. It exploits the multiple accounts these events created within the 1641 depositions in a relatively resource-rich urban context to reveal the complex histories and politics that might lie behind the immediate act of violence. The episodes of violence in Galway were the focus of subsequent investigation, with testimonies taken in the 1640s and again in the 1650s. These offer multiple perspectives on the episodes from victims and eyewitnesses but, it should be noted, from only a few of the accused and almost none of the bulk of the town's population.Footnote 12 From January 1642, the remit of the Commission for the Despoiled Subjects included investigation of killings.Footnote 13 This, together with the evident use of interrogatories and the focus in the 1652 commissions on identifying and prosecuting those guilty of murder and massacre, tightly structured the focus of the evidence recorded.Footnote 14 In particular, as Aidan Clarke has noted, many of the examinations taken about Galway in the 1650s were structured by the attempt to implicate in the murders Patrick Darcy, the Galway lawyer and a leading figure in the Confederate government.Footnote 15
The evidence from the depositions can be related to the voluminous letter books of the neighbouring earl of Clanricarde (who, as governor of the town and county of Galway, was to play an active role in seeking first to avoid violence and then to curtail its consequences),Footnote 16 and to the more taciturn records of the corporation.Footnote 17 Contextualising the violence reveals the prolonged but ultimately unsuccessful negotiation that preceded its occurrence. It locates that violence in the more complex (and divided) politics of a city and in the radical challenge it brought to traditional structures of government in Galway. In both episodes the violence was in large part a response to policies in state and church.
II
In the early morning of Friday, 19 March 1642, a ship was attacked while riding at anchor in Galway harbour. Recently returned from La Rochelle in France, the Elizabeth and Francis was a vessel of some two to three hundred tons with its own ordnance and a cargo of imported salt, gunpowder and arms commissioned by merchants of the town. The attackers intermingled with other boatmen coming with tickets issued by the town's mayor for the ship's cargo of salt.Footnote 18 Taking advantage of the absence of the captain and with part of the crew ashore gathering ballast, the attackers boarded her under the pretext of helping to unload the salt.Footnote 19
The remnant of the crew was not, however, to be taken unawares. An attempt on the boat had been made the previous day, and it appears that in anticipation of an attack Captain Willoughby, commander at the adjacent fort, had stationed some soldiers aboard to guard the arms and was in the process of sending more. According to the merchant Steven Lynch, some forty townsmen, accompanied by the town's two sheriffs and the captain of the ‘company of young men’, had attempted to surprise the ship. Thinking the ship already taken, Lynch had gone with a musket to guard it, but those he met coming back had told him that though they had got on board they had been prevented from taking the ship because both the forecastle and lower deck had been barred.Footnote 20 The next day a group of young men, fewer in number — but now armed with swords, skeins [daggers] and pistols — were admitted on board.Footnote 21 Even then, the resort to violence was not immediate.
It was preceded by a series of exchanges in which the would-be attackers sought to exploit the moral norms of sociability and hospitality to secure their objective. On 19 March Dominick Kirwan called to the cabin boy to open the door and when challenged by the ship's surgeon, Robert Rawlins, claimed that he and his friends wanted to share a cup of beer with them in the cabin. Kirwan, whom most deponents identified as one of the leaders of the attackers, had served on this voyage as factor to his brother-in-law Thomas Lynch fitz Andrew, a leading Galway merchant.Footnote 22 In response to Kirwan's offer, the surgeon sent the ship's boy out by the main hatch with beer for them to drink on deck. Kirwan then called Rawlins on deck. Rawlins's subsequent deposition gives no details of their conversation, but its content can be approximated.Footnote 23 According to another deponent, Kirwan had asked to be allowed into the cabin to access his chest. The crew, fearful of surprise, agreed that only he should be admitted. However, once the door was open, two other men, Walter Martin and Murrough ô Moore, forced their entry.Footnote 24 Rawlins, now on deck and seeing that they had got the steerage door open, ran back to the hatch to secure the gun room.
Thomas Martin, another Galway merchant, on deck with the ship's surgeon when what he called the ‘uproar’ began, described how ‘on a sudden’ the attackers fell on the surgeon.Footnote 25 Dangerously wounded in the back, Rawlins was forced to leap into the hold to escape a man stabbing at him with a knife whom Martin claimed to have pushed away. As he was scrabbling to get into the hold, Rawlins was stabbed in the shoulder and forced to hide himself in a cradle between decks.Footnote 26 Martin fled with others into the forecastle to try to hold it against the attackers. According to Rawlins, Herrings, the master's mate, had then called on the ship's gunner to fire from the forecastle to clear the deck, but was stabbed by Murrough ô Moore and died immediately. Other assailants, hearing the noise, then came on board and attacked the crew and soldiers. Walter Martin and Steven Lynch fitz Andrew, another merchant (but not the Steven Lynch cited earlier) ran to the gunroom and overpowered the three crewmen attempting its defence. Those in the forecastle were forced to surrender when the attackers threatened to fire a piece of the ship's ordnance they had set against the door.
Thomas Martin claimed that they were promised good terms if they surrendered, but despite this agreement the attackers threatened to fall on those in the forecastle and he was forced to defend himself, cutting one man with his knife. Several of the crew were wounded and two men were killed, one a soldier sent from the fort.Footnote 27 One man had his head cleft in two, while the other was stabbed in the belly. Mary Bowler, then a young girl, vividly recalled in her testimony how McLaughlin Roe O'Flaherty, one of the attackers, later drinking with other boatmen in her father's house, had clapped his long dagger on the board and boasted that he had killed four of the crew with it.Footnote 28
The violence ended, the remaining crew (one of whom subsequently died from his wounds) and the bodies of the victims were brought into the town. (Another deponent claimed to have heard that the dead were thrown overboard).Footnote 29 On the day of the attack on the ship, the town's gates had been locked and the English had been disarmed and ordered to remain indoors.Footnote 30 Martha Lone, the wife of an officer serving in the fort, claimed that she and other gentlewomen were prevented from attending the wounded ship's surgeon and warned on threat of death not to go to church or market.Footnote 31 But witnesses watched the ship unloaded of all its cargo and moved beyond the range of the fort's guns, which on news of its surprise had fired at it. The arms, powder and ship's ordnance were removed, and the ship's guns moved through the town and set up against the fort. Later moved to a new harbour, the ship, it was said, was ‘broken up by the countrey’.Footnote 32
The second episode of violence happened almost a month later. On the afternoon of April 17, the Sunday after Easter, a large contingent of native (Gaelic) Irish of Iar Connacht marched into town. Dressed in their distinctive ‘trowse and broages’ and armed with swords, pikes and skeans, these ‘Cuntry Rebell{s}’ were said to have come in ‘with flyeing colors in hostile Manner’.Footnote 33 Lt Hiber Scott, from the fort's garrison, who had been given leave from the mayor to live in the town while sick, later testified that on looking out of the house where he lodged, he saw a tall, swarthy young man, ‘one Morrogh ô fflahertie (stiled Collonel) of Ere Coonagh … Marching downe the streete with about 300 Irish rebells’.Footnote 34 They made a stand near Scott's house, ‘& immediately forced into another howse just over the way where about five of those souldjers first stabbed with their skeanes one Mistriss Collins an English gentlewoman whereof she dyed then & there’. According to Margaret Rollright, in whose house the attack took place, Collins was killed ‘as she was kneeling att her praiers’.Footnote 35 After the elderly woman's murder, Scott reported, the Irish ‘killd one John ffox a Chandler being an English Protestant by cutting off his head, & one of them in this Examinants sight brought out his head so cut off, & by its haire threw it upp’. After it fell to the ground, ‘a great Lustie Irish woman tooke it upp by the haire … & threw it as high as shee could’. Fox's head was then paraded through the town on the head of a pike to cries of ‘there was the head of an English Dogg’.Footnote 36 Later, it was ‘tumbled’ up and down the streets. According to Margaret Rollright, Fox's head was, ‘tossed & used with very much Disgrace & kicked like a footeball’.Footnote 37
Fox's wife, otherwise nameless and entering the historical record like others in 1641 only posthumously,Footnote 38 was also killed. William Lincoln, an English maltster, later deposed that it was ‘the souldiers of … Captain Bourk [who] moste barbarously cut of the head of Mr John ffox an English man and a protestant, … and then and there murthered … Mr ffoxes wife’. According to Magdalene Smith, Mrs Fox, being dangerously wounded, ‘the preists and fryers [had] resorted to her to seduce and convert her[,] but not prevaileing that wicked rebell that had wounded her before, then murthered her outright’. An officer in the fort, Hygate Lone, testified that he had heard from his wife and mother-in-law and others who were then in the town, that Mrs Fox was also decapitated and her head subjected to similar treatment. John Turner too reported that the rebels ‘tumbled’ both the heads of John Fox and his wife ‘about the streets’. Others staying in the same house were also killed, including the ship's carpenter who had been wounded on the Elizabeth and Francis.Footnote 39 So too was ‘a yong gallant yowth’, the twelve-year-old son of Mr Fisher, one of the English refugees who had fled from Tuam to Galway.
Groups of rebels were described as rushing up and down the town's streets. Twenty or thirty of them entered the house where Lt Scott lodged. Scott claimed to have had a narrow escape, breaking a window and clambering over the rooftops. But as he was escaping he had heard Mistress Harding, the wife of an English minister, her sister Mistress Scott (his brother's wife) and another woman, ‘drawne downe the sta[i]res whoe pitifully stritched [screeched] becawse of the barbarous usage then exercised upon them’. As he later deposed, his brother's wife died shortly thereafter from her injuries. Scott, whose escape ended in capture and imprisonment the next day, recounted that he had had to share his prison with a ‘barbarous bloody Rebell’ who, overtaken with drink, had ‘bragged how he had kild an English woman, & what good it had done him to see her child sprawle after he had ript it out of her wombe’.Footnote 40
Hearsay might add to the numbers killed. Martha Lone, after listing the Foxes and Mrs Collins as victims, said that she had heard of several other English then murdered, but testified that she could say no more since she ‘was then sick in her bed’. Oliver Smyth, after reporting the deaths of the Foxes, Mrs Collins and Fisher's son, included, but did not name, ‘others, English protestants’. William Lincoln reported that the soldiers had killed ‘two English women more’. One was presumably Mrs Collins; the other he named as ‘sister to Lieutenant Stapleton’. No other deponent mentions this death, but since the report may be doubtful it might represent some confusion with the fate of Lt Scott's brother's wife. Nor did any other deponent mention the glover's wife, whose death Dorothy Butler included in those who died subsequently of their wounds. But neither did she in her deposition mention the ‘suckling child’ that her husband included in his list of those murdered.Footnote 41 William Lincoln ended his list of those killed with the claim that ‘they alsoe murthered diuers others of th[e] english whom he cannot name’, while another group of English deponents who had continued to live under threats in the town before finally fleeing to the fort, claimed more wildly that the rebels had subsequently murdered most of those who stayed.Footnote 42
The killings were followed by the plundering of the English in the town. Guided sometimes, it would appear, by townsmen, groups then broke into other houses with English occupants. A merchant's wife, Margaret Roch, deposed ‘that about the tyme of the saith murther the Comon sort of Irish in the towne plundered many English’.Footnote 43 John Goll, a soldier then in the fort, deposed that William oge Martin brought ten or more of the O'Flahertys into his house and plundered him. Michael Smyth, archdeacon of Clonfert, reported that his house too was assaulted. At Margaret Rollright's house, the Irish, having killed Mrs Collins, then disarmed all the English and robbed her.Footnote 44 That same night, Dorothy Butler and her husband, a Protestant minister, had their house invaded and were forced to hide from those whom she feared intended their murder and who went on to rifle all their goods. To judge by the names she gave these were townsmen of Galway; included in their number was William Noone, the corporation's swordbearer.Footnote 45
Protestant deponents believed that there was an intention to murder all the English and that the O'Flahertys were brought in by the town and corporation to do so. But their depositions suggest a more complex reality. Although she made no reference to it in her own deposition, Captain Lone testified that his wife and mother-in-law ‘hardly escaped murthering’ and reported ‘that hee credibly heard by them (and other English) that the townsmen had given consent to the murthering of all the English’, but ‘the priest and ffryers went upp and downe the streets and hindered the murthering of any more of them’. Others echoed this. Lt Goll reported ‘that it was commonly spoken in Galway that the said o fflahertyes of Irconnaght were brought into the towne purposely to murther all the English. And he beleiveth that they had murthered them all accordingly had not’, he too acknowledged, ‘some preists hindered them, by goeing out in their vestments with tapers and a Crucifix carried before them, commanding the said murtherers to surcease’.Footnote 46 The servant Mary Bowler as a young girl not only saw what happened, but also heard what was said. Her testimony in Irish, ‘taken by the Interpretacion of lieuetenant Jull [Goll] upon his oath’, challenges the simple lines of conflict drawn by the English deponents. Bowler testified that she had seen,
the Preists of the Towne & other Preists (being about eight in number) goeing about the Towne in their vestments, with tapers lighted burneing, and the Sacrament borne before them, and earnestly exhorting the said Murrough ne mart and his Company for Christs sake, and our ladyes, and St Patricks, that they wold shed noe more blood, for if they did they wold never have mercy.
She too is reported as saying that ‘she verily beleveth that had it not bin for the said Preists the said o fflahertyes and their Company had killed all the English protestants they had found in Galwaye’.Footnote 47 Some townsmen, including leading members of the town's ruling group, had also opposed the violence. The English minister, Richard Butler, believed that there would have been ‘a total massacre of all the English Protestants in the towne that night’ but for the Franciscan friars and ‘some of the townes men that were very active in resisting the murtherers’. Margaret Roch vividly recalled seeing Sir Thomas Blake, an alderman and former mayor, chase and capture an Irish rebel, ‘running with a drawne skeane, and his Armes all bloody’.Footnote 48
The ubiquity of the insult ‘English dog’ that was hurled at Lt Scott (in Irish) by his pursuers,Footnote 49 at the ship's surgeon by Dominick Kirwan and at John Fox's head as it was paraded through the streets reflected the popular hostility that lay behind the killing of the English. A small group of Protestants later deposed that,
they durst not goe out neither night nor day without danger of their lives (being subject every day to their scandalls and op[p]robrious words as English dogs, and threatening often by what death the English dogs … should suffer death … Their very frie or yonge base children would … come to the English women & say … with their skeanes presented, you English Jades or dogs I will cut your throats.Footnote 50
The English plasterer, David Lawson, later deposed that he was not able to name any of those involved in the attack on the ship because he and all the English in Galway were ‘in soe much danger and feare that the[y] durst not stirre out of their lodgings for feare of being killed by the Irish’.Footnote 51
On the day before the attack on the ship, the English found themselves on leaving church surrounded by ‘rude & deboist [debauched] Irish soldiers’ and forced to subscribe an oath to be true to king and town.Footnote 52 Subsequently, they were summoned before the mayor and Council of Eight, newly appointed to oversee the town's security, and again required to take an oath ‘to be true to them and to the towne’.Footnote 53 And before 10 March (and perhaps again in April), the English were required to sign a certificate ‘purportinge the good demeanour & carriage’ of the townsmen towards them (‘as in case we had been of their own flesh and blood’). Some believed that refusal would have resulted in ‘some suddaine hurt or mischiefe’; Clanricarde suggested that the fulsome declaration the English had signed before the killings was ‘to give them more safety, they having been sometimes frightened by unruly people who were not duly punished.’Footnote 54
By spring 1642, refugees fleeing violence elsewhere had increased the number of English in the town to some 400 or more.Footnote 55 Clanricarde attributed demands for the disarming of the English and for the closure of the churches and prohibition of Protestant worship after the 19 March episode to ‘discourse amongst the unruly multitude’.Footnote 56 The mayor claimed that they had been disarmed to prevent any in the town that might have drawn a ‘great inconveniency’ on them. But that in justification of this policy he also cited ‘the example of the like usage to catholicks’ at Dublin, Cork and and Youghall ‘whose present miserable condition did put us in mind of what we were to expect’ suggests that even the corporation shared these popular anxieties.Footnote 57 It is perhaps an indication of the tensions in the town that when Lt Scott was captured during the violent April episode and brought before the mayor and others from the Council of Eight, he was interrogated as to ‘whether he was sent to burne the towne or noe’? That the Irishman with whom Scott had been forced to share his imprisonment was allowed to keep his arms in prison and, after receiving ‘many visits of the townsmen’ overnight, was let out the next day suggests some disagreement in the town as to whether his actions merited condemnation or congratulation.Footnote 58
III
There was a consensus among English deponents about the causes and character of the violence at Galway. Predictably, as the language recorded in their depositions suggests, the seizure of the ship was the product of Irish treachery and the killing of Fox and others confirmation of the barbarity with which English commentators had long associated the native Irish.Footnote 59 Thus, the ship was ‘treacherously’ taken, its crew ‘barbarously’ murdered. John Fox was murdered in ‘a barbarous inhumane manner’, being ‘most barbarously’ decapitated, and English women at Galway subjected to ‘barbarous usage’. The perpetrators were ‘Ruffian irish barbarous souldjers’, the ‘rude & barbarous multitude of Rebells of EreConnaght’, and their actions ‘barbarous Cruelties’.Footnote 60 But behind this parade of familiar prejudices was an attempt to blame Galway's Old English rulers for the violence. As Lt Goll reported, the O'Flahertys came ‘by procurement of the magistrates of the towne’.Footnote 61 Inadvertently, however, these claims reveal the prolonged negotiations and complex politics that had preceded and were to follow the violence.
It was only after the failure of negotiations that an attempt was made on the Elizabeth and Francis. When the arms’ removal was stayed after the ship's arrival by a warrant from the Dublin administration to the earl of Clanricarde to impound and deliver them to the fort, the town attempted to secure their release. Kirwan was heard to say that he had brought arms and ammunition for the town's use, but Captain Clarke gave notice of the arms to Anthony Willoughby, commander, and John Turner, collector of customs at Galway and clerk of the store at the fort. This was probably the occasion of the heated on-board exchange between Captain Clarke and Dominick Kirwan, witnessed by Dorothy Butler when she went to inspect a cabin for her travel to France. Being ‘at very high words’, Clarke, she reported, threatened that ‘if Kirowan had spoken a little more to him hee wold have thrown him overboard’.Footnote 62
Before the ship's capture, Turner and Clarke had been called before a General Assembly of the town and temporarily imprisoned. In the interim, Sir Valentine Blake and Nicholas Bodkin, merchants and members of the corporation, the latter later described as captain, had apparently been authorised to offer to buy the ship and her guns to strengthen the town's defences. Clarke was offered eleven hundred pounds for the ship's ordnance, but asked for more time. According to James Lynch fitz Stephen, examined when later a prisoner, they were ‘allmost agreed’ but Clarke sent a message that he would not sell the ship at any price. A day or so later, a group of townsmen went to see Blake in his chamber. When told that the bargain was broken off, one of those present, Thomas Lynch fitz Andrew was reported as saying, ‘I can tell yow a good Way to ffasten the bargaine upon Captain Clarke’. He proposed hiring some of the commons and young men of the town to secure the ship so that Clarke ‘would be Glad to take Mony’ for it. Blake initially agreed, but by the next day was reported to have changed his mind.Footnote 63
Evidently, there were fears that the ship would join with the town against the fort.Footnote 64 Clearly, the corporation was trying to find a way to secure its defences that avoided violence, but the proposal from Lynch, younger and not an officeholder in the town, suggests a hardening of opinion, perhaps inside, and certainly outside, the town's ruling circle. The reported presence of the town's two sheriffs and the involvement of a group with responsibility for ‘watch and ward’ in the town, the ‘young men’, in the initial attempt to take back the arms might be taken to indicate a semi-official move by the town to reclaim the arms. But significantly, when the successful attempt was made to seize the ship it was by those not part of the ruling group. Even then it was a few days later, and after a failed attempt undertaken on a promise from the Council of Eight that they would ‘save the undertakers harmless[s]’, that the ship was violently taken.Footnote 65
New English deponents, many of whom were refugees from the surrounding countryside, were of course not privy to these discussions, conducted at the mayor's or another private house, nor to the meetings at the town hall. But they recounted what others told them. Martha Lone deposed that, ‘she cold somtymes heare the Irish telling [in Irish] in the streets … that they did nothing but what they had order for from the Maior and Patricke Darcy and the Aldermen and beste of the towne’.Footnote 66 Convincing evidence of the town rulers’ central role in the violence, it was repeatedly alleged, was provided by their inactivity after the violence. According to several deponents, they ‘did not in any way punish the offenders, but rather abetted and maintained them in their barbarous cruelties’. Of the killing of Fox and others, William Hamond claimed that ‘the Towne pleaded not guilty … but thus farre they must needs be faulty, that the agents were entertained & let into the Towne by them, nor did they ever after … [that he heard] make any enquiry after or punish’ them.Footnote 67 They had invited in the O'Flahertys with promises of pay and plunder in return for killing the English.Footnote 68 As the native speaker, Mary Bowler, testified, she had ‘heard (by severall of the towne people) that it was the Maior and Councell of the towne that had brought in the said Irconnaght people to kill and murther all the English Protestants in the towne because their owne hands should not be embrued in their blood’.Footnote 69
IV
It was therefore, the depositions suggested, the town's ‘Cheife Governors’ who were ultimately to blame for the violence in 1642.Footnote 70 Both the examiners and the New English witnesses agreed that the townsmen were rebels and that the events at Galway in early 1642 constituted a rebellion. Significantly, the 1652 treaty on the final surrender of Galway dated the town's joining the rising to 19 March 1642, the date of the attack on the ship. But reading against the grain of the otherwise stereotyped accusations of the witnesses, there is evidence to challenge and complicate the picture that the deponents and their examiners sought to paint. Framing the depositions in terms of a binary divide between English victims and violent Irish rebels ignores evidence contained in the depositions (and confirmed in other valuable sources) that reveals the divisions within the town over the use of violence. If the investigations were designed to show that events at Galway were part of the wider rising, they also reveal that within Galway they were part of a challenge to existing political structures and culture. Though the potential radicalism within that challenge ultimately failed, it drew on the politicisation inherent in reactions to the policies of anglicisation and Protestantisation pursued by the English administration in a town with developed structures of self-government, a sophisticated political culture and a resilient Catholic church, locally strongly present. Thus, the violence in Galway was a product of political division (with its roots partly in class and ethnic difference), but also of a political alliance that reflected shifting attitudes within the town in response to the crisis of 1641 and the actions of the English pro-parliamentary authorities, centred locally in 1641–2 on the question of arms, the fort and civic independence.
A regional capital, with a population of over 4,000 in 1600, Galway dominated its extensive rural hinterland, in which the townsmen were major landowners, and it derived much of its wealth from continental trade.Footnote 71 The town was controlled by a wealthy merchant elite and ruled by a small, self-selecting merchant oligarchy, with leading offices in the first half of the seventeenth century filled by only fourteen families. These families, the so-called tribes of Galway, represented the dominance of trade and town by the Old English, pre-Reformation settlers. Almost without exception, they remained committed to a resurgent Catholic church. This benefitted from their patronage, and was served by secular and regular clergy recruited from their ranks, who with the town's involvement in international trade were educated on the continent in Counter-Reformation thinking.Footnote 72 Knitted together by ties of landownership, trade, ethnicity and inter-marriage, Galway's mercantile rulers formed a close-knit patriciate for whom a commitment to a corporate Catholicism came, under state interference, to stand as the culture of civic independence (joyfully celebrated and formally recorded both by the corporation and town's annals, in the public restoration of Mass in the town's churches after 1642).Footnote 73
Self-government had been granted to Galway by royal charter. A succession of royal charters underwrote the city's political independence and economic prosperity, giving the city valuable exemptions from taxes on trade and from political interference by the provincial presidency.Footnote 74 Royal incorporation informed the town's recurring stress on its long tradition of loyalty to the crown.Footnote 75 This allegiance was powerfully underwritten by the ruling Old English elite's self-identity as English. It bound them to the Crown and with their claim to civility — as ‘a modest and civil people’, ‘not following the customs of the mountainous and wild people of those parts’Footnote 76 — distinguished them from the native (Gaelic) Irish.Footnote 77 As a draft petition of the town's inhabitants from 1655 proclaimed, they had ‘for upward of four hundred years performed the English interest in this corporation, not withstanding the several rebellions in this nation, till the late general defection’.Footnote 78 Wealthy and self-governing (and at some distance from the English administration in the Pale), the town's merchants might well merit their later description as ‘princes’ and Galway the title of city-state or ‘virtual city-republic by royal charter’.Footnote 79 But civic independence by chartered privilege had its limits and Galway's allegiance was conditional. From the early seventeenth century on, Galway's rulers were to discover the insecurities of their liberties.Footnote 80
Before 1641, renewed emphasis on the requirement for all officers to take the oath of supremacy — in Galway for the mayoralty publicly at the head of the churchFootnote 81 — had disrupted the cursus honorum of civic office and led periodically to the imposition of Protestants as mayor.Footnote 82 As with other towns, the stationing of troops in Galway at St Augustine's fort, built to command the town as well as the bay, had also created conflict that had intensified immediately before the outbreak of violence.Footnote 83 In the 1630s, Wentworth's policies as Lord Deputy posed a particular threat. With their increasingly heavy investment in land, Galway's mercantile elite had been unsettled by the crown's failure to ratify their late sixteenth-century composition made under the crown's policy of surrender and regrant. But Wentworth's proposed plantation in Connacht, which would have confiscated half of every holding above 134 acres and all of the holdings below that figure, represented an even greater threat. It was, of course, also a threat to the O'Flahertys of Iar Connacht. Given the potential loss of up to four-fifths of its citizens’ land, Galway was heavily implicated in the fierce resistance to Wentworth's scheme. This saw the jury that failed to find for the Crown imprisoned and heavily fined, while the corporation's lawyers representing the landowners, Patrick Darcy and Richard Martin, were barred from practising law.Footnote 84 Challenged too was the town's Old English rulers’ construction of themselves as loyal Englishmen. As a later document complained, the policy had been conducted ‘without consideration of being English or Irish extraction’. It was significant, it has been suggested, that in direct response members of Galway's ruling families had begun to adopt multiple patronymics to assert their ancestry in the town.Footnote 85
When Captain Clarke and John Turner had been examined before the seizure of the ship at a meeting of the Court of Assembly, the town's legal counsel, Patrick Darcy and Richard Martin, condemned their detaining arms imported for the town's defence to be treason. The sparse evidence suggests that behind this claim — as Turner noted, ‘they then pretending themselves to be his Maiesties subjects’ — was a familiar appeal to Galway's long record of independence and loyalty to the crown.Footnote 86 As the document drawn up by Corporation on 12 March declared, only a week before the attack on the Elizabeth and Francis, they were the king's ‘most humble, faithful, and loving subjects’. Calling to mind the ‘fast fidelity’ of ‘this ancient English colony’ to the English crown, the declaration reiterated their ‘natural obedience & allegiance’, and re-stated their commitment to defend town and fort (but with the proviso of the fort complying with them) against any traitorous conspiracies. They also made an offer to take the oath of allegiance throughout the town and to expel any who refused to take it.Footnote 87 But only three days later the Elizabeth and Francis was seized.
State interference and the consequences and costs of anglicisation had challenged Galway's self-identification as loyal subjects of a Protestant English crown. Writing to Clanricarde two days after the ship's seizure, the town's mayor, Walter Lynch, informed him that the refusal to take money for the arms ‘did administer occasion to divers to believe that a hard opinion was undeservedly conceived of our loyalty’. Reports of the seizure of Galway shipping at Dublin and in England had created fears in the town that ‘there was but very little distinction made between us and enemies’. With rumours flying, rebels active in the province and relations fraying between the fort and a town, the mayor had repeatedly complained of the great want of arms and ammunition.Footnote 88 Clanricarde, his own loyalty compromised by his Catholicism in the eyes of the Dublin authorities, had been unable to secure a supply of arms for the town or to persuade Captain Willoughby (a man whom he found ‘of a rash, violent nature’ and in ‘temper nor judgement’ unfit to command the fort) to accede to the town's repeated request to supply them with arms.Footnote 89 Galway's rulers thus found themselves caught between Willoughby's aggressive proto-parliamentarianism and the Dublin administration's continuing failure to provide arms for those whose Catholicism — they believed — made their loyalty questionable. They had sought to align their actions within a culture of allegiance to the crown, claiming justification for their taking of the arms in an appeal to what they called the late proclamation requiring communities to acquire arms for their defence against the rising.Footnote 90 Although distancing himself from the violence and (ambiguously) attributing it only to ‘some in the town’, the mayor had stressed that it was finding themselves in the ‘extremity’ of lacking arms for their defence that had led to the ship's seizure. Thus, the unsuccessful attempt to take the ship on 18 March, with a crowd that included the corporation's two sheriffs and members of the company of young men, might be read as a quasi-official intervention.Footnote 91 A group with its own officers and by-laws and recognised by the corporation as ‘a body politic of themselves’ with responsibility for watch and ward, the involvement of the company of young men, paralleling similar interventions in other cities, in the attempted seizure was to be significant.Footnote 92 Their accountability for security in the town was to lead them to challenge the existing structures of rule in Galway, and to claim a larger role in civic government during and after the episodes of violence.Footnote 93
Threatened too by the policy of Protestantisation was the commitment to the Catholic faith central to Galway's rulers’ self-identity. In a submission to Clanricarde in May 1642 signed by the mayor and four others, what were euphemistically called the ‘troubles’ in the town were attributed to ‘an apprehension taken upon report of ruin & destruction threatened to the nation, and Catholic religion’.Footnote 94 A year later, during negotiations for a truce, the town submitted another paper entitled ‘Some Particular Motives of these troubles in Ireland’ which repeated this analysis. The paper made defence of the true religion its opening clause and saw all other grievances as stemming from the attempt to supplant Catholicism with Protestantism. It raised again the refusal to arm the town (‘and what good meaning was thereby intended, every indifferent man may judge’), referred to the fate of fellow Catholics, disarmed and plundered, in Dublin, Cork and Youghal, and complained of the seizure of ships, goods and persons, ‘under colour of a quarrel to their religion’. Dominick Kirwan, the leader of those who attacked the Elizabeth and Francis, was reported to have demanded in his exchange with Robert Rawlins, ‘whether it were not better to be a slave in Argere [Algiers] than there’?Footnote 95
V
The thrust of the evidence offered in the depositions and examinations was that the corporation was behind the seizure of the ship and the invitation to the O'Flahertys. But although the evidence is problematic, given the (deliberate?) silence in the town's records, the reality was that the violence was the product of a divided corporation, of new political structures and of widening political participation. Andrew Darcy, the brother of Patrick Darcy, testified that in the spring of 1642, the mayor, aldermen and freemen had met at the tholsel (town hall) at the instigation of Richard oge Martin and John Blake fitz Robert, both members of the town's council.Footnote 96 There, they had appointed a Council of Eight. It was this body, meeting at the mayor's house, which had directed some of the townsmen to bargain for a ship with ordnance to strengthen the town and, when they had failed to agree a price with Clarke, had given the order to surprise the ship.Footnote 97 At the same time there was an extension of political participation. Thus, the taking of the ship and the killing of the sailors, some claimed made ‘a Towne act’ even before they had come ashore, was afterwards declared by ‘Publike and Generall vote’ of the council and inhabitants at the Townsal ‘the acte of the towne’.Footnote 98
Shared grievances, not least over the implications of Wentworth's plantation scheme for Connacht, and links between the O'Flaherty chiefs and members of the town's elite,Footnote 99 had made it possible for a town that had until then resisted calls from within Connacht to join the rising to invite in the O'Flahertys to assist in the siege of the fort. But if relations between the Old English and Gaelic Irish had long moved from the hostility reflected in Galway's earlier by-laws excluding ‘mere Irish’ from the town, tensions remained. The invitation to the O'Flahertys to enter the town may, therefore, also have come from some of the more radical elements among the corporation and people. According to a deposition by a later mayor, Martin Lynch, the decision to invite them had been taken by some of the Council of Eight ‘and with the permittance of the Inhabitants … or the Major Vote’.Footnote 100
Clanricarde's voluminous correspondence, while doubtless reflecting the familiar irritation of a landed aristocrat for a town which he found ‘not wanting a large proportion of pride’, offers valuable pointers to the divisions within Galway that explain the abandonment of negotiation and the resort to violence. According to Clanricarde, ‘the better part of that town were overswayed by the greater’.Footnote 101 Writing within the conventions of the contemporary language of sorts, Clanricarde was careful to draw a distinction between the better sort and those he called ‘the multitude’. The ‘disobedient and unnatural act’ of seizing the ship he attributed to ‘the multitude’ and in particular to ‘some young men’. The town's endorsement of the act, he reported, was the work of ‘a faction raised in the town … [who had] compelled the mayor and graver sort to take it upon them’. Clanricarde identified what he variously called the ‘active’, ‘ill-affected’ or ‘malignant party’. This included members of the ruling elite, notably Sir Valentine, John and Francis Blake, the last ‘stiled their general’, and a number of clerics — Walter Lynch, Valentine Brown and Thomas Fleming — as well as the ‘strong party of the young men’.Footnote 102 The significant role played by the clergy, secular and regular, was reflected in their opposition to the subsequent restoration of order in May 1642, publicly continuing to advance against it the politics of conscience and threat of excommunication.Footnote 103
In an attempt to subvert the rules on electing only Protestant mayors, the town had earlier introduced a popular franchise for the election of the mayor. After the seizure of the ship, this seems to have been extended in disregard of an earlier narrowing of the right of freeman to attend the town's meetings by the corporation. Now, with ‘the young men and the malignant party … resolved to govern’, decisions were to be made by the ‘votes of the multitude’. The mayor complained to Clanricarde of the overthrow of what he referred to as the ‘ancient forms of government’, with ‘new erected captains, and private councils’, frequent assemblies ‘composed of a mixt multitude’, where critical decisions were to be ‘carried by voices’. When the town's rulers appeared not to adhere to this, there had been ‘tumult and uproar’ in the town with the young men claiming that they should have been called to court by the sounding of a drum and demanding ‘they should have had their voices’ too.Footnote 104
While the town might subsequently (and perhaps speciously) claim a right by its charter to detain the ship,Footnote 105 the violent capture of the Elizabeth and Francis demonstrated how the state's unpopular policies could forge an alliance, based on shared grievances between some members of the ruling circle and townsmen, which extended political participation and licensed violence by a group defined by their youth and lack of office. The holding of a special meeting at the tholsel which saw the freemen as well as mayor and aldermen appoint the Council of Eight;Footnote 106 the private meetings in Walter Oge Martin's house and in Sir Valentine Blake's of a group including those not members of the corporation to debate whether to take the ship by force; and the enforced endorsement of the seizure as an act of the town at a meeting at the tholsel, to which many people flocked, all point to an extension of political participation.
But these changes were to be only temporary. In the short term, the violence was to lead to a restoration of the traditional structures of rule. In May, the corporation, renewing declarations of allegiance to the English nation and crown, submitted.Footnote 107 In letters to the lords justices, Clanricarde had reported that most of ‘the better sort’ of the town were averse to the violent proceedings, but had been forced to join ‘the mad resolution of the multitude’.Footnote 108 Key members of the ruling group had opposed the violence as it happened and had been driven out of the town by popular hostility for protecting the English.Footnote 109 When Sir Richard Blake later sought government support, he was able to present a certificate recording that he had been ‘very serviceable to the English’ in 1641.Footnote 110 Patrick Darcy, when examined, said he had ‘bemoaned’ the seizing of the ship to the earl of Clanricarde, and he claimed to have been active with the town's recorder in subsequently expelling the O'Flahertys from the town.Footnote 111 The later punishment by Galway's rulers of those involved in the murders suggests that while some may have been willing to tolerate robbing and killing, others (like their landed contemporaries) worried about the consequences of lower-class violence. Richard Kinowan, the bloodied rebel chased by Sir Thomas Blake, may have been the drunken man imprisoned with Lt Scott, but then released. But in 1643, by order of the new mayor, Richard Blake, and in a direct imitation of the punishment inflicted by the state on sixteenth-century English rebels, he was hanged on a gibbet at John Fox's door.Footnote 112 The centrality of allegiance to the crown in the town's political culture may have facilitated the restoration of order, with Clanricarde's promise to take the town under the crown's protection until Charles came to Ireland and wider political participation being folded into corporate oath-taking. Taken individually and on the gospel, for ‘the mutual protection of all catholicks, united for the service of God, king, and country’,Footnote 113 this required takers to swear to defend inter alia the monarchy and Catholic religion, ‘to uphold and defend the rights, liberties, privileges, immunities and possessions of the corporation of Galway, and to carefully observe their lawful commands and defend all and every member thereof’.Footnote 114 The restoration of order suggests that many, including most perhaps of the corporation, had been driven from above by the state's policies and from below by popular anti-Englishness and political agitation, to accept, if not welcome, the violence. But as elsewhere in Ireland fear of the crowd had come to outweigh fear of the crown.
VI
Despite the archetypal evidence of Irish savagery provided by the brutal nature of John Fox's death, with its entanglement ‘in the complex Irish heritage of symbolic mutilation’ and the gendered transgression of the lusty, masculinised Irish woman,Footnote 115 events at Galway did not provide copy for newsbooks or contemporary ‘histories’ of the 1641 Rising. Indeed, some well-informed contemporary histories of the violence at Galway omitted Fox's story.Footnote 116 Ironically, while the five named as killers of the ship's crew were excepted from the 1652 treaty of surrender, a further clause reserving for punishment anyone else for murders committed before 19 March effectively wrote out of memory the deaths of Fox and others in the April episode.Footnote 117 Nor, local studies apart, have the deaths at Galway in 1642 commanded much attention in later histories.Footnote 118 In part, this probably reflects the welter of competing examples of even more gruesome violent episodes, real and imagined, on which later polemicists could draw.
Reading the depositions is overwhelmingly to listen to witnesses and victims who were, via the 1650s examinations, participants in victors’ justice. As elsewhere in Ireland, the commonalty at Galway, Clanricarde's ‘worst sort of people’,Footnote 119 were left mute, their beliefs and motivations ventriloquised by their victims, or recoverable only in the performative nature of their violence.Footnote 120 Nonetheless, contextualising the violence at Galway challenges any simple reading of the killings as spontaneous acts of Irish savagery. It suggests that understanding the episodes there in their own right can make a more general contribution to understanding popular violence in the 1641 Rising and the role of crowds in early modern Ireland.
Despite the claims and fears of the English deponents, there were only a small number of deaths at Galway (though as we have noted not all those mentioned in the depositions merited investigation). Many of the English were able to escape to the fort and all finally on its surrender to leave Galway. A partial explanation for the discrepancy in the level of violence is, of course, to be found in the English deponents' exaggerated fears of such violence. The significant recalibration downwards of levels of violence that has resulted from ongoing work on the 1641 depositions has rightly challenged previous, polemically-driven and partisan estimates of the number of deaths and murders. Nevertheless, recent recognition of the potential offered for a reading of the depositions informed by trauma studies and by a history of the emotions suggests the possibilities of a more nuanced reading of how we might assess the experience of violence.Footnote 121 The Galway survivors’ later recollection of events there, even in the constrained space permitted them by the process of deposing to order, underline the importance of not simply measuring the impact of violence in 1641 by numbers alone. The English forced to remain in Galway were not cut off from the reports and rumours of violence elsewhere, not least the massacre at nearby Shrule bridge.Footnote 122 The trauma of witnessing violent death and of having to live cheek by jowl with its perpetrators in what was a closely-packed town is captured in their memories of the gibbet ‘whereon to hang the English’, erected on their arrival at the cross in the centre of the city and only taken down at their departure.Footnote 123
Given the evident hostility reported in the depositions, what perhaps needs more explanation is why there was not more anti-English violence. As we have seen, in a divided city not all approved of the violence, even those like Sir Thomas Blake who were otherwise very active in the conflict against the English. Others, besides Sir Richard Blake, were later able to seek government support on the basis of help they had given to the English. The ship's surgeon had been saved by an anonymous, musket-carrying native speaker, and Lt Scott reported that it was the intervention of another townsman that had saved him from violence at the hands of his attackers.Footnote 124 Catholic clergy at Galway too had sought to stop the killings, employing Catholic rites, as in other continental risings, to do so.Footnote 125 The deaths on the ship were in part a consequence of its ultimately violent seizure. There is evidence to suggest that behind the O'Flahertys’ violence was a familiar pattern of tit-for-tat killing.Footnote 126 The minister William Hamond testified that on the same day as the killing of Fox and the others, the soldiers of the fort had killed kill two or three of the rebels in a skirmish, and those he termed ‘the rogues’, ‘in Coole bloud (to ag[g]ravate their malice)’, afterwards killed three (in reality, more) of the English, one of whom was Mrs Collins.Footnote 127 But even the relative wealth of documentation at Galway does not allow us to recover the personal backstories that might explain the selection of the April victims, of whom otherwise little is known. John Fox was a ship's chandler and had given shelter to the carpenter wounded in the attack on the ship; Mrs Collins, a ‘worthy & religious woman’, was a kinswoman of Doctor Boyle, archbishop of Tuam.Footnote 128 The nature of the evidence perfectly illustrates the problems when using the depositions of seeing beyond the stereotypical characterisations of an Irish atrocity.
If it is not possible to recover individual life stories, contextualising the violence does allow us to see the politics behind its occurrence. The policy of anglicisation had challenged Galway's Old English rulers’ self-identity, slighted their faith, and threatened a collective loss of power. It had endangered Galway's conception of itself as an independent, but loyal city-state, and had called into question the allegiance to the crown that had been the bedrock of the town's political identity. It provoked anti-English hostility, of which the killings were one expression. It created division among Galway's rulers and increased popular political participation in the radical, if ultimately temporary, changes to the town's ruling structures that had parallels in the experience of other Irish cities in the 1640s.Footnote 129 It had finally promoted a confessional union of Catholics between the Old English and Gaelic Irish in action against the English in the fort and in the town.
Contextualising the episodes of violence reveals that the ‘unofficial’ attack on the ship was driven by fears of further persecution of Catholics. It paralleled the plans originally envisaged and encouraged by the corporation. Nor were the killings in April merely acts of spontaneous violence, whatever the possible and problematic relationship between retaliation, drink and violence. Permitted but not commanded,Footnote 130 they drew on shared grievances. They too had their origins in the political and religious changes pursued by the state. Under the pressure of state interference, confessional unity had come to replace ethnic division. As Aidan Clarke wryly observed, ‘the union of Catholics in Ireland was, from first to last, a Protestant achievement, not a Catholic one’.Footnote 131
VIII
In a thoughtful recent essay Brendan Kane has offered his reflections on whether evidence exists for what he calls ‘operative non-elite politics’, ‘a tradition of en masse political agitation’ in early modern Ireland.Footnote 132 His answer to his own question, though nuanced, would seem to be in the negative. But Kane makes an exception for 1641, though he does not regard events therein ‘as an expression of an ingrained and developed sense of plebeian political ‘right’ or expectation’. Some may find that his distinction between popular agency that seeks ‘to shape the character of the state and governance’ and popular agency that seeks ‘simply to rebuff certain of its local manifestations’ both raises the bar too high and is a distinction in practice difficult to maintain. As Tim Harris has observed, ‘People were politicized in the first place as a result of being subject to government’.Footnote 133
Other work on violence and crowd actions before 1641,Footnote 134 on the public role of the Catholic clergy,Footnote 135 on the experience of governance and the orality of the communicative practices of authority in early modern Ireland has begun to lay the groundwork for understanding how a popular politics could emerge in early modern Ireland.Footnote 136 Exploring the relationship between these pre-existing patterns of protest and popular politics in the rising and the potential for further politicisation this represented, will help to evaluate to what extent it drew on an earlier tradition of crowd actions and to what extent it created a new space for popular politics (though, as ever, the social dimension of the popular in crowds before and during the rising remains relatively unexplored and problematic). Clearly, the experience of 1641 promoted new forms of political engagement, not least in mass oath-taking, an enlarged public role for the Catholic clergy and the new structures of confederate government, about which the 1641 depositions also provide valuable evidence.Footnote 137 That this did not lead to the levels of politicisation and radicalisation evident in the contemporaneous English Revolution raises important questions of comparative history.Footnote 138 The increased popular political participation that accompanied the violence in Galway doubtless reflected its developed structures of urban government and the advanced political culture of what the town itself chose to call a commonwealth. But Galway was unusual, not unique, in early modern Ireland. All crowd actions can be seen as political to the extent that they represent a claim to negotiate, interrogate and exercise power. Seen in context, the violence in 1642 was political; it was both a consequence of and contributor to political change at Galway.Footnote 139