27 May 1224: Cathal Crovderg [‘Redhand’] O'Conor, king of
Connacht, son of Turlough and brother of Rory O'Conor (the last 'High King' of
Ireland), died at the age of 72. He was the last of the great Irish Kings. His
death opened the way for the Norman takeover of Connacht.
'We feel sure that you have heard, through the trusty men
and counsellors of your father and your own, how that we did not fail to give
faithful and devoted service to the Lord John, your father of happy memory ;
and since his death, as your trusty servants stationed in Ireland know and have
learned, we are not failing to give devoted obedience to you, nor do we wish
ever as long as we live to fail you. Wherefore, although we possess a charter
for the land of Connacht from the Lord your father given to ourselves and our
heirs, and by name to Od [Aedh] our son and heir...'
LETTER FROM CATHAL "CROVDEARG" O'CONOR, KING OF
CONNACHT, TO HENRY III, circa 1224
Taken from A History of Ireland by Eleanor Hull
'A great affliction befell the country then, the loss of
Cathal Crobderg son of Toirrdelbach O Conchobair, king of Connacht;
the king most feared and dreaded on every hand in Ireland;
the king who carried out most plunderings and burnings
against Galls and Gaels who opposed him;
the king who was the fiercest and harshest towards his
enemies that ever lived;
the king who most blinded, killed and mutilated rebellious
and disaffected subjects;
the king who best established peace and tranquillity of all
the kings of Ireland;
the king who built most monasteries and houses for religious
communities;
the king who most comforted clerks and poor men with food
and fire on the floor of his own habitation;
the king whom of all the kings in Ireland God made most
perfect in every good quality;
the king on whom God most bestowed fruit and increase and
crops;
the king who was most chaste of all the kings of Ireland;
the king who kept himself to one consort and practised
continence before God from her death till his own;
the king whose wealth was partaken by laymen and clerics,
infirm men, women and helpless folk, as had been prophesied in the writings and
the visions of saints and righteous men of old;
the king who suffered most mischances in his reign, but God
raised him up from each in turn;
the king who with manly valour and by the strength of his
hand preserved his kingship and rule.
And it is in the time of this king that tithes were first
levied for God in Ireland. This righteous and upright king, this prudent,
pious, just champion, died in the robe of a Grey Monk, after a victory over the
world and the devil, in the monastery of Knockmoy, which with the land
belonging to it he had himself offered to God and the monks, on the
twenty-seventh day of May as regards the solar month and on a Monday as regards
the week-day, and was nobly and honourably buried, having been for six and
thirty years sole monarch of the province of Connacht.
So says Donnchad Baccach O Maelchonaire in his poem on the
Succession of the Kings:
‘The reign of Red-hand was a pleasant reign, after the fall
of Cathal Carrach; he ruled for sixteen and twenty prosperous calm years.’
And he was in the seventy-second year of his age, as the
poet Nede O Maelchonaire says: ‘Three years and a half-year, I say, was the
life of Red-hand in Cruachu till the time that his father died in
wide-stretching Ireland.’
He was born at Port Locha Mesca and fostered by Tadc O Con
Chennainn in Ui Diarmata, and it was sixty-eight years from the death of
Toirrdelbach to the death of Cathal Crobderg, as the chronicle shows.'
The Annals of Connacht
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