6 June 1333: The death by murder of William Burke 'the Brown
Earl' of Ulster and the Lord of Connacht near Belfast while on his way to
Carrickfergus.
The young Earl was only 21 years old. Far from being a
callow youth he was already a very able and ruthless man. In November 1332, at
Greencastle, near the mouth of Lough Foyle, he had his cousin Sir Walter Liath
de Burgh starved to death. In revenge, Sir Walter's sister, Gylle de Burgh,
wife of Sir Richard de Mandeville, planned his assassination.
William had feared that his cousin Walter would be a threat
to him after his defeat of the O'Connor's in 1330. Clearly a man of some
ambition his foul murder of his own cousin was a bit too much even for that
ruthless age.
William Burke, Earl of Ulster, was killed by the English of
Ulster. The Englishmen who committed this deed were put to death, in divers
ways, by the people of the King of England; some were hanged, others killed,
and others torn asunder, in revenge of his death.
Annals of the Four Masters
With his death the whole Anglo-Norman rule in the North
began to unravel as the DeBurgo 'clan' fought amongst themselves over the
division of the dead Earl's vast holdings. With the collapse of their power the
first phase of the Conquest that began in 1169 came to an end. From then on until
the Reformation the Colony was to be basically on the defensive rather than on
the attack against the Gaels of Ireland.
No such blow had yet befallen the Anglo-Irish Colony. The
whole De Burgo Lordship, which had reduced the proudest of the Irish to
vassalage and had been the shield and rampart of the English interest in the
north and the west, fell at one stroke. Released from a yoke which they alone
could never have broken, the O'Neills and the O'Donnells were able to subject
eastern and southern Ulster on the one hand, and DeBurgo's lordship of Sligo on
the other. Within fifty years practically the whole province went back to the
Irish order.
A History of Medieval Ireland
Edmund Curtis
No comments:
Post a Comment