20 July 1398: The Battle of Kellistown/ An Cath Cell Osnadha
was fought on this day. The battle was fought between the forces of the
O’Byrnes and O’Tooles, and the English of Leinster led by Roger Mortimer, the
4th Earl of March.
A battle was given to the English by O'Byrne and O'Toole, in
which the Earl of March was slain, and the English were slaughtered.
Annals of the Four Masters
The O’Byrnes and O’Tooles were surrogates for Art Mac
Murrough Cavanagh who was the most powerful Chieftain in Leinster and
recognised as a King amongst his own people. He used them to fight a proxy war
against the English and thus avoid a complete break with them. Kellistown is
situated in County Carlow between the towns of Carlow and Tullow.
"Here fell the
heir presumptive to the English crown, whose premature removal was one of the
causes which contributed to the revolution in England a year or two
later."
Mortimer had been created the King of England’s Lieutenant
in Ireland in 1396 and held this position until the Irish killed him. His body
was cut to pieces during the battle but whether this as a result of combat or
mutilation after his death is not recorded. Curiously enough he had decided to
engage in the combat dressed in the Irish style - that is without body armour.
There was at least enough of him remaining for his corpse to be brought back
home to England where he was interred amongst his own people in Wigmore Abbey,
Herefordshire.
Mortimer was none other than a potential heir to the throne of
England then held by the childless king Richard II [above]. He was also
dignified with the titles ‘Earl of Ulster’ and ‘Lord Of Connaught’. Ironically
he was a direct descendant of Aoife Murchada, whose father Diarmait had let the
English way in back in 1169 AD. Thus he was a distant relation of his nemesis
Art Mac Murrough Cavanagh! However the unstable & paranoid King Richard
II had ordered his arrest just after
this engagement[27 July] but the news had not reached England before his death
in battle. With him dead then the primary candidate to succeed the childless
Richard became Henry Bolingbroke whom the King had sent into exile.
Richard was so concerned by the news from Ireland that his
Authority had been so flouted and decided to settle matters once and for all by
returning to Ireland with an Expedition to make Art Mac Murrough submit to
English rule as he had before when
Richard had last campaigned here in 1394. But his departure from his own
Country in the following year of 1399 cost him his Kingdom as his domestic
enemies took the opportunity to topple him from his throne. On return in the
month of August of that year he was compelled to give up his crown and submit
to the advances of his cousin, Henry of Bolingbroke [below] who had returned in Richard’s
absence and risen in revolt.
Henry was crowned King Henry IV in Westminster Abbey on 13
October and Richard was now his prisoner. An embarrassment to the new King
Henry he was allowed to wither away in captivity in Pontefract Castle in
Yorkshire and ‘died’ (probably from deliberate starvation?] in early 1400.
An Cath Cell Osnadha was thus a battle of great importance
in the history of two countries – England and Ireland - as it was a catalyst
for a series of events that led to the Downfall of a Monarch who claimed to be
both ‘King of England’ and ‘Lord of Ireland’ - claims that at the end of the
day he found impossible to maintain.
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