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Donegal - Event Notice
Thursday January 01 1970

The Flight of the Earls & its Consequences

category donegal | history and heritage | event notice author Tuesday September 04, 2007 20:49author by Séamas Mac Lochlainn - Noneauthor email foedonegaltown at yahoo dot com Report this post to the editors

Understanding Perspectives

A free event looking at the Flight of the Earls & its Consequences from different perspectives will take place on Friday night 7th September 2007 in the Central Hotel, Donegal Town. The event is one of the most significant to take place this year it starts at 7.30pm sharp.

Speakers; Ruairi Ó Brádaigh, Seoirse Ó Dochartaigh, Eunan O Donnell.

Free Night of Art, Debate, Song & Music in Donegal Town

This Friday night will see Donegal Town host one of the most important evenings this year dealing with the Flight of the Earls. The event is free admission and takes place in the Central Hotel at 7.30 sharp in the main function room. This is an historical evening that is a much about making history as reflecting upon it.

As part of the 400th anniversary of The Flight of the Earls a night of art, debate, song and music will take place in the Central Hotel, Donegal Town this Friday 7th September. The organisers are anticipating a very large turn out and are advising those attending to get into the Central Hotel on time due to the limited space available.

Seoirse Ó Dochartaigh is starting the evening off with a discussion on the Flight of the Earls at the point of departure and supporting his talk with a display of his highly acclaimed artwork. Two eminent speakers with different perspectives, Ruairi Ó Brádaigh and Eunan O Donnell will then provide the audience with food for thought and the audience will then be given an opportunity to question the three speakers on the issues raised. The evening will be chaired by well known local man Paddy Meehan.

The historic evening is also a celebration through music and song with a very impressive line-up of highly accomplished artists, including, the Champion Lilter of Ulster, Eamonn Monaghan, the renowned Seoirse Ó Dochartaigh on guitar and the highly regarded Irish traditional band, Fuinneamh.

This is certainly a once in a life time event, one which participants will no doubt be discussing for a long time to come!

author by anarchaeologist - PRApublication date Thu Sep 06, 2007 23:05author address author phone Report this post to the editors

I would hope somebody brought up a funny little story about something that happened in north Fanad in September 1607. As the feckless aristos buggered off (one of the greatest days in Ireland's history imho), they didn't have time to take on enough water for the voyage. They thought they'd stop after rounding Fanad Head.

However, MacSuibhne Fanad and the local people of Rinboy wouldn't let them land and went as far as to pelt the the landing party with beach pebbles. A nice bit of early modern begrudgery.

Their descendants whacked Lord Leitrim a few hundred years later in 1878.

author by mallarchaeologistpublication date Fri Sep 07, 2007 08:57author address author phone Report this post to the editors

"One of the greatest days in Ireland's history imho". This tips on a really important point. We often have to listen to rubbish that the demise of the aristo's of Gaelic Ireland was some negative occurance. These people were tyrants plain and simple. There is evidence that in the late middle ages there is movement of the poorer classes from Gaelic areas to Crown held areas. Why? presumably life is better. We often hear horrendous stalinist type analysis where agency is ignored. We should pay more attention to the actions of the people at the time and not 19th nationalist propaganda.

author by Caelpublication date Sat Sep 08, 2007 18:10author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Ruairí Ó Brádaigh, President, Sinn Féin Poblachtach, speaking at a seminar entitled “The Flight of the Earls and its Consequences” in the Central Hotel, Donegal Town this week has said:

At the outset I would like to take issue with the expression “Flight of the Earls”. One dictionary explains “flight” as “to run away, as from danger.” I agree with Prof John McGurk of the University of Ulster when he spoke at Letterkenny on August 19 last. Naming the event as a “flight’ was “pandering to the English interpretation” of what happened. He suggested that the departure of the Earls – who had intended to return – could have been termed a “strategic regrouping”.

The historian Micheline Kerney Walsh in her work “Destruction by Peace: Hugh O’Neill after Kinsale” published in 1986 writes; “It has been generally assumed that he accepted defeat and, in despair, had gone into voluntary exile”, but this is not so. She states that according to recent research, his principal objective in leaving for Spain in 1607 was “to return at the head of an army designed to break English power in Ireland.”

The 99 Irish exiles who sailed from Rathmullen, Co Donegal on September 14, 1607 were on a French ship procured for them by Cúchonnacht Maguire, chieftain of Fermanagh. They sailed for Spain and were within sight almost of the Spanish coast when an almighty storm blew then off course and back across the Bay of Biscay to France, where they landed on October 4.

At home in Ireland, the consequences of their departure from the scene were many and varied. With the Plantation of Ulster from 1608, the Gaelic order was eclipsed, and the great Irish Diaspora began. Also in Ireland began a great renaissance of culture and learning, in the Irish language of course, “Anocht is Uaigneach Éire” (Ireland is desolate tonight), by Aindrias MacMarcais is a poem famous for its description of the Irish following the Departure. The plantation of Ulster, begun in 1608, was the greatest consequence of the Departure of the Earls. Their lands were confiscated by the English Crown. The revolt of Sir Cahir O’Doherty of Innishowen in January 1608 was initially successful in that he captured the city of Derry. But in July he was shot at Kilmacrennan, Co Donegal and his lands too were confiscated.

Chichester (ancestor of Captain Terence O’Neill) and Sir John Davies, the Attorney-General at Dublin Castle felt that war would never be at an end until there was “one king, one allegiance and one law”. The king would, of course, be the king of England and English ‘common law’ would replace the Irish Brehon code. This would be the new framework for Ulster.

The scheme adopted was not simply to redistribute the land seized but to build a new society – an exercise in social engineering. This is how the Ulster Plantation differed from earlier plantations elsewhere in Ireland and why it lasted so much longer. A homogeneous society at all levels was to be created, with English law, English courts and an English army in the background.

The present Belfast and St Andrews Agreements are just that – agreements. They are not a settlement. An artificial arrangement at Stormont gives us temporary and enforced vertical power-sharing, but under English rule. The alternative is a nine-county Ulster, this could be permanent within a four province federation. This proposal, known as ÉIRE NUA – a New Ireland – was outlined face-to-face at confidential meetings with all shades of unionism in the 1970s. In all cases the reaction was the same. If the English government disengaged from Ireland, then our proposal would be the second choice of unionists. Their first choice would be an independent Six-County state. We felt that that model would not be viable.

Nationalists have never sought to undo the Plantation of Ulster which next year will be four centuries old. They seek equal rights and equal opportunities within an Ireland where there is room for all – where all its inhabitants can feel comfortable and have their place in the sun.

 
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