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No date in Irish history is
better known than 1690. No Irish battle is more famous than William III's
victory over James II at the River Boyne, a few miles west of Drogheda.
James, a Roman Catholic, had lost the throne of England in the bloodless
"Glorious Revolution" of 1688. William was Prince of Orange,
a Dutch-speaking Protestant married to James's daughter Mary, and became
king at the request of parliament. James sought refuge with his old ally,
Louis XIV of France, who saw an opportunity to strike at William through
Ireland. He provided French officers and arms for James, who landed at
Kinsale in March 1689. The lord deputy, the Earl of Tyrconnell, was a
Catholic loyal to James, and his Irish army controlled most of the island.
James quickly summoned a parliament, largely Catholic, which proceeded to
repeal the legislation under which Protestant settlers had acquired land.
During the rule of Tyrconnell, the first Catholic viceroy since the
Reformation, Protestants had seen their influence eroded in the army, in
the courts and in civil government. Only in Ulster did they offer
effective resistance. In September 1688, while James was still king,
apprentice boys in Londonderry closed the city's gates to deny admission
to a Catholic regiment under Lord Antrim. In April 1689, the city refused
to surrender to James's army, and survived the hardships of a three-month
siege before relief came by sea. The Protestants of Enniskillen defended
their walled city with equal vigour, and won a number of victories over
Catholic troops. Eventually, James withdrew from the northern province.
William could not ignore the threat from Ireland. In August 1689 Marshal
Schomberg landed at Bangor with 20,000 troops and, with Ulster secure,
pushed south as far as Dundalk. James's army blocked further progress
towards Dublin, but there was no battle and the two armies withdrew to
winter quarters. In March 1690 the Jacobite army was strengthened by 7,000
French regulars, but Louis demanded over 5,000 Irish troops in return. The
Williamites were reinforced by Danish mercenaries and by English and Dutch
regiments. When William himself landed at Carrickfergus on 14 June, he was
able to muster an army of 36,000 men. He began the march towards Dublin.
There was some resistance near Newry, but the Jacobites soon withdrew to
the south bank of the River Boyne. The battle was fought on 1 July
1690 at a fordable river bend four miles west of Drogheda. The main body
of Williamite infantry was concentrated on fording the river at the
village of Oldbridge, which was approached by a deep and sheltenng glen.
First, however, a detachment of cavalry and infantry made a flanking
attack upstream, which forced James to divert troops to prevent his
retreat being cut off. William's army was stronger by at least 10,000 men,
but after these troops were drawn off he had three-to-one superiority in
the main arena. By mid-afternoon the Jacobite army was in retreat,
outpaced by James himself, who rode to Dublin to warn the city of
William's approach. He was in France before the month was out. On 6 July
William entered Dublin, where he gave thanks for victory in Christ Church
Cathedral.
The Battle of the Boyne is recalled each July in the celebrations of the
Orange Order, not on the first day but on "the Twelfth", for
eleven days were lost with the change from the Julian to the Gregorian
calendar in 1752. It was not the end of the Williamite campaign, and the
King had returned to England before the Dutch general Ginkel's victory at
Aughrim and the formal Irish surrender after the siege of Limerick in
1691. The Treaty of Limerick was not ungenerous to the defeated Catholics. |