Jump to content

Siege of Limerick (1642)

Coordinates: 52°40′11″N 8°37′32″W / 52.669722°N 8.625556°W / 52.669722; -8.625556
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Gog the Mild (talk | contribs) at 13:34, 19 October 2022 (Undid revision 1116449847 by 2A02:C7C:5012:8B00:F023:AC99:6495:804A (talk) Revert unsourced edit). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Siege of Limerick (1642)
Part of the Irish Confederate Wars
King John's Castle in 2007.
King John's Castle on the River Shannon
Date18 May - 23 June 1642[1]
Location52°40′11″N 8°37′32″W / 52.669722°N 8.625556°W / 52.669722; -8.625556
Result Confederate Victory
Belligerents
Royalists Irish Confederation
Commanders and leaders
George Courtenay Garret Barry
Strength
200 unknown
Siege of Limerick (1642) is located in Ireland
St John's Castle - Limerick
St John's Castle - Limerick
Belfast
Belfast
Dublin
Dublin
Ireland and St John's Castle

The city of Limerick has been besieged five times during the 17th century. Two of these sieges took place during the Eleven Years' War The first of these sieges occurred during the spring of 1642 when Irish Confederate troops besieged and took the town's citadel, King John's Castle from an English Protestant garrison.

1641 Rebellion

The Irish Confederacy’s taking of Limerick was made far easier than subsequent attempts by the fact that they had the support of most of the city's population. About 600 English Protestant settlers had fled to the city to escape the Irish Rebellion of 1641 and had fortified themselves in King John's Castle in the centre of Limerick. They were led by Captain George Courtenay, 1st Baronet, of Newcastle[2] of Powderham in Devon. The city was predominantly Catholic and appealed to the new Confederate Catholic government at Kilkenny to capture this Protestant citadel.

Confederate troops arrive

As a result, General Garret Barry, the commander of the Confederate Munster army marched to Limerick with 1,500 men to secure it.[3] As he had no siege artillery, Barry put his men to digging mines under the eastern curtain wall and the south-east bastion of the castle,[4] which he intended to collapse by burning their supports. He also positioned snipers in the houses surrounding the castle to harass the defenders, particularly in St. Mary's Cathedral, which overlooked King John's Castle.[5] Finally, he cut off the defenders' food and water supply.

Surrender

After five weeks, when the English Protestants were ravaged by disease, they surrendered on terms, before Barry had to collapse his mines and assault the castle. The 400 surviving Protestants were evacuated to Dublin.

Citations

  1. ^ M'Enery 1904, p. 163.
  2. ^ M'Enery 1904, p. 163, line 31: "The castle was defended by Captain George Courtenay, a younger son of Sir William Courtenay, head of the famous house of Courtenay, Earls of Devon;"
  3. ^ M'Enery 1904, p. 163, penultimate line: "The principal men among the besiegers were General Gerald Barry, Patrick Pursell of Croagh, County Limerick, lord Roche, lord Muskerry ..."
  4. ^ Wiggins 2001, p. 1: "The castle had been brought to the brink of surrender by the invisible and inexorable power of deep gallery mining."
  5. ^ Meehan 1882, p. 28, line 29: "Muskerry ordered a cannon to be mounted on St. Mary's church, from which he kept up an incessant fire on the castle;"

References

  • Meehan, Rev. Charles Patrick (1882). The Confederation of Kilkenny (New revised and enlarged ed.). Dublin: James Duffy. OCLC 561870165.
  • M'Enery, M. J. (1904). "A Diary of the Siege of Limerick Castle, 1642". The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland. 5th. 34 (2): 163–187. JSTOR 25507363.
  • Wiggins, Kenneth (2001). Anatomy of a Siege: King John’s Castle, Limerick, 1642. London: The Boydell Press. ISBN 0-85115-827-7.