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THE STORY OF IRELAND

(By A. M. Sullivan.)

XVII.—THE TREASON OF DIARMID

McMURROGH.

About the year 1152, in the course of the interminable civil war desolating Ireland, a feud of, peculiar bitterness arose between Tiernan O'Ruarc, prince of Brefni, and Diarmid McMurrogh, prince of Leinster. While one of the Ard-Righana favorable to the latter was for the moment uppermost, O'Ruarc had been dispossessed of his territory, its lordship being handed over to McMurrogh. To this was added a wrong still more dire. Devorgilla, the wife of O'Ruarc, eloped with McMurrogh, already her husband's most bitter rival and foe Her father and her husband both appealed to Torlogh O'Connor for justice upon the guilty prince of Leinster. O'Connor, although McMurrogh had been one of his supporters, at once acceded to this request. McMurrogh soon found his territory surrounded, and Devorgilla was restored to her husband. She did not, however, return to domestic life. Recent researches amongst the ancient Manuscript Materials for Irish History, by O'Curry and O'Donovan, throw much light upon this episode, and considerably alter the long prevailing popular impressions in reference thereto. Whatever the measure of Devorgilla's fault in eloping with McMurrogh—and the researches alluded to bring to light many circumstances invoking for her more of commiseration than of angry scorn— whole life subsequently to this sad event, and she lived for forty years afterwards, was one prolonged act of contrition and of penitential reparation for the scandal she had given. As I have already said, she did not return to the home she had abandoned. She entered a religious retreat; and thenceforth, while living a life of practical piety, penance, and mortification, devoted the immense dower which she possessed in her own right to works of charity, relieving the poor, building hospitals, asylums, convents, and churches. Thirteen years after this event, Roderick O'Connor, son and successor of the king - who had forced

McMurrogh to yield up the unhappy Devorgilla, claimed the throne of the kingdom. Roderick was a devoted friend of O'Ruarc, and entertained no very warm feelings toward McMurrogh. The king claimant marched on his "circuit," claiming "hostages" from the local princes as recognition of sovereignty. McMurrogh, who hated Roderick with intense violence, burned his city of Ferns, and retired to his Wicklow fastnesses, rather than yield allegiance to him. Roderick could not just then delay on his circuit to follow him up, but passed on southward, took up his hostages there, and then returned to settle accounts with McMurrogh. But by this time O'Ruarc, apparently only too glad to have such a pretext and opportunity for a stroke at his mortal foe. had assembled a. powerful army and marched upon McMurrogh from the north, while Roderick approached him from the south. Diarmid, thus surrounded, and deserted bv most of his own

people, outwitted and overmatched on all sides, saw that he was a ruined man. He abandoned the few

followers yet remaining to Kim, fled to the nearest seaport, and, with a heart bursting- with the most deadly passions, sailed for England (A.D. 1168 V vowing vengsance, black, bitter, and terrible, on all that he left behind !

"A solemn sentence of banishment was public!v pronounced against him by the assembled princes, and Morrogh, his —commonly called 'Morrogh wa Gael,' (or 'of the Irish'), to distinguish him from 'Morrogh na Gall' (or 'of th? Foreigners')—was inaugurated in his —McGee. Straightway he sought out the English king, who was just then in Aquitaine quelling a revolt of the nobles in that portion of his possessions. McMurrogh laid before Henry a most piteous recital of his wrongs unci grievances," appeai-ou w ****** i*« j«*ai/*c« emu .±ui

aid, inviting him to enter Ireland, which he was sure most easily to reduce to his sway, and finally offering to become his most submissive vassal if his majesty would but aid him in, recovering, the possessions from ■ which he had been expelled. "Henry," as one of our historians justly remarks, "must have been forcibly struck by such an invitation to carry out a project which he had long entertained, and for which he had been making grave preparations long before." He was too busy himself, however, just then to enter upon the project but he gave McMurrogh a royal letter or proclamation authorising such of his subjects as might so desire to aid the views of the Irish fugitive. Diarmid hurried back to England, and had all publicity given to this proclamation in his favor : but though he made the most alluring offers of reward and booty, he was a long time before he found anyone to espouse his cause. At length Robert Fitzstephen, a Norman relative of the prince of North Wales, just then held in prison by his Cambrian kinsman, was released or brought out of prison by McMurrogh, on condition of undertaking his service. Tbrough Fitzstephen there came into the enterprise several other knights, Maurice Fitzgerald, Meyler Fitzhenry, and others—all of them men of supreme daring, but of needy circumstances. Eventually there joined one who was destined to take command of them all, Richard de Clare, earl of Pembroke, commonly called '.'Strongbow" : a man of ruined fortune, needy, greedy, unscrupulous, and ready for any desperate adventure, possessing unquestionable military skill and reckless daring, and having a tolerably strong following of like adventurous spirits amongst the knights of the Welsh marches—in fine, just the man for Diarmid's purpose. The terms were soon settled. Strongbow and his companions undertook to raise a force of adventurers, proceed to Ireland with McMurrogh, and reinstate him in his principality. McMurrogh was to bestow on Strongbow (then a widower between fifty and sixty years of ago) his "daughter Eva in marriage, with succession to the throne of Leinster. Large grants of land also were to be distributed amongst the adventurers. Now, Diarmid knew that "succession to the throne" was not a matter which any king in Ireland, whether provincial or national, at any time could bestow ; the monarchy being elective out of the members of the reigning family. Even if he was himself at the time in full legal possession of "the throne of Leinster," he could, not promise, secure, or bequeath it, as of right, even to hi? own son.

In the next place, Diarmid knew that his offers of "grants of land" struck directly and utterly at the existing land system, the basis of Jill society in Ireland. For, according to the Irish Constitution and laws for a thousand years, the fee-simple or ownership of the soil was vested in the sept, tribe, or clan ; its use or

occupancy (by the individual members of the sept or others) baiug only regulated on behalf of aud in the interest of the whole sept, by the elected king for the time being. "Tribe land" could not be alienated unless by the king, with the sanction of the sept. The users and occupiers were, so to speak, a co-operative sccietv of agriculturists, who, as a bod// or a community, owned the soil they tilled, while individually renting it from that bodv or community under its administrative officialthe king. While Strongbow and his confederates were completing their arrangements in Chester, McMurrogh crossed over to his native Wexford privately to prepare the way there for their reception. It would seem that no whisper had reached Ireland of his movements, designs, proclamations, and preparations on the other side of the Channel. The wolf assumed the sheep's

clothing. McMurrogh feigned great humility and contrition, and pretended to aspire only to the recovery, by grace and favor, of his immediate patrimony of HyKinsella. Amongst his own immediate clansmen, no doubt, he found a friendly meeting and a ready following, and, more generally, a feeling somewhat of commiseration for one deemed to be now 6o fallen, so helpless so humiliated. This secured him from very close

observation, and greatly favored the preparations he was stealthily making to meet the Norman expedition with stout help on the shore. (To be continued.) '

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.I whakaputaina aunoatia ēnei kuputuhi tuhinga, e kitea ai pea ētahi hapa i roto. Tirohia te whārangi katoa kia kitea te āhuatanga taketake o te tuhinga.
Permanent link to this item
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZT19190220.2.12

Bibliographic details
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New Zealand Tablet, 20 February 1919, Page 10

Word count
Tapeke kupu
1,327

THE STORY OF IRELAND New Zealand Tablet, 20 February 1919, Page 10

THE STORY OF IRELAND New Zealand Tablet, 20 February 1919, Page 10

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