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Battle of Aughrim

The Battle of Aughrim (Irish: Cath Eachroma) was the decisive battle of the Williamite War in Ireland. It was fought between the largely Irish Jacobite army loyal to James II and the forces of William III on 12 July 1691 (old style, equivalent to 22 July new style), near the village of Aughrim, County Galway.

Battle of Aughrim
Part of the Williamite War in Ireland and the Nine Years' War

Contemporary sketch of Aughrim, viewed from the Williamite lines, by Jan Wyk
Date22 July [O.S. 12 July] 1691
Location53°17′42″N 8°18′43″W / 53.295°N 8.312°W / 53.295; -8.312
Result Williamite and Allied victory[1][2]
Belligerents
Williamites
Dutch Republic
Jacobites
 France
Commanders and leaders
Godert de Ginkell
Duke of Wurttemberg
Thomas Tollemache
Henri de Massue
Hugh Mackay
Charles Chalmot de Saint-Ruhe 
Chevalier de Tessé
William Dorrington
John Hamilton 
Dominic Sheldon
Strength
20,000 20,000–25,000[3]
Casualties and losses
3,000 killed 4,000 killed
4,000 missing
581 captured
class=notpageimage|
Location within Ireland
Battle of Aughrim (County Galway)

The battle was one of the bloodiest ever fought in the British Isles: 7,000 people were killed. The Jacobite defeat at Aughrim meant the effective end of James's cause in Ireland, although the city of Limerick held out until the autumn of 1691.[4]

The campaign edit

By 1691, the Jacobites had adopted a defensive position.[5] In the previous year they had retreated into Connacht behind the easily defensible line of the Shannon, with strongholds at Sligo, Athlone and Limerick guarding the routes into the province and the western ports. William besieged Limerick in late August 1690 but, suffering heavy casualties and losses to disease, he called off the siege and put his army into winter quarters. However, internal divisions, exacerbated by the departure of James for France after defeat at the Boyne, were increasingly undermining the Jacobite command.[6]

The main split was between the "Peace Party", led by James's viceroy Tyrconnell, which proposed negotiating a settlement with William, and the "War Party" of army officers grouped around Patrick Sarsfield, who believed the war could still be won outright.[7] Encouraged by William's failure to take Limerick and looking to break Tyrconnell's influence, Sarsfield's faction decided to appeal directly to Louis XIV of France requesting that Tyrconnell and army commander Berwick be removed from office and that Louis send military aid.[8]

The "Peace Party" obtained an offer of settlement from the Williamites in December, upon which Sarsfield demanded that Berwick have Riverston, Denis Daly and other "Peace Party" leaders arrested. Berwick complied, probably with the approval of Tyrconnell, who returned from France to try and preserve his influence by repositioning himself with Sarsfield's faction.[8]

Alarmed by the fracturing of the Irish command, James was persuaded to request further military support directly from Louis.[9] Louis sent general Charles Chalmot de Saint-Ruhe to replace Berwick as senior Jacobite commander, with secret instructions to assess whether Louis should send further military aid.[9] Saint-Ruhe, accompanied by lieutenant-generals de Tessé and d'Usson, arrived at Limerick on 9 May, bringing sufficient arms, corn and meal to sustain the army until the autumn, but not the troops or money the Jacobites desperately needed.[10]

By this stage William's forces were led by his subordinates, Dutch officer Godert de Ginkel and second-in-command Württemberg.[11] Ginkel was conscious of the poor military situation facing William in the Netherlands, and seeking a quick end to the war obtained William's permission to offer the Jacobites moderate terms of surrender.[12] By late spring 1691, however, Ginkel became concerned that a French convoy could land further reinforcements at Galway or Limerick, and began planning to enter the field as quickly as possible.[13] During May, both sides began assembling forces for a summer campaign, the Jacobites at Limerick and the Williamites at Mullingar.

 
Godert de Ginkel, the Williamite commander at Aughrim

On 16 June, Ginkel's cavalry reconnoitred from Ballymore towards the Jacobite garrison at Athlone. Saint-Ruhe had been unsure where Ginkel would attempt to cross the Shannon, but by 19 June he realised Athlone was the target and began concentrating his troops west of the town.[14] Ginkel breached the Jacobite lines of defence and took Athlone on 30 June after a bloody siege; Saint-Ruhe was unable to relieve the town and fell back to the west. Athlone was seen as a significant victory and likely to provoke the collapse of the Jacobite army.[14] The Lords Justice in Dublin issued a proclamation offering generous terms for Jacobites who surrendered, including a free pardon, restoration of forfeited estates, and the offer of similar or higher rank and pay if they wished to join William's army.[15]

Unaware of the location of Saint-Ruhe's main army and assuming he was outnumbered, on 10 July Ginkel continued a cautious advance through Ballinasloe down the main Limerick and Galway road.[16] Saint-Ruhe's and Tyrconnell's plan had been to fall back on Limerick and force the Williamites into another year of campaigning, but wishing to redeem his errors at Athlone Saint-Ruhe appears to have instead decided to force a decisive battle.[17] Ginkel found his way blocked by Saint-Ruhe's army at Aughrim on the early morning of 12 July 1691.

Deployments edit

At this point of the campaign, both armies were about 20,000 strong. The core of the Jacobite force was formed around James's old Irish Army, which had been reorganised by Tyrconnell from 1686 onwards by dismissing the majority of Protestant officers and men.[18] It had been substantially expanded with newly recruited Irish Catholic regiments, organised in the English military tradition.[19]

While it is not now possible to establish with certainty which Jacobite infantry regiments fought at Aughrim, at least 30 have been identified as likely present, including the Foot Guards, Talbot's, Nugent's, Fitzgerald's, Boffin's, Cormack O'Neill's, Saxby's and Iveagh's.[20] The Jacobites also retained around 4,000 cavalry and dragoons, mostly much better trained and equipped than their foot.

The composition of Ginkel's army is better documented than that of the Jacobites: in addition to English regiments, it included a large number of Anglo-Irish Protestants as well as Dutch, Danish and French Huguenot contingents.[19] Different contemporary sources give different dispositions for Ginkel's forces at Aughrim, but most agree that the right wing was composed of English, Anglo-Irish and Huguenot cavalry, with Danish and French cavalry on the left.[21] Ginkel positioned the English infantry regiments on the right of his centre, with French, Danish and Dutch foot on their left.[21]

According to witnesses of the battle the Jacobite lines at Aughrim occupied a strong defensive position extending over two miles.[22] To protect his largely inexperienced infantry, Saint-Ruhe deployed most of it in two divisions under Major-Generals John Hamilton and William Dorrington along the crest of a ridge known as Kilcommadan Hill, their positions protected by small hillside enclosures and hedgerows. The centre was further screened by a large bog, impassable to cavalry, through which the Melehan River flowed. The left flank was also bounded by a "a large Red Bogg, almost a mile over",[22] through which there was only one causeway, overlooked by the deserted village of Aughrim and a ruined castle: Saint-Ruhe deployed the bulk of his cavalry here under Parker, Luttrell and Purcell, under the overall command of Dominic Sheldon. On the right flank where the Tristaun stream ran through the "Pass" of Urraghry or Urachree, much the more open and weaker position, Saint-Ruhe placed his best infantry and the cavalry regiments of Abercorn, Tyrconnell and Edmund Prendergast, all under his second-in-command, the chevalier de Tessé.[17][23] According to one participant's account Patrick Sarsfield had quarrelled with Saint-Ruhe and was posted with the cavalry reserve to the left rear, under strict instructions not to move without orders.[23][a]

The battle edit

After heavy mist all morning, Ginkel's forces moved into position by about two o'clock in the afternoon, and both sides cannonaded each other for the next few hours.[24] Ginkel planned to avoid fully joining battle until the next day; he ordered a probing attack on the Jacobites' weaker right flank led by a captain and sixteen Danish troopers, followed by 200 of Cunningham's Eniskillen dragoons.[24]

The Jacobite response demonstrated the strength of their defence but also meant that the attackers were no longer able to break off the engagement as Ginkel had planned.[24] A conference was held at about 4 pm: Ginkel still favoured withdrawing, but the Williamite infantry general Hugh Mackay argued for an immediate full-scale attack.[25]

 
Henri de Massue led the right of the Williamite cavalry at Aughrim. A French Protestant, he had entered William's service in 1690, forfeiting his French estates and title (the Marquis de Rouvigny) as a result.

Battle was joined in earnest between five and six o'clock. In the centre, the largely English and Scots regiments under Mackay attempted a frontal assault on Dorrington's infantry on Kilcommadan Hill. The attackers had to contend with waist-deep water and a tenacious Irish defence of the reinforced hedge lines. They withdrew with heavy losses: the Jacobites pursued them downhill, capturing colonels Erle and Herbert.[26]

On their left centre, the Williamites advanced across low ground exposed to Jacobite fire and took a great number of casualties. The Williamite assault in this area, led by St John's and Tiffin's regiments and the Huguenot foot, was driven back into the bog by the Irish foot fighting with clubbed (reversed) muskets; many of the attackers were killed or drowned.[26] In the rout, the pursuing Jacobites managed to spike a battery of Williamite guns. The Jacobite regiments of the Guards and Gordon O'Neill were said to have fought particularly strongly.[26] The musketry was so intense that "the ridges seemed to be ablaze" according to Andreas Claudianus, a Norwegian fighting with the Danish infantry.[citation needed]

The Jacobite right and centre holding firm, Ginkel tried to force a way across the causeway on the Jacobite left, where any attack would have to pass along a narrow lane covered by Walter Burke's regiment from their positions in Aughrim castle.[27] Four battalions led by Brigadier Kirke secured positions near the castle, following which Compton's Royal Horse Guards got across the causeway at the third attempt.[27] Dorrington having earlier withdrawn two battalions of infantry from this area to reinforce the Jacobite centre, they were faced only with weak opposition, reaching Aughrim village. While a force of Jacobite cavalry and dragoons under Luttrell had been tasked with covering this flank, their commander had ordered them to fall back, following a route now known locally as "Luttrell's Pass". Rumours later flew that he had been in the pay of William, although it seems most probable that Luttrell withdrew as he had little or no infantry support.[17] The cavalry regiments of Henri de Massue, Lanier, Langston and Byerley also crossed the causeway, attacking Dorrington's flank.[27]

Most commentators, even those sympathetic to William, judged that the Irish foot had fought exceptionally well, and some accounts including James II's Memoirs claim that Saint-Ruhe was "in a transport of joy to see the foot [...] behave themselves so well".[28]

Appearing to believe that the battle could be won, he was heard to shout, "they are running, we will chase them back to the gates of Dublin", before riding across the battlefield to direct the defence against the Williamite cavalry on his left wing.[29] However, as he rode over to rally his cavalry, Saint-Ruhe paused briefly to direct the fire of a battery, and was decapitated by a cannonball;[17] his death was said to have occurred around sunset, shortly after eight o'clock.[30]

 
Jacobite cavalry officer Patrick Sarsfield. Sarsfield's large reserve of cavalry could have countered the Williamite advance, but he had been ordered not to move without specific orders by the Jacobite commander.

After Saint-Ruhe's death the Jacobite left, devoid of a senior commander, collapsed very quickly: the regiment of Horse Guards left the field almost immediately, followed shortly by the cavalry and dragoon regiments of Luttrell, Sheldon and Galmoy.[31][b] De Tessé attempted to head a cavalry counter-attack but was seriously wounded shortly afterwards.[27] The Jacobite left flank was now exposed: Mackay and Tollemache also attacked again in the centre, pushing the Jacobites towards the hilltop.[31] Burke and his regiment, still holding the castle, were forced to surrender. Most of the infantry remained unaware of Saint-Ruhe's death, however,[30] and Hamilton's infantry on the Jacobite right continued to counter-attack, fighting the Huguenot foot to a standstill in an area still known locally as the "Bloody Hollow".[31][32] At around nine o'clock towards nightfall the Jacobite infantry were finally pushed to the top of Killcommadan hill and broke, fleeing towards a bog in the left rear of their position, while their cavalry retreated towards Loughrea.[33]

Sarsfield and Galmoy briefly tried to organise a rearguard action but as in many battles of the period, most of the Jacobite casualties occurred in the pursuit, which was ended only by darkness and the onset of mist and rain.[33] The defeated infantry were cut down in their hundreds by the Williamite cavalry as they tried to get away, many of them having thrown away their weapons in order to run faster.[citation needed]

In addition to the rank and file the Jacobite casualties and prisoners included many of its most experienced infantry officers: the dead included brigadiers Barker, O'Neill and O'Connell, and colonels Moore, Talbot, O'Mahony, Nugent, Felix O'Neil and Ulick Burke, Lord Galway.[34] The two major-generals commanding the Jacobite centre, Hamilton and Dorrington, were both taken prisoner, Hamilton dying of wounds shortly afterwards. Though the killing of prisoners to prevent rescue was a common practice at the time, Jacobite soldiers were accused of having "cut to pieces" colonel Herbert after his capture.[35] One contemporary Jacobite source (Leslie) alleged that about 2,000 Jacobites were killed "in cold blood" with many, including Lord Galway and colonel Charles Moore, killed after being promised quarter.[34]

An eyewitness with the Williamite army, George Story, wrote that "from the top of the Hill where [the Jacobite] Camp had been," the bodies "looked like a great Flock of Sheep, scattered up and down the Countrey for almost four Miles round."[36]

Aftermath edit

Estimates of the two armies' losses vary, but they were extremely heavy overall; it is generally agreed that 7,000 men were killed at Aughrim. Aughrim has been described as "quite possibly the bloodiest battle ever fought in the British Isles",[37] but earlier medieval battles, although poorly recorded, may rival this battle in casualty numbers. At the time, the Williamites claimed to have lost only 600 and to have killed some 7,000 Jacobites.[38] Some recent studies put the Williamite losses as high as 3,000,[39] but they are more generally given as 3,000, with 4,000 Jacobites killed.[40][41] Another 4,000 Jacobites had deserted, while Ginkel recorded 526 prisoners taken of all ranks.[42] While Ginkel had given word to Dorrington that the captives would be treated as prisoners of war, general officers were instead taken to the Tower of London as prisoners of state, while the majority of the rank and file were incarcerated on Lambay Island where many died of disease and starvation.[43]

Aughrim was the decisive battle of the conflict: the Jacobites had lost many experienced officers, along with much of the army's equipment and supplies. The remnants of the Jacobite army retreated to the mountains before regrouping under Sarsfield's command at Limerick. Many of their infantry regiments were seriously depleted: on 22 July, Bellew's regiment was listed as having 240 soldiers, having lost all its senior officers and sergeants; Slane's regiment 140 soldiers, and Louth's just 28, although some stragglers arrived later.[44] The city of Galway surrendered without a fight after the battle, on advantageous terms, while Sarsfield and the Jacobites' main army surrendered shortly afterwards at Limerick after a short siege.[citation needed]

Cultural impact edit

 
Memorial cross on the site of the Battle of Aughrim

According to Ó Ciardha, the battle "made a searing impression on the Irish consciousness".[45] Irish tradition came to refer to the battle as "Eachdhroim an áir" – "Aughrim of the slaughter" – after a line in a poem by Irish-language poet Séamas Dall Mac Cuarta, the "Elegy for Sorley MacDonnell". While Ginkel ordered the burial of his own dead, the remaining Jacobites were left unburied, their bones remaining scattered on the battlefield for years afterwards:[43][c] Mac Cuarta wrote "It is at Aughrim of the slaughter where they are to be found, their damp bones lying uncoffined".[45]

John Dunton in his work, Teague Land, an account of his travels in Ireland written seven years after the battle, wrote that: "After the battle the English did not tarry to bury any of the dead but their own, and left those of the enemy exposed to the fowls of the air, for the country was then so uninhabited that there were not hands to inter them. Many dogs resorted to this aceldama [Potter's field] where for want of other food they fed on man's [sic] flesh, and thereby became so dangerous and fierce that a single person could not pass that way without manifest hazard". He ends the description with the story of a faithful greyhound belonging to a Jacobite killed in the battle who remained by his master's body defending it until shot by a passing soldier in January of the following year.[citation needed]

While Aughrim remained a powerful symbol of disaster for Irish Catholics, it was also the focus of Loyalist (particularly Orange Order) celebrations in Ireland on 12 July up until the early 19th century. Thereafter, it was superseded by the Battle of the Boyne in commemorations on "the Twelfth" due to the switch to the Gregorian calendar (in which 1 July OS became 11 July NS and 12 July OS became 22 July NS).

It has been suggested that the Boyne became emphasised because the Irish troops could be more easily presented as cowardly than at Aughrim, where they were generally agreed to have fought bravely.[46] The Loyalist song The Sash mentions Aughrim.

The battle was the subject of a 1728 tragic drama by Robert Ashton, The Battle of Aughrim or the Fall of Monsieur St Ruth, which after initial neglect became enormously popular from 1770 onwards into the 19th century. Though the play was intended to celebrate the Williamite victory and casts Saint-Ruhe firmly in the role of antagonist, it also portrays Sarsfield and his lieutenants as heroic figures and incorporates a "lament for Catholic patriotism", so that "both Catholics and Protestants were attracted to the play for generations".[47] In 1804 it was noted of Ashton's play that "a more popular Production never appeared in Ireland; it is in the hands of every Peasant who can read English; and [...] is committed to memory and occasionally recited".[48] In 1885, artist John Mulvany completed a painting of the battle; it was exhibited in Dublin in 2010.[49] The Battle of Aughrim was also the subject of a long 1968 poem by Richard Murphy, who noted that he had ancestors fighting on both sides.

The Aughrim battlefield site became the subject of controversy in Ireland over plans to build the new M6 motorway through the former battlefield. Historians, environmentalists and members of the Orange Order objected to the plans; the motorway opened in 2009.[citation needed]

Aughrim Interpretative Centre edit

The Battle of Aughrim Interpretative Centre,[50] in Aughrim village was opened in 1991. It is a collaboration between Aughrim Heritage Committee, Ireland West Tourism and Galway County Council. It houses artefacts found on the battlefield site, as well as three-dimensional displays and a documentary film that explains the course of the battle and its significance in the wider context of the history of Ireland.[51]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Two accounts, that given in Jacobite tract A Light to the Blind and in Macariae Excidium, place Sarsfield on the right with de Tessé and on the left, respectively. The account of Robert Parker, who fought at the battle, claims that Sarsfield was with the reserve at the rear: this is generally seen as accurate as he is not mentioned in any narrative of the battle until the retreat (see Hayes-McCoy (1942), p. 18).
  2. ^ Modern scholarly opinion is divided on the significance of St Ruth's death, as the critical breakthrough on the Jacobite left occurred prior to it: even at the time the Duke of Berwick suggested the battle would have been lost even if St Ruth had lived.
  3. ^ At least some were later collected: Sir Thomas Molyneux, 1st Baronet, a visitor to Kilconnell Friary in 1709, noted that the churchyard was then "surrounded by a wall of dead men's sckulls and bones pil'd very orderly [...] clear round against the wall to the length of 88 foot [...] within they shew you Ld. Gallway's and other great men's heads killed at Aghrim". The local landlord appears to have finally arranged burial in the 1860s.

References edit

  1. ^ Hayes-McCoy, Gerard Anthony (1964). The Irish at war. Mercier Press. p. 55.
  2. ^ Grant, James (1873). British battles on land and sea, Volume 1. Cassell, Petter, Galpin. p. 417.
  3. ^ Bodart 1908, p. 114.
  4. ^ G.A. Hayes McCoy, p. 244
  5. ^ Histoire de l'Irlande ancienne et moderne: tirée des monumens les ..., Volume 3 Par Mac-Geoghegan (James, abbé) pp 743–747 tr. The History of Ireland, Ancient and Modern, Taken From the Most Authentic Records, and Dedicated to the Irish Brigade. by the Abbe Mac-Geoghegan. Tr. From the French by Patrick O'Kelly. ISBN 978-1-4255-6638-8
  6. ^ Hayton, David (2004) Ruling Ireland, 1685–1742: Politics, Politicians and Parties, Boydell, p. 27
  7. ^ Bradshaw, Brendan (2016) And so began the Irish Nation: Nationality, National Consciousness and Nationalism in Pre-modern Ireland, Routledge, p. 221
  8. ^ a b Hayton, p. 28
  9. ^ a b Childs, John (2007) The Williamite Wars in Ireland, Bloomsbury, p. 279
  10. ^ Childs, p. 295
  11. ^ Van Nimwegen 2020, p. 216.
  12. ^ Childs, p. 293
  13. ^ Childs, p. 304
  14. ^ a b Childs, p. 316
  15. ^ Childs, p. 331
  16. ^ Childs, p. 332
  17. ^ a b c d Doherty, Richard. "The Battle of Aughrim", Early Modern History (1500–1700), Issue 3 (Autumn 1995), Vol. 3
  18. ^ Hayes-McCoy, "The Battle of Aughrim", Journal of the Galway Archaeological and Historical Society, Vol. 20, No. 1/2 (1942), p. 4
  19. ^ a b Hayes-McCoy (1942), p. 6
  20. ^ Hayes-McCoy (1942), pp. 15–17
  21. ^ a b Hayes-McCoy, p. 20
  22. ^ a b O'Callaghan (ed.) Macariae Excidium, Dublin: Irish Archaeological Society, p. 440
  23. ^ a b Hayes-McCoy, p. 18
  24. ^ a b c Hayes-McCoy, 21
  25. ^ Hayes-McCoy, p. 22
  26. ^ a b c Hayes-McCoy, p. 24
  27. ^ a b c d Childs, p. 336
  28. ^ O'Callaghan (ed.) Macariae Excidium, Dublin: Irish Archaeological Society, p. 443
  29. ^ Hayes-McCoy, p. 26
  30. ^ a b O'Callaghan (ed.) Macariae Excidium, Dublin: Irish Archaeological Society, p. 453
  31. ^ a b c Hayes-McCoy, p. 27
  32. ^ Historic map of the site 2010-05-29 at the Wayback Machine at Ordnance Survey of Ireland.]
  33. ^ a b Hayes-McCoy, p. 28
  34. ^ a b Haverty (1867) The History of Ireland, J Duffy, p. 664
  35. ^ O'Callaghan (ed.) Macariae Excidium, Dublin: Irish Archaeological Society, p. 457
  36. ^ O'Callaghan (ed.) Macariae Excidium, Dublin: Irish Archaeological Society, p. 455
  37. ^ Pittock, M. Poetry and Jacobite Politics in Eighteenth-Century Britain and Ireland, Cambridge UP, p. 44
  38. ^ Doherty, The Williamite War in Ireland, p. 181
  39. ^ Wauchope, Patrick Sarsfield and the Williamite War, p. 232
  40. ^ McCoy, p. 267 also gives the Jacobite losses as 4,000 killed, with 3,000 Williamite troops dead.
  41. ^ Padraig Lenihan in Consolidating Conquest, Ireland 1603–1727, p. 186, gives the losses as, "one fifth of the estimated 20,000-strong Irish army and at least 1,200 Allies killed in the opening attacks".
  42. ^ Boyle (1867) The Battle-fields of Ireland, from 1688 to 1691, Robert Coddington, p. 321
  43. ^ a b Childs (2007) The Williamite Wars in Ireland, A & C Black, p. 338
  44. ^ Murtagh, "Louth Regiments in the Irish Jacobite Army", Journal of the County Louth Archaeological Society, v. 13, num. 1 (1953), p. 11
  45. ^ a b Ó Ciardha (2002) Ireland and the Jacobite Cause – A Fatal Attachment, p. 82
  46. ^ Padraig Lenihan, The Battle of the Boyne, pp. 258–259, "The 18th-century anniversaries of the Boyne and Aughrim served as the focus of more plebeian commemorations that included bonfires and parading. In this context, the 'twelfth' was the most symbolically important battle commemoration but it referred to Aughrim. Until Britain belatedly adopted the Gregorian Calendar in 1752, 1 July was the anniversary of the Boyne and 12 July the anniversary of Aughrim."
    "Aughrim emphasises the valour and martial qualities of the Jacobites with a view to magnify the military achievement and bravery of the Williamites ... This depiction of Jacobites, favourable in many respects, may have been less suitable to Protestant communal rituals in the face of a post-1790s Catholic resurgence."
  47. ^ Wheatley, "Heroic Palimpsest: Robert Ashton's "The Battle of Aughrim" in Eighteenth-Century Ireland / Iris an dá chultúr, v. 11 (1996), 54
  48. ^ Wheatley (1996), 56
  49. ^ The Irish Times 2 Oct. 2010
  50. ^ "Battle of Aughrim Centre". Galway County Council. Retrieved 24 April 2016.
  51. ^ "Remembering Aughrim, July 21, 1691". Galway Advertiser, July 24th, 1997. Retrieved 24 April 2016.

Sources edit

  • Boulger, Demetrius C., The Battle of the Boyne, Together with an Account Based on French & Other Unpublished Records of the War in Ireland 1688–1691 Martin Secker, London, 1911 (Available as pdf)
  • Piers Wauchope, Patrick Sarsfield and the Williamite War, Dublin 1992.
  • J. G. Simms, Jacobite Ireland, London 1969.
  • G. A., Hayes-McCoy, Irish Battles, Belfast 1990.
  • Eamonn O Ciardha, Ireland and the Jacobite cause – a Fatal Attachment, Dublin 2002.
  • Padraig Lenihan, 1690, Battle of the Boyne, Tempus, 2003.
  • Van Nimwegen, Olaf (2020). De Veertigjarige Oorlog 1672–1712. Prometheus. ISBN 978-90-446-3871-4.
  • Bodart, Gaston (1908). Militär-historisches Kriegs-Lexikon (1618–1905). Retrieved 3 February 2023.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • on Mapviewer at Ordnance Survey of Ireland
  • Interview with historian Padraig Lenihan on the battle.
  • "The Battle of Aughrim" – traditional tune

battle, aughrim, irish, cath, eachroma, decisive, battle, williamite, ireland, fought, between, largely, irish, jacobite, army, loyal, james, forces, william, july, 1691, style, equivalent, july, style, near, village, aughrim, county, galway, part, williamite,. The Battle of Aughrim Irish Cath Eachroma was the decisive battle of the Williamite War in Ireland It was fought between the largely Irish Jacobite army loyal to James II and the forces of William III on 12 July 1691 old style equivalent to 22 July new style near the village of Aughrim County Galway Battle of AughrimPart of the Williamite War in Ireland and the Nine Years WarContemporary sketch of Aughrim viewed from the Williamite lines by Jan WykDate22 July O S 12 July 1691LocationAughrim County Galway Ireland53 17 42 N 8 18 43 W 53 295 N 8 312 W 53 295 8 312ResultWilliamite and Allied victory 1 2 BelligerentsWilliamites Dutch RepublicJacobites FranceCommanders and leadersGodert de Ginkell Duke of Wurttemberg Thomas Tollemache Henri de Massue Hugh MackayCharles Chalmot de Saint Ruhe Chevalier de Tesse William Dorrington John Hamilton Dominic SheldonStrength20 00020 000 25 000 3 Casualties and losses3 000 killed4 000 killed4 000 missing581 capturedclass notpageimage Location within IrelandShow map of IrelandBattle of Aughrim County Galway Show map of County Galway The battle was one of the bloodiest ever fought in the British Isles 7 000 people were killed The Jacobite defeat at Aughrim meant the effective end of James s cause in Ireland although the city of Limerick held out until the autumn of 1691 4 Contents 1 The campaign 2 Deployments 3 The battle 4 Aftermath 5 Cultural impact 6 Aughrim Interpretative Centre 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksThe campaign editBy 1691 the Jacobites had adopted a defensive position 5 In the previous year they had retreated into Connacht behind the easily defensible line of the Shannon with strongholds at Sligo Athlone and Limerick guarding the routes into the province and the western ports William besieged Limerick in late August 1690 but suffering heavy casualties and losses to disease he called off the siege and put his army into winter quarters However internal divisions exacerbated by the departure of James for France after defeat at the Boyne were increasingly undermining the Jacobite command 6 The main split was between the Peace Party led by James s viceroy Tyrconnell which proposed negotiating a settlement with William and the War Party of army officers grouped around Patrick Sarsfield who believed the war could still be won outright 7 Encouraged by William s failure to take Limerick and looking to break Tyrconnell s influence Sarsfield s faction decided to appeal directly to Louis XIV of France requesting that Tyrconnell and army commander Berwick be removed from office and that Louis send military aid 8 The Peace Party obtained an offer of settlement from the Williamites in December upon which Sarsfield demanded that Berwick have Riverston Denis Daly and other Peace Party leaders arrested Berwick complied probably with the approval of Tyrconnell who returned from France to try and preserve his influence by repositioning himself with Sarsfield s faction 8 Alarmed by the fracturing of the Irish command James was persuaded to request further military support directly from Louis 9 Louis sent general Charles Chalmot de Saint Ruhe to replace Berwick as senior Jacobite commander with secret instructions to assess whether Louis should send further military aid 9 Saint Ruhe accompanied by lieutenant generals de Tesse and d Usson arrived at Limerick on 9 May bringing sufficient arms corn and meal to sustain the army until the autumn but not the troops or money the Jacobites desperately needed 10 By this stage William s forces were led by his subordinates Dutch officer Godert de Ginkel and second in command Wurttemberg 11 Ginkel was conscious of the poor military situation facing William in the Netherlands and seeking a quick end to the war obtained William s permission to offer the Jacobites moderate terms of surrender 12 By late spring 1691 however Ginkel became concerned that a French convoy could land further reinforcements at Galway or Limerick and began planning to enter the field as quickly as possible 13 During May both sides began assembling forces for a summer campaign the Jacobites at Limerick and the Williamites at Mullingar nbsp Godert de Ginkel the Williamite commander at AughrimOn 16 June Ginkel s cavalry reconnoitred from Ballymore towards the Jacobite garrison at Athlone Saint Ruhe had been unsure where Ginkel would attempt to cross the Shannon but by 19 June he realised Athlone was the target and began concentrating his troops west of the town 14 Ginkel breached the Jacobite lines of defence and took Athlone on 30 June after a bloody siege Saint Ruhe was unable to relieve the town and fell back to the west Athlone was seen as a significant victory and likely to provoke the collapse of the Jacobite army 14 The Lords Justice in Dublin issued a proclamation offering generous terms for Jacobites who surrendered including a free pardon restoration of forfeited estates and the offer of similar or higher rank and pay if they wished to join William s army 15 Unaware of the location of Saint Ruhe s main army and assuming he was outnumbered on 10 July Ginkel continued a cautious advance through Ballinasloe down the main Limerick and Galway road 16 Saint Ruhe s and Tyrconnell s plan had been to fall back on Limerick and force the Williamites into another year of campaigning but wishing to redeem his errors at Athlone Saint Ruhe appears to have instead decided to force a decisive battle 17 Ginkel found his way blocked by Saint Ruhe s army at Aughrim on the early morning of 12 July 1691 Deployments editAt this point of the campaign both armies were about 20 000 strong The core of the Jacobite force was formed around James s old Irish Army which had been reorganised by Tyrconnell from 1686 onwards by dismissing the majority of Protestant officers and men 18 It had been substantially expanded with newly recruited Irish Catholic regiments organised in the English military tradition 19 While it is not now possible to establish with certainty which Jacobite infantry regiments fought at Aughrim at least 30 have been identified as likely present including the Foot Guards Talbot s Nugent s Fitzgerald s Boffin s Cormack O Neill s Saxby s and Iveagh s 20 The Jacobites also retained around 4 000 cavalry and dragoons mostly much better trained and equipped than their foot The composition of Ginkel s army is better documented than that of the Jacobites in addition to English regiments it included a large number of Anglo Irish Protestants as well as Dutch Danish and French Huguenot contingents 19 Different contemporary sources give different dispositions for Ginkel s forces at Aughrim but most agree that the right wing was composed of English Anglo Irish and Huguenot cavalry with Danish and French cavalry on the left 21 Ginkel positioned the English infantry regiments on the right of his centre with French Danish and Dutch foot on their left 21 According to witnesses of the battle the Jacobite lines at Aughrim occupied a strong defensive position extending over two miles 22 To protect his largely inexperienced infantry Saint Ruhe deployed most of it in two divisions under Major Generals John Hamilton and William Dorrington along the crest of a ridge known as Kilcommadan Hill their positions protected by small hillside enclosures and hedgerows The centre was further screened by a large bog impassable to cavalry through which the Melehan River flowed The left flank was also bounded by a a large Red Bogg almost a mile over 22 through which there was only one causeway overlooked by the deserted village of Aughrim and a ruined castle Saint Ruhe deployed the bulk of his cavalry here under Parker Luttrell and Purcell under the overall command of Dominic Sheldon On the right flank where the Tristaun stream ran through the Pass of Urraghry or Urachree much the more open and weaker position Saint Ruhe placed his best infantry and the cavalry regiments of Abercorn Tyrconnell and Edmund Prendergast all under his second in command the chevalier de Tesse 17 23 According to one participant s account Patrick Sarsfield had quarrelled with Saint Ruhe and was posted with the cavalry reserve to the left rear under strict instructions not to move without orders 23 a The battle editAfter heavy mist all morning Ginkel s forces moved into position by about two o clock in the afternoon and both sides cannonaded each other for the next few hours 24 Ginkel planned to avoid fully joining battle until the next day he ordered a probing attack on the Jacobites weaker right flank led by a captain and sixteen Danish troopers followed by 200 of Cunningham s Eniskillen dragoons 24 The Jacobite response demonstrated the strength of their defence but also meant that the attackers were no longer able to break off the engagement as Ginkel had planned 24 A conference was held at about 4 pm Ginkel still favoured withdrawing but the Williamite infantry general Hugh Mackay argued for an immediate full scale attack 25 nbsp Henri de Massue led the right of the Williamite cavalry at Aughrim A French Protestant he had entered William s service in 1690 forfeiting his French estates and title the Marquis de Rouvigny as a result Battle was joined in earnest between five and six o clock In the centre the largely English and Scots regiments under Mackay attempted a frontal assault on Dorrington s infantry on Kilcommadan Hill The attackers had to contend with waist deep water and a tenacious Irish defence of the reinforced hedge lines They withdrew with heavy losses the Jacobites pursued them downhill capturing colonels Erle and Herbert 26 On their left centre the Williamites advanced across low ground exposed to Jacobite fire and took a great number of casualties The Williamite assault in this area led by St John s and Tiffin s regiments and the Huguenot foot was driven back into the bog by the Irish foot fighting with clubbed reversed muskets many of the attackers were killed or drowned 26 In the rout the pursuing Jacobites managed to spike a battery of Williamite guns The Jacobite regiments of the Guards and Gordon O Neill were said to have fought particularly strongly 26 The musketry was so intense that the ridges seemed to be ablaze according to Andreas Claudianus a Norwegian fighting with the Danish infantry citation needed The Jacobite right and centre holding firm Ginkel tried to force a way across the causeway on the Jacobite left where any attack would have to pass along a narrow lane covered by Walter Burke s regiment from their positions in Aughrim castle 27 Four battalions led by Brigadier Kirke secured positions near the castle following which Compton s Royal Horse Guards got across the causeway at the third attempt 27 Dorrington having earlier withdrawn two battalions of infantry from this area to reinforce the Jacobite centre they were faced only with weak opposition reaching Aughrim village While a force of Jacobite cavalry and dragoons under Luttrell had been tasked with covering this flank their commander had ordered them to fall back following a route now known locally as Luttrell s Pass Rumours later flew that he had been in the pay of William although it seems most probable that Luttrell withdrew as he had little or no infantry support 17 The cavalry regiments of Henri de Massue Lanier Langston and Byerley also crossed the causeway attacking Dorrington s flank 27 Most commentators even those sympathetic to William judged that the Irish foot had fought exceptionally well and some accounts including James II s Memoirs claim that Saint Ruhe was in a transport of joy to see the foot behave themselves so well 28 Appearing to believe that the battle could be won he was heard to shout they are running we will chase them back to the gates of Dublin before riding across the battlefield to direct the defence against the Williamite cavalry on his left wing 29 However as he rode over to rally his cavalry Saint Ruhe paused briefly to direct the fire of a battery and was decapitated by a cannonball 17 his death was said to have occurred around sunset shortly after eight o clock 30 nbsp Jacobite cavalry officer Patrick Sarsfield Sarsfield s large reserve of cavalry could have countered the Williamite advance but he had been ordered not to move without specific orders by the Jacobite commander After Saint Ruhe s death the Jacobite left devoid of a senior commander collapsed very quickly the regiment of Horse Guards left the field almost immediately followed shortly by the cavalry and dragoon regiments of Luttrell Sheldon and Galmoy 31 b De Tesse attempted to head a cavalry counter attack but was seriously wounded shortly afterwards 27 The Jacobite left flank was now exposed Mackay and Tollemache also attacked again in the centre pushing the Jacobites towards the hilltop 31 Burke and his regiment still holding the castle were forced to surrender Most of the infantry remained unaware of Saint Ruhe s death however 30 and Hamilton s infantry on the Jacobite right continued to counter attack fighting the Huguenot foot to a standstill in an area still known locally as the Bloody Hollow 31 32 At around nine o clock towards nightfall the Jacobite infantry were finally pushed to the top of Killcommadan hill and broke fleeing towards a bog in the left rear of their position while their cavalry retreated towards Loughrea 33 Sarsfield and Galmoy briefly tried to organise a rearguard action but as in many battles of the period most of the Jacobite casualties occurred in the pursuit which was ended only by darkness and the onset of mist and rain 33 The defeated infantry were cut down in their hundreds by the Williamite cavalry as they tried to get away many of them having thrown away their weapons in order to run faster citation needed In addition to the rank and file the Jacobite casualties and prisoners included many of its most experienced infantry officers the dead included brigadiers Barker O Neill and O Connell and colonels Moore Talbot O Mahony Nugent Felix O Neil and Ulick Burke Lord Galway 34 The two major generals commanding the Jacobite centre Hamilton and Dorrington were both taken prisoner Hamilton dying of wounds shortly afterwards Though the killing of prisoners to prevent rescue was a common practice at the time Jacobite soldiers were accused of having cut to pieces colonel Herbert after his capture 35 One contemporary Jacobite source Leslie alleged that about 2 000 Jacobites were killed in cold blood with many including Lord Galway and colonel Charles Moore killed after being promised quarter 34 An eyewitness with the Williamite army George Story wrote that from the top of the Hill where the Jacobite Camp had been the bodies looked like a great Flock of Sheep scattered up and down the Countrey for almost four Miles round 36 Aftermath editEstimates of the two armies losses vary but they were extremely heavy overall it is generally agreed that 7 000 men were killed at Aughrim Aughrim has been described as quite possibly the bloodiest battle ever fought in the British Isles 37 but earlier medieval battles although poorly recorded may rival this battle in casualty numbers At the time the Williamites claimed to have lost only 600 and to have killed some 7 000 Jacobites 38 Some recent studies put the Williamite losses as high as 3 000 39 but they are more generally given as 3 000 with 4 000 Jacobites killed 40 41 Another 4 000 Jacobites had deserted while Ginkel recorded 526 prisoners taken of all ranks 42 While Ginkel had given word to Dorrington that the captives would be treated as prisoners of war general officers were instead taken to the Tower of London as prisoners of state while the majority of the rank and file were incarcerated on Lambay Island where many died of disease and starvation 43 Aughrim was the decisive battle of the conflict the Jacobites had lost many experienced officers along with much of the army s equipment and supplies The remnants of the Jacobite army retreated to the mountains before regrouping under Sarsfield s command at Limerick Many of their infantry regiments were seriously depleted on 22 July Bellew s regiment was listed as having 240 soldiers having lost all its senior officers and sergeants Slane s regiment 140 soldiers and Louth s just 28 although some stragglers arrived later 44 The city of Galway surrendered without a fight after the battle on advantageous terms while Sarsfield and the Jacobites main army surrendered shortly afterwards at Limerick after a short siege citation needed Cultural impact edit nbsp Memorial cross on the site of the Battle of AughrimAccording to o Ciardha the battle made a searing impression on the Irish consciousness 45 Irish tradition came to refer to the battle as Eachdhroim an air Aughrim of the slaughter after a line in a poem by Irish language poet Seamas Dall Mac Cuarta the Elegy for Sorley MacDonnell While Ginkel ordered the burial of his own dead the remaining Jacobites were left unburied their bones remaining scattered on the battlefield for years afterwards 43 c Mac Cuarta wrote It is at Aughrim of the slaughter where they are to be found their damp bones lying uncoffined 45 John Dunton in his work Teague Land an account of his travels in Ireland written seven years after the battle wrote that After the battle the English did not tarry to bury any of the dead but their own and left those of the enemy exposed to the fowls of the air for the country was then so uninhabited that there were not hands to inter them Many dogs resorted to this aceldama Potter s field where for want of other food they fed on man s sic flesh and thereby became so dangerous and fierce that a single person could not pass that way without manifest hazard He ends the description with the story of a faithful greyhound belonging to a Jacobite killed in the battle who remained by his master s body defending it until shot by a passing soldier in January of the following year citation needed While Aughrim remained a powerful symbol of disaster for Irish Catholics it was also the focus of Loyalist particularly Orange Order celebrations in Ireland on 12 July up until the early 19th century Thereafter it was superseded by the Battle of the Boyne in commemorations on the Twelfth due to the switch to the Gregorian calendar in which 1 July OS became 11 July NS and 12 July OS became 22 July NS It has been suggested that the Boyne became emphasised because the Irish troops could be more easily presented as cowardly than at Aughrim where they were generally agreed to have fought bravely 46 The Loyalist song The Sash mentions Aughrim The battle was the subject of a 1728 tragic drama by Robert Ashton The Battle of Aughrim or the Fall of Monsieur St Ruth which after initial neglect became enormously popular from 1770 onwards into the 19th century Though the play was intended to celebrate the Williamite victory and casts Saint Ruhe firmly in the role of antagonist it also portrays Sarsfield and his lieutenants as heroic figures and incorporates a lament for Catholic patriotism so that both Catholics and Protestants were attracted to the play for generations 47 In 1804 it was noted of Ashton s play that a more popular Production never appeared in Ireland it is in the hands of every Peasant who can read English and is committed to memory and occasionally recited 48 In 1885 artist John Mulvany completed a painting of the battle it was exhibited in Dublin in 2010 49 The Battle of Aughrim was also the subject of a long 1968 poem by Richard Murphy who noted that he had ancestors fighting on both sides The Aughrim battlefield site became the subject of controversy in Ireland over plans to build the new M6 motorway through the former battlefield Historians environmentalists and members of the Orange Order objected to the plans the motorway opened in 2009 citation needed Aughrim Interpretative Centre editThe Battle of Aughrim Interpretative Centre 50 in Aughrim village was opened in 1991 It is a collaboration between Aughrim Heritage Committee Ireland West Tourism and Galway County Council It houses artefacts found on the battlefield site as well as three dimensional displays and a documentary film that explains the course of the battle and its significance in the wider context of the history of Ireland 51 See also editList of conflicts in IrelandNotes edit Two accounts that given in Jacobite tract A Light to the Blind and in Macariae Excidium place Sarsfield on the right with de Tesse and on the left respectively The account of Robert Parker who fought at the battle claims that Sarsfield was with the reserve at the rear this is generally seen as accurate as he is not mentioned in any narrative of the battle until the retreat see Hayes McCoy 1942 p 18 Modern scholarly opinion is divided on the significance of St Ruth s death as the critical breakthrough on the Jacobite left occurred prior to it even at the time the Duke of Berwick suggested the battle would have been lost even if St Ruth had lived At least some were later collected Sir Thomas Molyneux 1st Baronet a visitor to Kilconnell Friary in 1709 noted that the churchyard was then surrounded by a wall of dead men s sckulls and bones pil d very orderly clear round against the wall to the length of 88 foot within they shew you Ld Gallway s and other great men s heads killed at Aghrim The local landlord appears to have finally arranged burial in the 1860s References edit Hayes McCoy Gerard Anthony 1964 The Irish at war Mercier Press p 55 Grant James 1873 British battles on land and sea Volume 1 Cassell Petter Galpin p 417 Bodart 1908 p 114 G A Hayes McCoy p 244 Histoire de l Irlande ancienne et moderne tiree des monumens les Volume 3 Par Mac Geoghegan James abbe pp 743 747 tr The History of Ireland Ancient and Modern Taken From the Most Authentic Records and Dedicated to the Irish Brigade by the Abbe Mac Geoghegan Tr From the French by Patrick O Kelly ISBN 978 1 4255 6638 8 Hayton David 2004 Ruling Ireland 1685 1742 Politics Politicians and Parties Boydell p 27 Bradshaw Brendan 2016 And so began the Irish Nation Nationality National Consciousness and Nationalism in Pre modern Ireland Routledge p 221 a b Hayton p 28 a b Childs John 2007 The Williamite Wars in Ireland Bloomsbury p 279 Childs p 295 Van Nimwegen 2020 p 216 Childs p 293 Childs p 304 a b Childs p 316 Childs p 331 Childs p 332 a b c d Doherty Richard The Battle of Aughrim Early Modern History 1500 1700 Issue 3 Autumn 1995 Vol 3 Hayes McCoy The Battle of Aughrim Journal of the Galway Archaeological and Historical Society Vol 20 No 1 2 1942 p 4 a b Hayes McCoy 1942 p 6 Hayes McCoy 1942 pp 15 17 a b Hayes McCoy p 20 a b O Callaghan ed Macariae Excidium Dublin Irish Archaeological Society p 440 a b Hayes McCoy p 18 a b c Hayes McCoy 21 Hayes McCoy p 22 a b c Hayes McCoy p 24 a b c d Childs p 336 O Callaghan ed Macariae Excidium Dublin Irish Archaeological Society p 443 Hayes McCoy p 26 a b O Callaghan ed Macariae Excidium Dublin Irish Archaeological Society p 453 a b c Hayes McCoy p 27 Historic map of the site Archived 2010 05 29 at the Wayback Machine at Ordnance Survey of Ireland a b Hayes McCoy p 28 a b Haverty 1867 The History of Ireland J Duffy p 664 O Callaghan ed Macariae Excidium Dublin Irish Archaeological Society p 457 O Callaghan ed Macariae Excidium Dublin Irish Archaeological Society p 455 Pittock M Poetry and Jacobite Politics in Eighteenth Century Britain and Ireland Cambridge UP p 44 Doherty The Williamite War in Ireland p 181 Wauchope Patrick Sarsfield and the Williamite War p 232 McCoy p 267 also gives the Jacobite losses as 4 000 killed with 3 000 Williamite troops dead Padraig Lenihan in Consolidating Conquest Ireland 1603 1727 p 186 gives the losses as one fifth of the estimated 20 000 strong Irish army and at least 1 200 Allies killed in the opening attacks Boyle 1867 The Battle fields of Ireland from 1688 to 1691 Robert Coddington p 321 a b Childs 2007 The Williamite Wars in Ireland A amp C Black p 338 Murtagh Louth Regiments in the Irish Jacobite Army Journal of the County Louth Archaeological Society v 13 num 1 1953 p 11 a b o Ciardha 2002 Ireland and the Jacobite Cause A Fatal Attachment p 82 Padraig Lenihan The Battle of the Boyne pp 258 259 The 18th century anniversaries of the Boyne and Aughrim served as the focus of more plebeian commemorations that included bonfires and parading In this context the twelfth was the most symbolically important battle commemoration but it referred to Aughrim Until Britain belatedly adopted the Gregorian Calendar in 1752 1 July was the anniversary of the Boyne and 12 July the anniversary of Aughrim Aughrim emphasises the valour and martial qualities of the Jacobites with a view to magnify the military achievement and bravery of the Williamites This depiction of Jacobites favourable in many respects may have been less suitable to Protestant communal rituals in the face of a post 1790s Catholic resurgence Wheatley Heroic Palimpsest Robert Ashton s The Battle of Aughrim in Eighteenth Century Ireland Iris an da chultur v 11 1996 54 Wheatley 1996 56 The Irish Times 2 Oct 2010 Battle of Aughrim Centre Galway County Council Retrieved 24 April 2016 Remembering Aughrim July 21 1691 Galway Advertiser July 24th 1997 Retrieved 24 April 2016 Sources editBoulger Demetrius C The Battle of the Boyne Together with an Account Based on French amp Other Unpublished Records of the War in Ireland 1688 1691 Martin Secker London 1911 Available as pdf Piers Wauchope Patrick Sarsfield and the Williamite War Dublin 1992 J G Simms Jacobite Ireland London 1969 G A Hayes McCoy Irish Battles Belfast 1990 Eamonn O Ciardha Ireland and the Jacobite cause a Fatal Attachment Dublin 2002 Padraig Lenihan 1690 Battle of the Boyne Tempus 2003 Van Nimwegen Olaf 2020 De Veertigjarige Oorlog 1672 1712 Prometheus ISBN 978 90 446 3871 4 Bodart Gaston 1908 Militar historisches Kriegs Lexikon 1618 1905 Retrieved 3 February 2023 Further reading editBoulger Demetrius Charles 1911 The Battle of the Boyne London Martin Secker Hayes McCoy Gerard Anthony 1990 Irish Battles A Military History of Ireland Belfast The Appletree Press ISBN 0 86281 250 X O Kelly Charles 1692 O Callaghan John Cornelius ed Macariae Excidium or The Destruction of Cyprus 1850 ed Dublin Irish Archaeological Society Todhunter John 1895 Life of Patrick Sarsfield Earl of Lucan London T Fisher UnwinExternal links editBattle site on Mapviewer at Ordnance Survey of Ireland Interview with historian Padraig Lenihan on the battle The Battle of Aughrim traditional tune Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Aughrim amp oldid 1187487281, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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