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Battle of the Boyne

The Battle of the Boyne (Irish: Cath na Bóinne IPA: [ˈkah n̪ˠə ˈbˠoːn̠ʲə]) was a battle in 1690 between the forces of the deposed King James II of England and Ireland, VII of Scotland, and those of King William III who, with his wife Queen Mary II (his cousin and James's daughter), had acceded to the Crowns of England and Scotland[b] in 1689. The battle took place across the River Boyne close to the town of Drogheda in the Kingdom of Ireland, modern-day Republic of Ireland, and resulted in a victory for William. This turned the tide in James's failed attempt to regain the British crown and ultimately aided in ensuring the continued Protestant ascendancy in Ireland.

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

Battle of the Boyne between James II and William III, 11 July 1690, Jan van Huchtenburg
Date1 July 1690 O.S.[a]
Location53°43′23″N 06°25′25″W / 53.72306°N 6.42361°W / 53.72306; -6.42361 (battle site)Coordinates: 53°43′23″N 06°25′25″W / 53.72306°N 6.42361°W / 53.72306; -6.42361 (battle site)
Result Williamite victory
Belligerents
Williamites
 Dutch Republic
Jacobites
 France
Commanders and leaders
William III
Frederick Schomberg  
Godert de Ginkell
Count of Solms
Duke of Wurttemberg
James II
Richard Talbot
Antoine Caumont
James FitzJames
Strength
36,000 23,500
Casualties and losses
500 killed or wounded 1,500 killed or wounded
class=notpageimage|
Location within island of Ireland

The battle took place on 1 July 1690 O.S. William's forces defeated James's army, which consisted mostly of raw recruits. Although the Williamite War in Ireland continued until the signing of the Treaty of Limerick in October 1691, James fled to France after the Boyne, never to return.

Background

The battle was a major encounter in James's attempt to regain the thrones of England and Scotland, resulting from the Invitation to William and William's wife, Mary, from the 'immortal seven' English peers to take the throne to defend Protestantism. But the conflict had broader and deeper European geopolitical roots, of the League of Augsburg and the Grand Alliance against the expansionist ambitions of Catholic Louis XIV of France, or of the House of Bourbon against the House of Habsburg.[1][2][3][4][5] If the battle is seen as part of the War of the Grand Alliance, Pope Alexander VIII was an ally of William and an enemy to James; the Papal States were part of the Grand Alliance with a shared hostility to the Catholic Louis XIV of France, who at the time was attempting to establish dominance in Europe and to whom James was an ally.[6]

The previous year William had sent the Duke of Schomberg to take charge of the Irish campaign.[7] He was a 75-year-old professional soldier who had accompanied William during the Glorious Revolution. He brought an army of 20,000 men, which arrived at Bangor. Under his command, affairs had remained static and very little had been accomplished, partly because the English troops suffered severely from fever[8] and the army's move south was blocked by Jacobite forces; both sides camped for the winter.[1]

In an Irish context, the war was a sectarian and ethnic conflict, in many ways a re-run of the Irish Confederate Wars of 50 years earlier. For the Jacobites, the war was fought for Irish sovereignty, religious tolerance for Catholicism, and land ownership. The Catholic upper classes had lost or had been forced to exchange almost all their lands after Cromwell's conquest, as well as the right to hold public office, practise their religion, and sit in the Irish Parliament.[9] To these ends, under Richard Talbot, 1st Earl of Tyrconnel, they had raised an army to restore James II after the Glorious Revolution. By 1690, they controlled all of Ireland except for Derry and Enniskillen.[1]

The majority of Irish people were Jacobites and supported James II due to his 1687 Declaration of Indulgence or, as it is also known, the Declaration for the Liberty of Conscience, that granted religious freedom to all denominations in England and Scotland and also due to James II's promise to the Irish Parliament of an eventual right to self-determination.[10][11]

Conversely, for the Williamites in Ireland, the war was about maintaining Protestant rule in Ireland. They feared for their lives and their property if James and his Catholic supporters were to rule Ireland, nor did they trust the promise of tolerance, seeing the Declaration of Indulgence as a ploy to re-establish Catholicism as the sole state religion. James had already antagonised English protestants with his actions. In particular, they dreaded a repeat of the Irish Rebellion of 1641, which had been marked by widespread killing. For these reasons, Protestants fought en masse for William of Orange. Many Williamite troops at the Boyne, including their very effective irregular cavalry, were Ulster Protestants, who called themselves "Enniskilliners" and were referred to by contemporaries as "Scots-Irish". These "Enniskilliners" were mostly the descendants of Anglo-Scottish border reivers; large numbers of these reivers had settled around Enniskillen in County Fermanagh.[12][13]

Commanders

 
James II, King of England and Ireland, James VII of Scotland, 1685–1688, portrayed as head of the army c.1685)
 
William III ("William of Orange"), King of England, Scotland and Ireland, 1689–1702, Stadtholder in the Netherlands, 1672–1702

The opposing armies in the battle were led by the Roman Catholic king James II of England (VII of Scotland) and Ireland and, opposing him, his nephew and son-in-law, the Protestant king William III ("William of Orange") who had deposed James the previous year. James's supporters controlled much of Ireland and the Irish Parliament.[2][14] James also enjoyed the support of his cousin, Louis XIV, who did not want to see a hostile monarch on the throne of England. Louis sent 6,000 French troops to Ireland to support the Irish Jacobites.[15] William was already Stadtholder of the Netherlands and was able to call on Dutch and allied troops from Europe as well as England and Scotland.[14]

James was a seasoned officer who had proved his bravery when fighting in Europe,[2] notably at the Battle of the Dunes.[16] However, recent historians have suggested that he was prone to panicking under pressure and making rash decisions,[17] which it has been suggested may have been due to poor health associated with the Stuart line.[2][18]

William, although a seasoned commander,[19] had yet to win a major battle. William's success against the French had been reliant upon tactical manoeuvres and good diplomacy rather than force.[19][14] His diplomacy had assembled the League of Augsburg,[20] a multi-national coalition formed to resist French aggression in Europe. From William's point of view, his taking power in England and the ensuing campaign in Ireland was just another front in the war against France in general, and Louis XIV in particular.[21]

James II's subordinate commanders were Richard Talbot, 1st Earl of Tyrconnell, who was Lord Deputy of Ireland and James's most powerful supporter in Ireland; and the French general Lauzun.[22] William's commander-in-chief was the Duke of Schomberg. Born in Heidelberg, Germany, Schomberg had fought for a few different countries and had formerly been a Marshal of France, but, being a Huguenot, was compelled to leave France in 1685 because of the revocation of the Edict of Nantes.[23][24]

Armies

The Williamite army at the Boyne was about 36,000 strong, composed of troops from many countries;[25] Only around half of them were British.[26] Around 20,000 troops had been in Ireland since 1689,[27] commanded by Schomberg.[25] William himself had landed in Carrickfergus on 14 June O.S. He met Schomberg at nearby Whitehouse, and then proceeded south through Belfast.[28] Loughbrickland was the rallying point of the scattered divisions of the army.[29][30] He arrived there with another 16,000 in June 1690.[31] On 30 June O.S. William had reached the top of a hill near the southern border of County Louth.[29]

William's troops were generally far better trained and equipped than James's.[25] The best Williamite infantry were from Denmark (7000) and the Netherlands (6000), professional soldiers equipped with the latest flintlock muskets.[1][32] The Danish infantry was commanded by General Ernst von Tettau. There was also a large (3000) contingent of French Huguenot troops fighting with the Williamites.[32] William did not yet have a high opinion of his English and Scottish troops, with the exception of the Ulster Protestant "skirmishers" who had held Derry in the previous year; the English and Scottish troops were felt at this stage to be politically unreliable, since James had been their legitimate monarch up to a year before. Moreover, they had only been raised recently and had seen little action.[33]

James’s flag was erected at the town of Donore, on the opposite side of the river Boyne.[29] The Jacobites were 23,500 strong.[25] James had several regiments of French troops, but most of his manpower was provided by Irish Catholics, with some English and Scottish Jacobites also present. The Jacobites' Irish cavalry, who were recruited from among the dispossessed Irish gentry, proved themselves to be high-calibre troops during the course of the battle.[34] However, the Irish infantry, predominantly peasants who had been pressed into service, were not trained soldiers. They had been hastily trained, poorly equipped, and only a minority of them had functional muskets. In fact, some of them carried only farm implements such as scythes at the Boyne.[35] Furthermore, the Jacobite infantry who actually had firearms were all equipped with the obsolete matchlock musket.[1] The French and Irish troops wore a white rallying mark, as a compliment to the Bourbons and to distinguish them from the Williamites.[29]

The battle

 
Map of the Battle of the Boyne. (South being up; west to the right.)
1. Drogheda 2. Jacobite army 3. Jacobite batteries 4. Donore 5. Oldbridge 6. William's line of march from Ardee 7. A small hamlet 8. The Williamite Camp 9. The hill whence William saw the Jacobite camp 10. Pass called King William's Glen 11. Place where William was wounded 12. Slane 13. Bridge near Slane 14. Where the Dutch passed the river 15. French and Enniskillingers ditto 16. Sir J. Hansner's & Count Nassau's ditto 17. Left wing of William's Horse 18. Mattlock rivulet 19. Where right wing of William's army crossed the river 20. Village of Duleek 21. Low marshy ground 22. Rosnaree
 

William sailed from Hoylake in Merseyside, landing at Carrickfergus, County Antrim on 14 June O.S. and marched south, intending to take Dublin.[citation needed] He was heard to remark that "the place was worth fighting for".[29] James chose to place his line of defence on the River Boyne, around 30 mi (48 km) from Dublin. The Williamites reached the Boyne on 29 June. The day before the battle, William himself had a narrow escape when he was wounded in the shoulder by Jacobite artillery while surveying the fords over which his troops would cross the Boyne.[36]

The battle itself was fought on 1 July O.S. (11th N.S.), for control of a ford on the Boyne near Drogheda, about 2.5 km (1.6 mi) north-west of the hamlet of Oldbridge (and about 1.5 km (0.9 mi) west-north-west of the modern Boyne River Bridge). As a diversionary tactic, William sent about a quarter of his men under the cover of morning mist to cross the river at Roughgrange, about 4 km (2.5 mi) west of Donore and about 6 mi (9.7 km) south-west of Oldbridge. The Duke of Schomberg's son, Meinhardt, led this crossing, which a small force of Irish dragoons in picquet under Neil O'Neill unsuccessfully opposed.[37] James thought that he might be outflanked and sent a large part of his army, including his best French troops along with most of his artillery, to counter this move. What neither side had realised was that there was a deep, swampy ravine at Roughgrange. Because of this ravine, the opposing forces there could not engage each other, but literally sat out the battle as artillery engaged. The Williamite forces went on a long detour march which, later in the day, almost saw them cut off the Jacobite retreat at the village of Naul.[38]

At the main ford near Oldbridge, William's infantry, led by the elite Dutch Blue Guards under Solms, forced their way across the river, using their superior firepower to slowly drive back the Jacobite foot soldiers, but were pinned down when the Jacobite cavalry, commanded by James II's son James FitzJames, 1st Duke of Berwick,[39] counter-attacked. Having secured the village of Oldbridge, the Williamite infantry tried to hold off successive Jacobite Irish cavalry attacks with disciplined volley fire, but many were scattered and driven into the river, with the exception of the Blue Guards, who formed up in three separate squares.[40] The Williamites were not able to resume their advance until their own horsemen managed to cross the river and, after being badly mauled, particularly the Huguenots,[41] managed to hold off the Jacobite cavalry. William's second-in-command, the Duke of Schomberg, and George Walker were killed in this phase of the battle. The Irish cavalry finally gave up when Danish infantry commanded by Wurttemberg and cavalry led by Godert de Ginkell (about 11 or 12 squadrons), who had both crossed the river further downstream, advanced towards them.[40]

The Jacobites retired in good order. William had a chance to trap them as they retreated across the River Nanny at Duleek, but his troops were held up by a successful rear-guard action. The Dutch secretary of King William, Constantijn Huygens Jr., has given a good description (in Dutch) of the battle and its aftermath, including subsequent cruelties committed by the victorious soldiers.[42]

The casualty figures of the battle were quite low for a battle of such a scale—of the 50,000 or so participants, about 2,000 died.[1] Three quarters of the dead were Jacobites. William's army had far more wounded. At the time, most casualties of battles tended to be inflicted in the pursuit of an already-beaten enemy; this did not happen at the Boyne, as the counter-attacks of the skilled Jacobite cavalry screened the retreat of the rest of their army, and in addition William was always disinclined to endanger the person of James, since he was the father of his wife, Mary. The Jacobites were badly demoralised by the order to retreat, which lost them the battle. Many of the Irish infantrymen deserted, abandoning clothing in their escape.[43] The Williamites triumphantly marched into Dublin two days after the battle. The Jacobite army abandoned the city and marched to Limerick, behind the River Shannon, where they were unsuccessfully besieged.

Soon after the battle, William issued the Declaration of Finglas, offering full pardons to ordinary Jacobite soldiers, but not to their leaders.

Aftermath

 
William crosses the Boyne, by Jan Hoynck van Papendrecht

The battle was overshadowed by the defeat of an Anglo-Dutch fleet by the French on the previous day at the Battle of Beachy Head, a far more serious event in the short term;[44] only on the continent was the Boyne treated as an important victory. Its importance lay in the fact that it was the first proper victory for the League of Augsburg, the first-ever alliance between the Vatican and Protestant countries. The victory motivated more nations to join the alliance and in effect ended the fear of a French conquest of Europe.[45]

The Boyne also had strategic significance for both England and Ireland. It marked the beginning of the end of James's hope of regaining his throne by military means and probably assured the triumph of the Glorious Revolution. In Scotland, news of this defeat temporarily silenced the Highlanders supporting the Jacobite rising, which had been led by Bonnie Dundee who was killed the previous July at the Battle of Killiecrankie.[46] The battle was a general victory for William. Due to the political situation mentioned above, Catholic institutions amongst William's continental allies hailed his victory with bell-ringing.[47]

The battle caused the Jacobites to abandon the city of Dublin, which was occupied by William's forces without a fight. Despairing of his hopes for victory, James II fled to Duncannon and returned to exile in France, even though his army left the field relatively unscathed. James's loss of nerve and speedy exit from the battlefield enraged his Irish supporters and he was derisively nicknamed Séamus a' chaca ("James the shit") in Irish.[48][49] The war in Ireland had not ended, however. The Franco-Irish Jacobite army regrouped in Limerick and fought off a Williamite assault on the city in late August. It was not until the following year and battle of Aughrim that their forces were broken and after another siege of Limerick, they surrendered to William's general Godard de Ginkell. The war in Ireland formally ended with the Treaty of Limerick in 1691. This allowed over 14,000 Irish soldiers under Patrick Sarsfield, to leave for France and allowed most Irish Catholic land owners to keep their land provided they swore allegiance to William of Orange. However, the Protestant dominated Irish Parliament rejected these terms, not ratifying the treaty until 1697—and then not in full—and imposed a tough Penal Code resented by Irish Catholics for many years.[50][51][52][53]

Commemoration

Originally, the Twelfth of July commemoration was that of the Battle of Aughrim,[54] symbolising Irish Protestants' victory in the Williamite war in Ireland. At Aughrim, which took place a year after the Boyne, the Jacobite army was destroyed, deciding the war in the Williamites' favour. The Boyne, which, in the old Julian calendar, took place on 1 July O.S., was treated as less important, third after Aughrim and the anniversary of the Irish Rebellion of 1641 on 23 October O.S.

In 1752, the Gregorian calendar was also adopted in Ireland.[55] However, even after this date, "The Twelfth" continued to be commemorated at Aughrim, on 12 July NS,[54] following the usual historical convention of commemorating events of that period within Great Britain and Ireland by mapping the Julian date directly onto the modern Gregorian calendar date (as happens for example with Guy Fawkes Night on 5 November). But, after the Orange Order was founded in 1795 amid sectarian violence in County Armagh, the two events were combined in the late 18th century.[54]

"The Twelfth" in Northern Ireland today

The Battle of the Boyne remains a controversial topic today in Northern Ireland, where some Protestants remember it as the great victory over Catholics that resulted in the sovereignty of Parliament and the Protestant monarchy.[57]

In recent decades, "The Twelfth" has often been marked by confrontations, as members of the Orange Order attempt to celebrate the date by marching past or through what they see as their traditional route.[58] Some of these areas, however, now have a nationalist majority who object to marches passing through what they see as their areas.[57]

Many nationalists still see these marches as provocative, whilst Unionist marchers insist that it is part of their historical right to celebrate. Since the start of the Troubles, the celebrations of the battle have been seen as playing a critical role in the awareness of those involved in the unionist/nationalist tensions in Northern Ireland. Better policing and improved dialogue between the sides in the 21st century have made for more peaceful parades.[57]

"The Eleventh Night" in Northern Ireland

There are also traditions set to happen on July 11th, the eve of the Twelfth Night, known as the Eleventh Night. On this night, Protestants ignite bonfires all over Northern Ireland to celebrate the commencement of the Twelfth Night.

The reason they use bonfires to symbolize the event, dates back to the pagan celebrations of Midsummer, Bealtaine and Samhain, where fire is used as a symbol of celebration. [59]

 
Bonfire pyre including the Tricolour flag

Many object to the use of bonfires in Loyalist celebrations today, especially because many bonfires now include "the burning of flags, effigies and election posters." [60]

Battlefield preservation

 
River Boyne at Oldbridge in 2011

The site of the Battle of the Boyne sprawls over a wide area west of the town of Drogheda in the Republic of Ireland. In the County Development Plan for 2000, Meath County Council rezoned the land at the eastern edge of Oldbridge, at the site of the main Williamite crossing, to residential status. A subsequent planning application for a development of over 700 houses was granted by Meath County Council and this was appealed against by local historians to An Bord Pleanála (The Planning Board). In March 2008, after an extremely long appeal process, An Bord Pleanála approved permission for this development to proceed.[61] Further plans have been submitted for hundreds more homes and a link to the River Boyne Boardwalk.[62]

The Battle of the Boyne Visitor Centre at Oldbridge house is run by the Office of Public Works, an agency of the Irish government, and is about one mi (1.6 km) to the west of the main river crossing point. The battle's other main combat areas, at Duleek, Donore and Plattin, along the Jacobite line of retreat, are marked with tourist information signs.

On 4 April 2007, in a sign of improving relations between unionist and nationalist groups, the newly elected First Minister of Northern Ireland, the Reverend Ian Paisley, was invited to visit the battle site by the Taoiseach (Prime Minister) Bertie Ahern later in the year. Following the invitation, Paisley commented that "such a visit would help to demonstrate how far we have come when we can celebrate and learn from the past so the next generation more clearly understands". On 10 May, the visit took place, and Paisley presented the Taoiseach with a Jacobite musket in return for Ahern's gift at the St Andrews talks of a walnut bowl made from a tree from the site. A new tree was also planted in the grounds of Oldbridge House by the two politicians to mark the occasion.[63]

See also

Notes

Explanatory footnotes

  1. ^ The battle took place on 11 July N.S., but the anniversary is now celebrated on 12 July. This is explained at § Commemoration below.
  2. ^ The "Patriot Parliament" session of the Parliament of Ireland confirmed James as King of Ireland, though Poynings Law arguably made this invalid. In any case, the subsequent Act of Recognition, of their Majesties [sic] undoubted Right to the Crown of Ireland, 1692 set this aside.

Citations

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  59. ^ Corscadden, Jane (6 July 2022). "The reason bonfires are lit on the Eleventh Night in NI". BelfastLive. Retrieved 15 December 2022.
  60. ^ "The Twelfth: Why are bonfires lit in Northern Ireland?". BBC News. 9 July 2021. Retrieved 15 December 2022.
  61. ^ "224875: Oldbridge, Rathmullen Road, Drogheda, Co. Meath (SA/60260)". www.pleanala.ie/. from the original on 31 October 2019. Retrieved 31 October 2019.
  62. ^ "Housing boom as 661 homes planned on Rathmullen Road". www.independent.ie. from the original on 31 October 2019. Retrieved 31 October 2019.
  63. ^ "Paisley and Ahern visit 1690 site". BBC News. 11 May 2007. from the original on 20 May 2022. Retrieved 22 November 2019.

Further reading

  • Doherty, Richard (1998). The Williamite War in Ireland 1688–1691. Dublin: Four Courts Press. ISBN 1-85182-375-1.
  • Hayes-Mac Coy, G. A. (1990). Irish Battles. Belfast: Appletree Press. ISBN 0-86281-250-X. OCLC 231283129.
  • Lenihan, Padraig (2003). 1690: Battle of the Boyne. Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK: Tempus Publishing. ISBN 0-7524-3304-0. OCLC 61303112.
  • Van Nimwegen, Olaf (2020). De Veertigjarige Oorlog 1672-1712: de strijd van de Nederlanders tegen de Zonnekoning (The 40 Years War 1672-1712: the Dutch struggle against the Sun King) (in Dutch). Prometheus. ISBN 978-90-446-3871-4.

External links

  • Battle of the Boyne visitor centre at Oldbridge, plus battle information
  • Primary and secondary sources relating to the Battle of the Boyne (From the National Library of Ireland's Sources database)
  • Modern mapping of the area Ordnance Survey Ireland Choose "Base history and mapping" then "Historic 6-inch mapping" and enter 704444,776167 to see the site of the "Boyne Obelisk" (destroyed, 1923) on the northern side of the [subsequent] bridge.
  • Interview with historian Padraig Lenihan on the Battle of the Boyne

battle, boyne, painting, painting, irish, cath, bóinne, ˈkah, ˠə, ˈbˠoːn, ʲə, battle, 1690, between, forces, deposed, king, james, england, ireland, scotland, those, king, william, with, wife, queen, mary, cousin, james, daughter, acceded, crowns, england, sco. For the painting see The Battle of the Boyne painting The Battle of the Boyne Irish Cath na Boinne IPA ˈkah n ˠe ˈbˠoːn ʲe was a battle in 1690 between the forces of the deposed King James II of England and Ireland VII of Scotland and those of King William III who with his wife Queen Mary II his cousin and James s daughter had acceded to the Crowns of England and Scotland b in 1689 The battle took place across the River Boyne close to the town of Drogheda in the Kingdom of Ireland modern day Republic of Ireland and resulted in a victory for William This turned the tide in James s failed attempt to regain the British crown and ultimately aided in ensuring the continued Protestant ascendancy in Ireland Battle of the BoynePart of the Williamite War in Ireland and the Nine Years WarBattle of the Boyne between James II and William III 11 July 1690 Jan van HuchtenburgDate1 July 1690 O S a LocationOldbridge County Meath53 43 23 N 06 25 25 W 53 72306 N 6 42361 W 53 72306 6 42361 battle site Coordinates 53 43 23 N 06 25 25 W 53 72306 N 6 42361 W 53 72306 6 42361 battle site ResultWilliamite victoryBelligerentsWilliamites Dutch RepublicJacobites FranceCommanders and leadersWilliam III Frederick Schomberg Godert de Ginkell Count of Solms Duke of WurttembergJames II Richard Talbot Antoine Caumont James FitzJamesStrength36 00023 500Casualties and losses500 killed or wounded1 500 killed or woundedclass notpageimage Location within island of Ireland The battle took place on 1 July 1690 O S William s forces defeated James s army which consisted mostly of raw recruits Although the Williamite War in Ireland continued until the signing of the Treaty of Limerick in October 1691 James fled to France after the Boyne never to return Contents 1 Background 1 1 Commanders 1 2 Armies 2 The battle 3 Aftermath 4 Commemoration 4 1 The Twelfth in Northern Ireland today 4 2 The Eleventh Night in Northern Ireland 4 3 Battlefield preservation 5 See also 6 Notes 6 1 Explanatory footnotes 6 2 Citations 7 Further reading 8 External linksBackground EditThe battle was a major encounter in James s attempt to regain the thrones of England and Scotland resulting from the Invitation to William and William s wife Mary from the immortal seven English peers to take the throne to defend Protestantism But the conflict had broader and deeper European geopolitical roots of the League of Augsburg and the Grand Alliance against the expansionist ambitions of Catholic Louis XIV of France or of the House of Bourbon against the House of Habsburg 1 2 3 4 5 If the battle is seen as part of the War of the Grand Alliance Pope Alexander VIII was an ally of William and an enemy to James the Papal States were part of the Grand Alliance with a shared hostility to the Catholic Louis XIV of France who at the time was attempting to establish dominance in Europe and to whom James was an ally 6 The previous year William had sent the Duke of Schomberg to take charge of the Irish campaign 7 He was a 75 year old professional soldier who had accompanied William during the Glorious Revolution He brought an army of 20 000 men which arrived at Bangor Under his command affairs had remained static and very little had been accomplished partly because the English troops suffered severely from fever 8 and the army s move south was blocked by Jacobite forces both sides camped for the winter 1 In an Irish context the war was a sectarian and ethnic conflict in many ways a re run of the Irish Confederate Wars of 50 years earlier For the Jacobites the war was fought for Irish sovereignty religious tolerance for Catholicism and land ownership The Catholic upper classes had lost or had been forced to exchange almost all their lands after Cromwell s conquest as well as the right to hold public office practise their religion and sit in the Irish Parliament 9 To these ends under Richard Talbot 1st Earl of Tyrconnel they had raised an army to restore James II after the Glorious Revolution By 1690 they controlled all of Ireland except for Derry and Enniskillen 1 The majority of Irish people were Jacobites and supported James II due to his 1687 Declaration of Indulgence or as it is also known the Declaration for the Liberty of Conscience that granted religious freedom to all denominations in England and Scotland and also due to James II s promise to the Irish Parliament of an eventual right to self determination 10 11 Conversely for the Williamites in Ireland the war was about maintaining Protestant rule in Ireland They feared for their lives and their property if James and his Catholic supporters were to rule Ireland nor did they trust the promise of tolerance seeing the Declaration of Indulgence as a ploy to re establish Catholicism as the sole state religion James had already antagonised English protestants with his actions In particular they dreaded a repeat of the Irish Rebellion of 1641 which had been marked by widespread killing For these reasons Protestants fought en masse for William of Orange Many Williamite troops at the Boyne including their very effective irregular cavalry were Ulster Protestants who called themselves Enniskilliners and were referred to by contemporaries as Scots Irish These Enniskilliners were mostly the descendants of Anglo Scottish border reivers large numbers of these reivers had settled around Enniskillen in County Fermanagh 12 13 Commanders Edit James II King of England and Ireland James VII of Scotland 1685 1688 portrayed as head of the army c 1685 William III William of Orange King of England Scotland and Ireland 1689 1702 Stadtholder in the Netherlands 1672 1702 The opposing armies in the battle were led by the Roman Catholic king James II of England VII of Scotland and Ireland and opposing him his nephew and son in law the Protestant king William III William of Orange who had deposed James the previous year James s supporters controlled much of Ireland and the Irish Parliament 2 14 James also enjoyed the support of his cousin Louis XIV who did not want to see a hostile monarch on the throne of England Louis sent 6 000 French troops to Ireland to support the Irish Jacobites 15 William was already Stadtholder of the Netherlands and was able to call on Dutch and allied troops from Europe as well as England and Scotland 14 James was a seasoned officer who had proved his bravery when fighting in Europe 2 notably at the Battle of the Dunes 16 However recent historians have suggested that he was prone to panicking under pressure and making rash decisions 17 which it has been suggested may have been due to poor health associated with the Stuart line 2 18 William although a seasoned commander 19 had yet to win a major battle William s success against the French had been reliant upon tactical manoeuvres and good diplomacy rather than force 19 14 His diplomacy had assembled the League of Augsburg 20 a multi national coalition formed to resist French aggression in Europe From William s point of view his taking power in England and the ensuing campaign in Ireland was just another front in the war against France in general and Louis XIV in particular 21 James II s subordinate commanders were Richard Talbot 1st Earl of Tyrconnell who was Lord Deputy of Ireland and James s most powerful supporter in Ireland and the French general Lauzun 22 William s commander in chief was the Duke of Schomberg Born in Heidelberg Germany Schomberg had fought for a few different countries and had formerly been a Marshal of France but being a Huguenot was compelled to leave France in 1685 because of the revocation of the Edict of Nantes 23 24 Armies Edit The Williamite army at the Boyne was about 36 000 strong composed of troops from many countries 25 Only around half of them were British 26 Around 20 000 troops had been in Ireland since 1689 27 commanded by Schomberg 25 William himself had landed in Carrickfergus on 14 June O S He met Schomberg at nearby Whitehouse and then proceeded south through Belfast 28 Loughbrickland was the rallying point of the scattered divisions of the army 29 30 He arrived there with another 16 000 in June 1690 31 On 30 June O S William had reached the top of a hill near the southern border of County Louth 29 William s troops were generally far better trained and equipped than James s 25 The best Williamite infantry were from Denmark 7000 and the Netherlands 6000 professional soldiers equipped with the latest flintlock muskets 1 32 The Danish infantry was commanded by General Ernst von Tettau There was also a large 3000 contingent of French Huguenot troops fighting with the Williamites 32 William did not yet have a high opinion of his English and Scottish troops with the exception of the Ulster Protestant skirmishers who had held Derry in the previous year the English and Scottish troops were felt at this stage to be politically unreliable since James had been their legitimate monarch up to a year before Moreover they had only been raised recently and had seen little action 33 James s flag was erected at the town of Donore on the opposite side of the river Boyne 29 The Jacobites were 23 500 strong 25 James had several regiments of French troops but most of his manpower was provided by Irish Catholics with some English and Scottish Jacobites also present The Jacobites Irish cavalry who were recruited from among the dispossessed Irish gentry proved themselves to be high calibre troops during the course of the battle 34 However the Irish infantry predominantly peasants who had been pressed into service were not trained soldiers They had been hastily trained poorly equipped and only a minority of them had functional muskets In fact some of them carried only farm implements such as scythes at the Boyne 35 Furthermore the Jacobite infantry who actually had firearms were all equipped with the obsolete matchlock musket 1 The French and Irish troops wore a white rallying mark as a compliment to the Bourbons and to distinguish them from the Williamites 29 The battle Edit Map of the Battle of the Boyne South being up west to the right 1 Drogheda 2 Jacobite army 3 Jacobite batteries 4 Donore 5 Oldbridge 6 William s line of march from Ardee 7 A small hamlet 8 The Williamite Camp 9 The hill whence William saw the Jacobite camp 10 Pass called King William s Glen 11 Place where William was wounded 12 Slane 13 Bridge near Slane 14 Where the Dutch passed the river 15 French and Enniskillingers ditto 16 Sir J Hansner s amp Count Nassau s ditto 17 Left wing of William s Horse 18 Mattlock rivulet 19 Where right wing of William s army crossed the river 20 Village of Duleek 21 Low marshy ground 22 Rosnaree The Battle of the Boyne painted by Benjamin West in 1778 William sailed from Hoylake in Merseyside landing at Carrickfergus County Antrim on 14 June O S and marched south intending to take Dublin citation needed He was heard to remark that the place was worth fighting for 29 James chose to place his line of defence on the River Boyne around 30 mi 48 km from Dublin The Williamites reached the Boyne on 29 June The day before the battle William himself had a narrow escape when he was wounded in the shoulder by Jacobite artillery while surveying the fords over which his troops would cross the Boyne 36 The battle itself was fought on 1 July O S 11th N S for control of a ford on the Boyne near Drogheda about 2 5 km 1 6 mi north west of the hamlet of Oldbridge and about 1 5 km 0 9 mi west north west of the modern Boyne River Bridge As a diversionary tactic William sent about a quarter of his men under the cover of morning mist to cross the river at Roughgrange about 4 km 2 5 mi west of Donore and about 6 mi 9 7 km south west of Oldbridge The Duke of Schomberg s son Meinhardt led this crossing which a small force of Irish dragoons in picquet under Neil O Neill unsuccessfully opposed 37 James thought that he might be outflanked and sent a large part of his army including his best French troops along with most of his artillery to counter this move What neither side had realised was that there was a deep swampy ravine at Roughgrange Because of this ravine the opposing forces there could not engage each other but literally sat out the battle as artillery engaged The Williamite forces went on a long detour march which later in the day almost saw them cut off the Jacobite retreat at the village of Naul 38 At the main ford near Oldbridge William s infantry led by the elite Dutch Blue Guards under Solms forced their way across the river using their superior firepower to slowly drive back the Jacobite foot soldiers but were pinned down when the Jacobite cavalry commanded by James II s son James FitzJames 1st Duke of Berwick 39 counter attacked Having secured the village of Oldbridge the Williamite infantry tried to hold off successive Jacobite Irish cavalry attacks with disciplined volley fire but many were scattered and driven into the river with the exception of the Blue Guards who formed up in three separate squares 40 The Williamites were not able to resume their advance until their own horsemen managed to cross the river and after being badly mauled particularly the Huguenots 41 managed to hold off the Jacobite cavalry William s second in command the Duke of Schomberg and George Walker were killed in this phase of the battle The Irish cavalry finally gave up when Danish infantry commanded by Wurttemberg and cavalry led by Godert de Ginkell about 11 or 12 squadrons who had both crossed the river further downstream advanced towards them 40 The Jacobites retired in good order William had a chance to trap them as they retreated across the River Nanny at Duleek but his troops were held up by a successful rear guard action The Dutch secretary of King William Constantijn Huygens Jr has given a good description in Dutch of the battle and its aftermath including subsequent cruelties committed by the victorious soldiers 42 The casualty figures of the battle were quite low for a battle of such a scale of the 50 000 or so participants about 2 000 died 1 Three quarters of the dead were Jacobites William s army had far more wounded At the time most casualties of battles tended to be inflicted in the pursuit of an already beaten enemy this did not happen at the Boyne as the counter attacks of the skilled Jacobite cavalry screened the retreat of the rest of their army and in addition William was always disinclined to endanger the person of James since he was the father of his wife Mary The Jacobites were badly demoralised by the order to retreat which lost them the battle Many of the Irish infantrymen deserted abandoning clothing in their escape 43 The Williamites triumphantly marched into Dublin two days after the battle The Jacobite army abandoned the city and marched to Limerick behind the River Shannon where they were unsuccessfully besieged Soon after the battle William issued the Declaration of Finglas offering full pardons to ordinary Jacobite soldiers but not to their leaders Aftermath Edit William crosses the Boyne by Jan Hoynck van Papendrecht The battle was overshadowed by the defeat of an Anglo Dutch fleet by the French on the previous day at the Battle of Beachy Head a far more serious event in the short term 44 only on the continent was the Boyne treated as an important victory Its importance lay in the fact that it was the first proper victory for the League of Augsburg the first ever alliance between the Vatican and Protestant countries The victory motivated more nations to join the alliance and in effect ended the fear of a French conquest of Europe 45 The Boyne also had strategic significance for both England and Ireland It marked the beginning of the end of James s hope of regaining his throne by military means and probably assured the triumph of the Glorious Revolution In Scotland news of this defeat temporarily silenced the Highlanders supporting the Jacobite rising which had been led by Bonnie Dundee who was killed the previous July at the Battle of Killiecrankie 46 The battle was a general victory for William Due to the political situation mentioned above Catholic institutions amongst William s continental allies hailed his victory with bell ringing 47 The battle caused the Jacobites to abandon the city of Dublin which was occupied by William s forces without a fight Despairing of his hopes for victory James II fled to Duncannon and returned to exile in France even though his army left the field relatively unscathed James s loss of nerve and speedy exit from the battlefield enraged his Irish supporters and he was derisively nicknamed Seamus a chaca James the shit in Irish 48 49 The war in Ireland had not ended however The Franco Irish Jacobite army regrouped in Limerick and fought off a Williamite assault on the city in late August It was not until the following year and battle of Aughrim that their forces were broken and after another siege of Limerick they surrendered to William s general Godard de Ginkell The war in Ireland formally ended with the Treaty of Limerick in 1691 This allowed over 14 000 Irish soldiers under Patrick Sarsfield to leave for France and allowed most Irish Catholic land owners to keep their land provided they swore allegiance to William of Orange However the Protestant dominated Irish Parliament rejected these terms not ratifying the treaty until 1697 and then not in full and imposed a tough Penal Code resented by Irish Catholics for many years 50 51 52 53 Commemoration EditOriginally the Twelfth of July commemoration was that of the Battle of Aughrim 54 symbolising Irish Protestants victory in the Williamite war in Ireland At Aughrim which took place a year after the Boyne the Jacobite army was destroyed deciding the war in the Williamites favour The Boyne which in the old Julian calendar took place on 1 July O S was treated as less important third after Aughrim and the anniversary of the Irish Rebellion of 1641 on 23 October O S In 1752 the Gregorian calendar was also adopted in Ireland 55 However even after this date The Twelfth continued to be commemorated at Aughrim on 12 July NS 54 following the usual historical convention of commemorating events of that period within Great Britain and Ireland by mapping the Julian date directly onto the modern Gregorian calendar date as happens for example with Guy Fawkes Night on 5 November But after the Orange Order was founded in 1795 amid sectarian violence in County Armagh the two events were combined in the late 18th century 54 Statue of William of Orange on College Green in Dublin erected in 1701 It was destroyed in 1929 View of the commemorative Boyne Obelisk prior to 1883 erected in 1736 It was destroyed in 1923 Medal struck to commemorate the Battle of the Boyne Robert Chambers p 8 July 1832 56 The Twelfth in Northern Ireland today Edit Main article The Twelfth The Battle of the Boyne remains a controversial topic today in Northern Ireland where some Protestants remember it as the great victory over Catholics that resulted in the sovereignty of Parliament and the Protestant monarchy 57 In recent decades The Twelfth has often been marked by confrontations as members of the Orange Order attempt to celebrate the date by marching past or through what they see as their traditional route 58 Some of these areas however now have a nationalist majority who object to marches passing through what they see as their areas 57 Many nationalists still see these marches as provocative whilst Unionist marchers insist that it is part of their historical right to celebrate Since the start of the Troubles the celebrations of the battle have been seen as playing a critical role in the awareness of those involved in the unionist nationalist tensions in Northern Ireland Better policing and improved dialogue between the sides in the 21st century have made for more peaceful parades 57 The Eleventh Night in Northern Ireland Edit There are also traditions set to happen on July 11th the eve of the Twelfth Night known as the Eleventh Night On this night Protestants ignite bonfires all over Northern Ireland to celebrate the commencement of the Twelfth Night The reason they use bonfires to symbolize the event dates back to the pagan celebrations of Midsummer Bealtaine and Samhain where fire is used as a symbol of celebration 59 Bonfire pyre including the Tricolour flag Many object to the use of bonfires in Loyalist celebrations today especially because many bonfires now include the burning of flags effigies and election posters 60 Battlefield preservation Edit River Boyne at Oldbridge in 2011 The site of the Battle of the Boyne sprawls over a wide area west of the town of Drogheda in the Republic of Ireland In the County Development Plan for 2000 Meath County Council rezoned the land at the eastern edge of Oldbridge at the site of the main Williamite crossing to residential status A subsequent planning application for a development of over 700 houses was granted by Meath County Council and this was appealed against by local historians to An Bord Pleanala The Planning Board In March 2008 after an extremely long appeal process An Bord Pleanala approved permission for this development to proceed 61 Further plans have been submitted for hundreds more homes and a link to the River Boyne Boardwalk 62 The Battle of the Boyne Visitor Centre at Oldbridge house is run by the Office of Public Works an agency of the Irish government and is about one mi 1 6 km to the west of the main river crossing point The battle s other main combat areas at Duleek Donore and Plattin along the Jacobite line of retreat are marked with tourist information signs On 4 April 2007 in a sign of improving relations between unionist and nationalist groups the newly elected First Minister of Northern Ireland the Reverend Ian Paisley was invited to visit the battle site by the Taoiseach Prime Minister Bertie Ahern later in the year Following the invitation Paisley commented that such a visit would help to demonstrate how far we have come when we can celebrate and learn from the past so the next generation more clearly understands On 10 May the visit took place and Paisley presented the Taoiseach with a Jacobite musket in return for Ahern s gift at the St Andrews talks of a walnut bowl made from a tree from the site A new tree was also planted in the grounds of Oldbridge House by the two politicians to mark the occasion 63 See also EditThe Boyne Water Irish calendar List of conflicts in Ireland Military history of Britain Orange OrderNotes EditExplanatory footnotes Edit The battle took place on 11 July N S but the anniversary is now celebrated on 12 July This is explained at Commemoration below The Patriot Parliament session of the Parliament of Ireland confirmed James as King of Ireland though Poynings Law arguably made this invalid In any case the subsequent Act of Recognition of their Majesties sic undoubted Right to the Crown of Ireland 1692 set this aside Citations Edit a b c d e f Battle of the Boyne www britannica com Archived from the original on 21 July 2021 Retrieved 6 July 2019 a b c d James II King of England Scotland and Ireland www britannica com Archived from the original on 11 August 2021 Retrieved 13 July 2019 The Glorious Revolution www parliament uk Archived from the original on 11 July 2021 Retrieved 1 November 2019 James II in Ireland www libraryireland com Archived from the original on 7 March 2021 Retrieved 1 November 2019 War of the Grand Alliance www britannica com Archived from the original on 29 June 2021 Retrieved 1 November 2019 Brown Derek 11 July 2000 How the battle of the Boyne earned its place in history The Guardian Archived from the original on 26 May 2021 Retrieved 17 December 2016 Elliott I D 1973 Schomberg Friedrich Hermann Duke of Encyclopaedia Britannica Volume 19 London Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc William Benton Publisher p 1174 He went to Ireland as commander in chief against James II in August 1689 ISBN 978 0 85229 173 3 Elliott 1973 p 1174 but he could do little more than hold Ulster as there was much sickness in his small army and he took no risks Charles I 1625 49 and the Commonwealth 1649 60 www britannica com Archived from the original on 24 October 2020 Retrieved 1 November 2019 Harris Tim 2006 Revolution The Great Crisis of the British Monarchy 1685 1720 London Allen Lane p 440 ISBN 978 0 7139 9759 0 Magennis Eoin 1998 A Beleaguered Protestant Walter Harris and the Writing of Fiction Unmasked in Mid 18th Century Ireland Eighteenth Century Ireland 13 6 111 JSTOR 30064327 The Inniskillings 6th Dragoons Archived from the original on 18 January 2008 Retrieved 1 November 2019 Jackson Major E S 2015 INNISKILLING DRAGOONS The Records of an Old Heavy Cavalry Regiment Uckfield East Sussex The Naval amp Military Press a b c William III King of England Scotland and Ireland www britannica com Archived from the original on 17 June 2015 Retrieved 15 July 2019 The Williamite War 1689 91 1 1 www historyireland com 22 January 2013 Archived from the original on 16 July 2019 Retrieved 16 July 2019 Battle of the Dunes www britannica com Archived from the original on 26 May 2019 Retrieved 13 July 2019 Baldwin Smith Lacey 2006 English History Made Brief Irreverent and Pleasurable Chicago Chicago Review Press p 224 Holmes Frederick 2003 The Sickly Stuarts The Medical Downfall of a Dynasty Gloucester Sutton Publishing a b Bevan Bryan 1997 King William III Prince of Orange the first European London Rubicon Press Payne George James Rainsford 1838 The Life and Times of Louis the Fourteenth Volume 4 London Samuel Bentley p 154 Blom J C H Lamberts E eds 2006 History of the Low Countries new English language ed New York amp Oxford Berghahn Books p 196 Antonin Nompar de Caumont count and duke de Lauzun www britannica com Archived from the original on 3 June 2019 Retrieved 15 July 2019 Schomberg Frederick Herman 1st duke of www encyclopedia com Archived from the original on 16 July 2019 Retrieved 16 July 2019 Frederick Herman duke of Schomberg www britannica com Archived from the original on 11 July 2019 Retrieved 16 July 2019 a b c d The Battle of the Boyne Teachers Notes amp Resources Secondary Level Archived 25 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine PDF Office of Public Works Ireland undated retrieved 9 March 2017 Britannica Battle of the Boyne Britannica com Archived from the original on 21 July 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2020 Laverty Henry producer director 1 January 1990 Battle of the Boyne Part I Battle of the Boyne 2 48 minutes in BBC Archived from the original on 1 July 2022 Retrieved 6 July 2019 King William s Progress to the Boyne The Ulster Journal of Archaeology 1 131 1853 JSTOR 20563454 a b c d e Macaulay T B 1849 Chapter XVI History of England from the accession of James II 1685 until the death of William III 1702 New York Harper Two Unpublished Diaries Connected with the Battle of the Boyne Ulster Journal of Archaeology 1 Belfast 4 80 1856 Ohlmeyer Jane ed 2018 The Cambridge History of Ireland Volume 2 1550 1730 Cambridge Cambridge University Press a b Laverty Henry producer director 1 January 1990 Battle of the Boyne Part I Battle of the boyne 2 32 minutes in BBC Archived from the original on 1 July 2022 Retrieved 6 July 2019 Childs John 2007 The Williamite Wars in Ireland London New York A amp C Black pp 33 135 Laverty Henry producer director 1 January 1990 Battle of the Boyne Part I Battle of the boyne 10 50 minutes in BBC Archived from the original on 1 July 2022 Retrieved 6 July 2019 BBC History The Battle of the Boyne Archived 5 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine BBC undated retrieved 9 March 2017 Lavery Henry producer director 1 January 1990 Battle of the Boyne Part I Battle of the boyne 4 05 minutes in BBC Archived from the original on 1 July 2022 Retrieved 21 July 2019 Laverty Henry producer director 1 January 1990 Battle of the Boyne Part I Battle of the boyne 8 00 minutes in BBC Archived from the original on 1 July 2022 Retrieved 21 July 2019 Laverty Henry producer director 1 January 1990 Battle of the Boyne Part I Battle of the boyne 9 10 minutes in BBC Archived from the original on 1 July 2022 Retrieved 21 July 2019 Handley Stuart May 2011 Fitzjames James Duke of Berwick upon Tweed 1670 1734 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press a b Van Nimwegen 2020 p 207 Laverty Henry producer director 1 January 1990 Battle of the Boyne Part I Battle of the boyne 11 00 minutes in BBC Archived from the original on 1 July 2022 Retrieved 21 July 2019 Observaties van een Zeventiende eeuwse wereldbeschouwer Constantijn Huygens en de uitvinding van het moderne dagboek Dekker Rudolf Amsterdam 2013 pp 45 47 Laverty Henry producer director 1 January 1990 Battle of the Boyne Part I Battle of the boyne 15 10 minutes in BBC Archived from the original on 1 July 2022 Retrieved 21 July 2019 Macaulay Lord 1914 The History of England from the Accession of James the Second Vol 4 London Macmillan amp Co Ltd pp 854 858 War of the Grand Alliance www britannica com Archived from the original on 29 June 2021 Retrieved 31 October 2019 Jacobite Risings www oxfordreference com Archived from the original on 21 June 2017 Retrieved 31 October 2019 Finn Clodagh 9 July 2016 Craving for a bond unlikely to lag due to a flag Irish Examiner Archived from the original on 31 October 2019 Retrieved 31 October 2019 Simms J G 1986 War and Politics in Ireland 1649 1730 London amp Ronceverte The Hambledon Press pp 184 203 Szechi Daniel 1994 The Jacobites Britain and Europe 1688 1788 Manchester amp New York Manchester University Press p 49 The Treaty of Limerick 1691 www ucc ie en Archived from the original on 31 December 2018 Retrieved 31 October 2019 History of the law 1691 present www courts ie Archived from the original on 31 October 2019 Retrieved 31 October 2019 Treaty of Limerick www encyclopedia com Archived from the original on 31 October 2019 Retrieved 31 October 2019 Battle of the Boyne King William III s Victory in Ireland www historynet com 12 June 2006 Archived from the original on 5 October 2019 Retrieved 31 October 2019 a b c Lenihan Padraig 2003 1690 Battle of the Boyne Tempus pp 258 259 ISBN 9780752425979 The Pope s new invention the introduction of the Gregorian calendar in Ireland 1583 1782 page 9 Archived 14 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine History Department University College Cork 1 April 2006 Chambers Robert 1832 The Book of Days A Miscellany of Popular Antiquities in Connection with the Calendar Including Anecdote Biography amp History Curiosities of Literature and Oddities of Human Life and Character Volume 2 London W amp R Chambers Limited Archived from the original on 7 March 2022 Retrieved 7 January 2016 a b c The Irish Post Twelve things you should know about marching season in Northern Ireland on The Twelfth Dublin 11 July 2016 Archived from the original on 17 July 2019 Retrieved 17 July 2019 Bryan Dominic 2000 Orange Parades The politics of ritual tradition and control Pluto Press pp 147 148 Corscadden Jane 6 July 2022 The reason bonfires are lit on the Eleventh Night in NI BelfastLive Retrieved 15 December 2022 The Twelfth Why are bonfires lit in Northern Ireland BBC News 9 July 2021 Retrieved 15 December 2022 224875 Oldbridge Rathmullen Road Drogheda Co Meath SA 60260 www pleanala ie Archived from the original on 31 October 2019 Retrieved 31 October 2019 Housing boom as 661 homes planned on Rathmullen Road www independent ie Archived from the original on 31 October 2019 Retrieved 31 October 2019 Paisley and Ahern visit 1690 site BBC News 11 May 2007 Archived from the original on 20 May 2022 Retrieved 22 November 2019 Further reading EditDoherty Richard 1998 The Williamite War in Ireland 1688 1691 Dublin Four Courts Press ISBN 1 85182 375 1 Hayes Mac Coy G A 1990 Irish Battles Belfast Appletree Press ISBN 0 86281 250 X OCLC 231283129 Lenihan Padraig 2003 1690 Battle of the Boyne Stroud Gloucestershire UK Tempus Publishing ISBN 0 7524 3304 0 OCLC 61303112 Van Nimwegen Olaf 2020 De Veertigjarige Oorlog 1672 1712 de strijd van de Nederlanders tegen de Zonnekoning The 40 Years War 1672 1712 the Dutch struggle against the Sun King in Dutch Prometheus ISBN 978 90 446 3871 4 External links EditBattle of the Boyne visitor centre at Oldbridge plus battle information Boyne Valley Tourist Portal Information on Battle of the Boyne Tourist Information on Battle of the Boyne Visitor Centre Primary and secondary sources relating to the Battle of the Boyne From the National Library of Ireland s Sources database Modern mapping of the area Ordnance Survey Ireland Choose Base history and mapping then Historic 6 inch mapping and enter 704444 776167 to see the site of the Boyne Obelisk destroyed 1923 on the northern side of the subsequent bridge Interview with historian Padraig Lenihan on the Battle of the Boyne Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of the Boyne amp oldid 1127637853, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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