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Garret Barry (soldier)

Garret Barry, also called Gerat (died 1646), was an Irish soldier and military writer, who fought for Spain in the Eighty Years' War and then for the Irish insurgents in the Rebellion and the Confederate Wars. When young he left Kinsale at its surrender in 1602 for Spain where he took service, first as marine in the Atlantic Fleet and then in the Army of Flanders. While in Spanish service, he fought at the Siege of Breda in 1624/1625. He retired with the rank of captain in 1632. Returning to Ireland he was at the Rebellion appointed general of the insurgents' Munster Army. He took Limerick in June 1642 but was defeated at Liscarroll by Inchiquin in September. He was confirmed as General of the Munster Army by the Irish Catholic Confederation but was in practice superseded by Castlehaven in 1643.

Garret Barry
Frontispiece of his book "A Discourse ..."
DiedMarch 1646
Limerick
Allegiance
RankCaptain in the Spanish service, General of the Confederate Munster army
Battles/wars

Birth and origins edit

Garret was probably born near the end of the 16th century.[1] and is probably the 'Garrot Barry', eldest of the four sons of 'David FitzGarret Barry', 'dwelling at Rincorran', who is mentioned in Pacata Hibernia in the context of the Siege of Kinsale, Munster, Ireland in 1602.[2][3] Rincurran, also spelled Rincorran, is a locality near Kinsale.[4] Rincurran Castle stood where Charles Fort, built in 1677, now stands. It was also called Barry Óg's Castle as it belonged to the Barry Óg (younger) branch of the de Barrys.[5] Garret's father was a member of a cadet branch of the De Barrys, possibly the Barry Ogs. The de Barrys were a landed Old English family, seated in County Cork. During most of Barry's life, first David de Barry, 5th Viscount Buttevant and then David Barry, 1st Earl of Barrymore were heads of the family. Unlike Barry, both sided with the government.

Siege of Kinsale edit

Tyrone's Rebellion, also called the Nine Years' War in Ireland was a theatre of the Anglo-Spanish War (1585–1604), as a Spanish expeditionary force under Juan del Águila landed at Kinsale end September 1601 Old Style (O.S.).[6][7][8] Águila garrisoned Rincurran Castle.[9] Charles Blount, 8th Baron Mountjoy, Deputy of Ireland, rushed down to Munster and started the siege early in October. He took Rincurran Castle in November.[10] After Tyrone's defeat at the battle of Kinsale in December[11] and the surrender of Kinsale in February 1602, Barry, in company of his parents and three brothers, was allowed to leave Ireland together with the Spanish in March 1602.[2][12]

Spanish Service edit

Barry served for four years as a marine in the Spanish Atlantic Fleet in the Irish company of Hugh Mostyn.[13] In June 1605 his unit was transferred to the Army of Flanders to bolster the offensive led by Ambrogio Spinola, against the United Provinces of the Netherlands. Barry landed at Dunkirk (part of the Spanish Netherlands at the time) in December 1605. His unit joined the newly created Irish Tercio, commanded by Henry O'Neill,[14] a younger son of Hugh O'Neill, Earl of Tyrone.[15] Barry fought as a soldier at the siege of Rheinberg in 1608.[16] Some time between 1610 and 1621 Henry died[17][18] and was succeeded as maestre de campo by Shane O'Neill, who was however too young and Owen Roe O'Neill was acting commander. Tyrone died in far away Rome and in the eyes of the Spanish Shane O'Neill, the eldest surviving son, succeeded as Conde de Tyrone. His tercio became Tyrone's Tercio.

Barry was promoted ensign in 1623.[16] The tercio's maestre de campo, Henry O'Neill, died about 1626[15] and Owen Roe O'Neill succeeded in his post. Barry fought at the capture of Breda in 1624 and 1625. In 1628 he became captain in command of a company in Tyrone's Tercio.[19] In 1632 he retired from active service.[20]

In about 1639 he returned to Ireland to recruit for the Army of Flanders.[21]

 
Limerick Castle captured by Barry in 1642

General of the Munster Army edit

In October 1641 Phelim O'Neill launched the Irish Rebellion from the northern province of Ulster.[22] When Barry visited Ireland in 1640 to recruit for the Spanish Army, his endeavour was interrupted by the arrival of the rebellion in Southern Ireland. Barry sided with his fellow Catholics.[23]

In January 1642 Barry and Maurice Roche, 8th Viscount Fermoy besieged Richard Boyle, 1st Earl of Cork in Youghal.[24] On 2 March 1642 Donough MacCarty, the 2nd Viscount Muskerry joined the rebellion[a][26] To resolve the rivalry between Muskerry and Fermoy, Barry was chosen as General of the insurgents' Munster army.[27]

In March 1642 Barry, Muskerry besieged William St Leger, the President of Munster, in Cork but weas driven off by Murrough O'Brien, 6th Baron Inchiquin, on 13 April.

Barry then besieged King John's Castle in Limerick for the insurgents and took it through skillful use of the siege techniques he had learnt in Flanders—in particular undermining of the castle's walls (see Siege of Limerick 1642). The castle surrendered in June 1642.[28][29] He then used the artilry captured at King John's Castle to capture other castles in County Limerick. He then tried to invade County Cork again but was driven off in disorder at the Battle of Liscarroll on 3 September 1642 by Inchiquin with a numerically much inferior force.

When the insurgents organised themselves as the Irish Catholic Confederates in October 1642, Barry was confirmed as commander of the Munster army by the general assembly.[30]

In 1643 Barry prepared to besiege the town of Cappoquin in County Waterford, held by Inchiquin. When Ormond came south from Dublin and besieged New Ross in March 1643, Barry tried to relieve it with the Munster army,[31] but Thomas Preston with the Leinster army got there first. Preston relieved the town but was beaten by Ormond at the Battle of New Ross on 18 March 1643. The war in southern Ireland was stopped by the Cessation signed on 15 September 1643.[32]

Barry seems to have kept the position until his death in early March 1646 at Limerick[33][34] but took little further part in the war.

Timeline
Age Date Event
0 1580, estimate Born, probably at Rincurran, County Cork[1]
20–21 1601, 23 Sep The Spanish landed at Kinsale[35]
21–22 1602, Mar Left Ireland with his parents and his three brothers[2]
22–23 1603, 24 Mar Accession of King James I, succeeding Queen Elizabeth I[36]
44–45 1625, 27 Mar Accession of King Charles I, succeeding King James I[37]
51–52 1632, 12 Jan Thomas Wentworth, later Earl of Stafford, appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland[38]
51–52 1632 Retired from active service for Spain[20]
60–61 1641, 23 Oct Outbreak of the Irish Rebellion[39]
61–62 1642, 23 Jun Captured Limerick Castle[29]
62–63 1643, 15 Sep Cessation (truce) between the Confederates and the government[32]
62–63 1643, Nov James Butler, 1st Marquess of Ormond appointed Lord Lieutenant of Ireland[40]
64–65 1645, 21 Oct Giovanni Battista Rinuccini, the papal nuncio, landed in Ireland.[41]
65–66 1646, Mar Died in Limerick[33]

Works edit

Barry wrote two published books:

  • The Siege of Breda (Louvain: Henricus Hastenius, 1627) online at Google Books
  • A Discourse of Military Discipline (Brussels: Widow of John Mommart, 1634) online at the University of Michigan

The Siege of Breda is essentially a translation into English of the Obsidio Bredana by Herman Hugo with some additions from Barry's own participation in this siege. Hugo's book had appeared in Latin in 1626.

The Discourse was meant as an introduction to the subject for young Irishmen envisaging to take Spanish service as infantry officers. It was dedicated to David Barry, 1st Earl of Barrymore: "To the Right Honorable David Barry, Earle of Barry-Moor, Viconte of Butevante, Baron of Ibaune, Lord of Barrycourte and Castelliones", who was the head of the Barrys, even if a Protestant.

Notes and references edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Muskerry changed sides on Ash Wednesday 1642.[25] Calculations with the Easter Calculator of the University of Utrecht or that of the IMCCE show that Ash Wednesday fell on 2 March in 1642.

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Gilbert 1885, p. 319, right column. "Barry was born in the latter part of the sixteenth century ..."
  2. ^ a b c Lenihan 2004, p. 130, right column. "Barry, Gerat (d. 1646), army officer  ... was probably the individual of that name who embarked from Kinsale with the Spanish forces in March 1601 in the company of his father, David FitzGerrot Barry of Rincurran ..."
  3. ^ Stafford 1896, p. 66. "David FitzGarret Barry, and his wife and children dwelling at Rincorran. Garrot Barry, Nicholas Barry, John Barry, David Oge Barry – sons to David FitzGarrot aforesaid ..."
  4. ^ Lewis 1840, p. 514. "Rincurran a parish, partly in the baronny of Kinnalea, but chiefly in that of Kinsale ..."
  5. ^ Thuillier 2014, unknown. "... Barry Óg's Castle, now the site of Charles Fort."
  6. ^ Bagwell 1890, p. 399. "... on September 23 [1601] Don Juan disembarked all his men without opposition."
  7. ^ Hayes-McCoy 1976, p. 134. "About 3,500 of the troops landed unopposed at Kinsale on 21 September and the days following."
  8. ^ Silke 1970, p. 110. "... Kindsale where Águila disembarked om 2 October [1601]."
  9. ^ Silke 1970, p. 112. "Rincorran Castle stood on the east bank of the harbour, about a mile from the entrance. ... This castle Águila garrisoned."
  10. ^ Silke 1970, p. 123. "On 11 November Mountjoy forced the surrender of the fort."
  11. ^ Ekin 2016, p. []. ""
  12. ^ Dowen 2019, p. 38, line 11. "Numbered among them was Gerat Barry who, along with many other Irishmen and their families, had been allowed to leave Ireland under the terms of surrender negotiated by the Spanish commander Juan de Águila."
  13. ^ Dowen 2019, p. 38, line 14. "Initially serving as a marine in the Atlantic Fleet in the Irish company of Hugh Mostyn ..."
  14. ^ Mesa 2014, p. 13. "In 1605 the first Irish tercio, that of Henry O'Neill, its maestre de campo, was created in Flanders."
  15. ^ a b Dunlop 1895a, p. 196, left column. "... Henry, a colonel of an Irish regiment in the Archduke's army, who died about 1626;"
  16. ^ a b Lenihan 2004, p. 131, left column, line 1. "... a private soldier at the siege of Rheinsberg in 1608 and was promoted through the ranks to ensign (1623) ..."
  17. ^ Casway 1969, p. 48. "With the death of Henry O'Neill in August 1610 ..."
  18. ^ Canny 2004, p. 839, left column. "... and Henry O'Neill (1586?–1617x1621)."
  19. ^ Dowen 2019, p. 41. "[in 1628] Barry was placed in command of a company in Tyrone's Tercio ..."
  20. ^ a b Armstrong 2009, 1st paragraph, 3rd sentence. "... by 1632 was awarded a pension as a wounded veteran ..."
  21. ^ Gilbert 1885, p. 320, left column. "Barry attained to the rank of colonel under the King of Spain, for whose service he was employed to raise troops in Ireland."
  22. ^ Dunlop 1895b, p. 205. "In accordance with the final arrangements for the rebellion, Sir Phelim on the evening of 22 Oct. surprised Charlemont Castle ..."
  23. ^ Corish 1976, p. 294, line 28. "... an army raised for the Spanish service by Colonel Garret Barry "
  24. ^ Townshend 1904, pp. 100–102. "... in the beginning of January [1642] Youghal had surrendered to the Irish under Lord Roche and General Barry. ... My Lord [Cork] had some small notice of their coming, and therefore got with all his men into the castle ..."
  25. ^ McGrath 1997, p. 203, line 20. "He declared for his co-religionists on Ash Wednesday 1642 ..."
  26. ^ M'Enery 1904, p. 172. "Lord Muskerry joined the insurgents early in March [1642]."
  27. ^ Corish 1976, p. 294, line 40. "... it was agreed that Colonel Barry should command the Munster forces."
  28. ^ Lenihan 1866, p. 37. "Lord Muskerry, Garret Barry, and other Irish commanders took possession of it the other day [2 June 1642]"
  29. ^ a b M'Enery 1904, p. 176. "The castle was delivered up the same day [23 June 1642]."
  30. ^ Ó Siochrú 2009, Last sentence of 2nd paragraph. "... appointed Garret Barry, a continental veteran, as compromise commander in Munster ..."
  31. ^ Coffey 1914, p. 122. "Barry, the General of the Munster Irish, who was preparing to attack Cappoquin, hurried to the relief of New Ross with fifteen hundred men."
  32. ^ a b Airy 1886, p. 54, right column. "... and the cessation was signed on the 15 Sept. [1643]."
  33. ^ a b Lenihan 2004, p. 131, left column. "Barry died in Limerick City in early March 1646."
  34. ^ Armstrong 2009, last sentence of the article. "... seems to have retained his titular command until his death in March 1646."
  35. ^ Joyce 1903, p. 172. "On the 23d of September, 1601, a Spanish fleet entered the harbour of Kinsale with 3,400 troops ... "
  36. ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 44, line 1. "James I ... acc. 24 Mar. 1603 ..."
  37. ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 44, line 16. "Charles I. ... acc. 27 Mar. 1625 ..."
  38. ^ Asch 2004, p. 146, right column, line 23. "Wentworth was appointed lord deputy on 12 January 1632 ..."
  39. ^ Warner 1768, p. 6. "... the twenty-third October [1641] ... seized all the towns, castles, and houses belonging to the Protestants which they had force enough to possess;"
  40. ^ Cokayne 1895, p. 149, line 29. "Viceroy of Ireland, as Lord Lieutenant 1643–47 ..."
  41. ^ Coffey 1914, p. 152, line 16. "... [Rinuccini] landed at Kenmare October, 21st [1645]."

Sources edit

garret, barry, soldier, garret, barry, also, called, gerat, died, 1646, irish, soldier, military, writer, fought, spain, eighty, years, then, irish, insurgents, rebellion, confederate, wars, when, young, left, kinsale, surrender, 1602, spain, where, took, serv. Garret Barry also called Gerat died 1646 was an Irish soldier and military writer who fought for Spain in the Eighty Years War and then for the Irish insurgents in the Rebellion and the Confederate Wars When young he left Kinsale at its surrender in 1602 for Spain where he took service first as marine in the Atlantic Fleet and then in the Army of Flanders While in Spanish service he fought at the Siege of Breda in 1624 1625 He retired with the rank of captain in 1632 Returning to Ireland he was at the Rebellion appointed general of the insurgents Munster Army He took Limerick in June 1642 but was defeated at Liscarroll by Inchiquin in September He was confirmed as General of the Munster Army by the Irish Catholic Confederation but was in practice superseded by Castlehaven in 1643 Garret BarryFrontispiece of his book A Discourse DiedMarch 1646LimerickAllegianceSpainIrish ConfederationRankCaptain in the Spanish service General of the Confederate Munster armyBattles warsEighty Years WarIrish Confederate Wars Contents 1 Birth and origins 2 Siege of Kinsale 3 Spanish Service 4 General of the Munster Army 5 Works 6 Notes and references 6 1 Notes 6 2 Citations 6 3 SourcesBirth and origins editGarret was probably born near the end of the 16th century 1 and is probably the Garrot Barry eldest of the four sons of David FitzGarret Barry dwelling at Rincorran who is mentioned in Pacata Hibernia in the context of the Siege of Kinsale Munster Ireland in 1602 2 3 Rincurran also spelled Rincorran is a locality near Kinsale 4 Rincurran Castle stood where Charles Fort built in 1677 now stands It was also called Barry og s Castle as it belonged to the Barry og younger branch of the de Barrys 5 Garret s father was a member of a cadet branch of the De Barrys possibly the Barry Ogs The de Barrys were a landed Old English family seated in County Cork During most of Barry s life first David de Barry 5th Viscount Buttevant and then David Barry 1st Earl of Barrymore were heads of the family Unlike Barry both sided with the government Siege of Kinsale editTyrone s Rebellion also called the Nine Years War in Ireland was a theatre of the Anglo Spanish War 1585 1604 as a Spanish expeditionary force under Juan del Aguila landed at Kinsale end September 1601 Old Style O S 6 7 8 Aguila garrisoned Rincurran Castle 9 Charles Blount 8th Baron Mountjoy Deputy of Ireland rushed down to Munster and started the siege early in October He took Rincurran Castle in November 10 After Tyrone s defeat at the battle of Kinsale in December 11 and the surrender of Kinsale in February 1602 Barry in company of his parents and three brothers was allowed to leave Ireland together with the Spanish in March 1602 2 12 Spanish Service editBarry served for four years as a marine in the Spanish Atlantic Fleet in the Irish company of Hugh Mostyn 13 In June 1605 his unit was transferred to the Army of Flanders to bolster the offensive led by Ambrogio Spinola against the United Provinces of the Netherlands Barry landed at Dunkirk part of the Spanish Netherlands at the time in December 1605 His unit joined the newly created Irish Tercio commanded by Henry O Neill 14 a younger son of Hugh O Neill Earl of Tyrone 15 Barry fought as a soldier at the siege of Rheinberg in 1608 16 Some time between 1610 and 1621 Henry died 17 18 and was succeeded as maestre de campo by Shane O Neill who was however too young and Owen Roe O Neill was acting commander Tyrone died in far away Rome and in the eyes of the Spanish Shane O Neill the eldest surviving son succeeded as Conde de Tyrone His tercio became Tyrone s Tercio Barry was promoted ensign in 1623 16 The tercio s maestre de campo Henry O Neill died about 1626 15 and Owen Roe O Neill succeeded in his post Barry fought at the capture of Breda in 1624 and 1625 In 1628 he became captain in command of a company in Tyrone s Tercio 19 In 1632 he retired from active service 20 In about 1639 he returned to Ireland to recruit for the Army of Flanders 21 nbsp Limerick Castle captured by Barry in 1642General of the Munster Army editIn October 1641 Phelim O Neill launched the Irish Rebellion from the northern province of Ulster 22 When Barry visited Ireland in 1640 to recruit for the Spanish Army his endeavour was interrupted by the arrival of the rebellion in Southern Ireland Barry sided with his fellow Catholics 23 In January 1642 Barry and Maurice Roche 8th Viscount Fermoy besieged Richard Boyle 1st Earl of Cork in Youghal 24 On 2 March 1642 Donough MacCarty the 2nd Viscount Muskerry joined the rebellion a 26 To resolve the rivalry between Muskerry and Fermoy Barry was chosen as General of the insurgents Munster army 27 In March 1642 Barry Muskerry besieged William St Leger the President of Munster in Cork but weas driven off by Murrough O Brien 6th Baron Inchiquin on 13 April Barry then besieged King John s Castle in Limerick for the insurgents and took it through skillful use of the siege techniques he had learnt in Flanders in particular undermining of the castle s walls see Siege of Limerick 1642 The castle surrendered in June 1642 28 29 He then used the artilry captured at King John s Castle to capture other castles in County Limerick He then tried to invade County Cork again but was driven off in disorder at the Battle of Liscarroll on 3 September 1642 by Inchiquin with a numerically much inferior force When the insurgents organised themselves as the Irish Catholic Confederates in October 1642 Barry was confirmed as commander of the Munster army by the general assembly 30 In 1643 Barry prepared to besiege the town of Cappoquin in County Waterford held by Inchiquin When Ormond came south from Dublin and besieged New Ross in March 1643 Barry tried to relieve it with the Munster army 31 but Thomas Preston with the Leinster army got there first Preston relieved the town but was beaten by Ormond at the Battle of New Ross on 18 March 1643 The war in southern Ireland was stopped by the Cessation signed on 15 September 1643 32 Barry seems to have kept the position until his death in early March 1646 at Limerick 33 34 but took little further part in the war TimelineAge Date Event0 1580 estimate Born probably at Rincurran County Cork 1 20 21 1601 23 Sep The Spanish landed at Kinsale 35 21 22 1602 Mar Left Ireland with his parents and his three brothers 2 22 23 1603 24 Mar Accession of King James I succeeding Queen Elizabeth I 36 44 45 1625 27 Mar Accession of King Charles I succeeding King James I 37 51 52 1632 12 Jan Thomas Wentworth later Earl of Stafford appointed Lord Deputy of Ireland 38 51 52 1632 Retired from active service for Spain 20 60 61 1641 23 Oct Outbreak of the Irish Rebellion 39 61 62 1642 23 Jun Captured Limerick Castle 29 62 63 1643 15 Sep Cessation truce between the Confederates and the government 32 62 63 1643 Nov James Butler 1st Marquess of Ormond appointed Lord Lieutenant of Ireland 40 64 65 1645 21 Oct Giovanni Battista Rinuccini the papal nuncio landed in Ireland 41 65 66 1646 Mar Died in Limerick 33 Works editBarry wrote two published books The Siege of Breda Louvain Henricus Hastenius 1627 online at Google Books A Discourse of Military Discipline Brussels Widow of John Mommart 1634 online at the University of MichiganThe Siege of Breda is essentially a translation into English of the Obsidio Bredana by Herman Hugo with some additions from Barry s own participation in this siege Hugo s book had appeared in Latin in 1626 The Discourse was meant as an introduction to the subject for young Irishmen envisaging to take Spanish service as infantry officers It was dedicated to David Barry 1st Earl of Barrymore To the Right Honorable David Barry Earle of Barry Moor Viconte of Butevante Baron of Ibaune Lord of Barrycourte and Castelliones who was the head of the Barrys even if a Protestant Notes and references editNotes edit Muskerry changed sides on Ash Wednesday 1642 25 Calculations with the Easter Calculator of the University of Utrecht or that of the IMCCE show that Ash Wednesday fell on 2 March in 1642 Citations edit a b Gilbert 1885 p 319 right column Barry was born in the latter part of the sixteenth century a b c Lenihan 2004 p 130 right column Barry Gerat d 1646 army officer was probably the individual of that name who embarked from Kinsale with the Spanish forces in March 1601 in the company of his father David FitzGerrot Barry of Rincurran Stafford 1896 p 66 David FitzGarret Barry and his wife and children dwelling at Rincorran Garrot Barry Nicholas Barry John Barry David Oge Barry sons to David FitzGarrot aforesaid Lewis 1840 p 514 Rincurran a parish partly in the baronny of Kinnalea but chiefly in that of Kinsale Thuillier 2014 unknown Barry og s Castle now the site of Charles Fort Bagwell 1890 p 399 on September 23 1601 Don Juan disembarked all his men without opposition Hayes McCoy 1976 p 134 About 3 500 of the troops landed unopposed at Kinsale on 21 September and the days following Silke 1970 p 110 Kindsale where Aguila disembarked om 2 October 1601 Silke 1970 p 112 Rincorran Castle stood on the east bank of the harbour about a mile from the entrance This castle Aguila garrisoned Silke 1970 p 123 On 11 November Mountjoy forced the surrender of the fort Ekin 2016 p Dowen 2019 p 38 line 11 Numbered among them was Gerat Barry who along with many other Irishmen and their families had been allowed to leave Ireland under the terms of surrender negotiated by the Spanish commander Juan de Aguila Dowen 2019 p 38 line 14 Initially serving as a marine in the Atlantic Fleet in the Irish company of Hugh Mostyn Mesa 2014 p 13 In 1605 the first Irish tercio that of Henry O Neill its maestre de campo was created in Flanders a b Dunlop 1895a p 196 left column Henry a colonel of an Irish regiment in the Archduke s army who died about 1626 a b Lenihan 2004 p 131 left column line 1 a private soldier at the siege of Rheinsberg in 1608 and was promoted through the ranks to ensign 1623 Casway 1969 p 48 With the death of Henry O Neill in August 1610 Canny 2004 p 839 left column and Henry O Neill 1586 1617x1621 Dowen 2019 p 41 in 1628 Barry was placed in command of a company in Tyrone s Tercio a b Armstrong 2009 1st paragraph 3rd sentence by 1632 was awarded a pension as a wounded veteran Gilbert 1885 p 320 left column Barry attained to the rank of colonel under the King of Spain for whose service he was employed to raise troops in Ireland Dunlop 1895b p 205 In accordance with the final arrangements for the rebellion Sir Phelim on the evening of 22 Oct surprised Charlemont Castle Corish 1976 p 294 line 28 an army raised for the Spanish service by Colonel Garret Barry Townshend 1904 pp 100 102 in the beginning of January 1642 Youghal had surrendered to the Irish under Lord Roche and General Barry My Lord Cork had some small notice of their coming and therefore got with all his men into the castle McGrath 1997 p 203 line 20 He declared for his co religionists on Ash Wednesday 1642 M Enery 1904 p 172 Lord Muskerry joined the insurgents early in March 1642 Corish 1976 p 294 line 40 it was agreed that Colonel Barry should command the Munster forces Lenihan 1866 p 37 Lord Muskerry Garret Barry and other Irish commanders took possession of it the other day 2 June 1642 a b M Enery 1904 p 176 The castle was delivered up the same day 23 June 1642 o Siochru 2009 Last sentence of 2nd paragraph appointed Garret Barry a continental veteran as compromise commander in Munster Coffey 1914 p 122 Barry the General of the Munster Irish who was preparing to attack Cappoquin hurried to the relief of New Ross with fifteen hundred men a b Airy 1886 p 54 right column and the cessation was signed on the 15 Sept 1643 a b Lenihan 2004 p 131 left column Barry died in Limerick City in early March 1646 Armstrong 2009 last sentence of the article seems to have retained his titular command until his death in March 1646 Joyce 1903 p 172 On the 23d of September 1601 a Spanish fleet entered the harbour of Kinsale with 3 400 troops Fryde et al 1986 p 44 line 1 James I acc 24 Mar 1603 Fryde et al 1986 p 44 line 16 Charles I acc 27 Mar 1625 Asch 2004 p 146 right column line 23 Wentworth was appointed lord deputy on 12 January 1632 Warner 1768 p 6 the twenty third October 1641 seized all the towns castles and houses belonging to the Protestants which they had force enough to possess Cokayne 1895 p 149 line 29 Viceroy of Ireland as Lord Lieutenant 1643 47 Coffey 1914 p 152 line 16 Rinuccini landed at Kenmare October 21st 1645 Sources edit Airy Osmund 1886 Butler James twelfth Earl and first Duke of Ormonde 1610 1688 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol VIII New York MacMillan and Co pp 52 60 OCLC 8544105 Armstrong Robert October 2009 McGuire James Quinn James eds Barry Garret Gerat Dictionary of Irish Biography Retrieved 4 August 2021 Asch Ronald G 2004 Wentworth Thomas first earl of Strafford 1593 1641 In Matthew Colin Harrison Brian eds Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 56 New York Oxford University Press pp 142 157 ISBN 0 19 861408 X Bagwell Richard 1890 Ireland under the Tudors Vol III London Longmans Green and Co OCLC 761857292 1579 to 1603 Canny Nicholas 2004 O Neill Hugh Aodh O Neill second earl of Tyrone 1583 1616 In Matthew Colin Harrison Brian eds Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 41 New York Oxford University Press pp 837 845 ISBN 0 19 861391 1 Casway Jerrold 1969 Owen Roe O Neill s Return to Ireland in 1642 The Diplomatic Background Studia Hibernica 9 48 64 doi 10 3828 sh 1969 9 2 JSTOR 20495923 S2CID 241936358 Coffey Diarmid 1914 O Neill and Ormond A Chapter of Irish History Dublin Maunsel amp Company OCLC 906164979 Cokayne George Edward 1895 Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom Extant Extinct or Dormant Vol VI 1st ed London George Bell and Sons OCLC 1180818801 N to R for Ormond Corish Patrick J 1976 Chapter XI The rising of 1641 and the Catholic Confederacy 1641 5 In Moody Theodore William Martin F X Byrne Francis John eds A New History of Ireland Vol III Oxford Oxford University Press pp 289 316 ISBN 978 0 19 820242 4 1641 to 1645 Preview Dowen Keith 2019 Gerat Barry Soldier Military Theorist and the Irish Rebellion of 1641 In Jones Serena ed Britain turned Germany the Thirty Years War and Its Impact on the British Isles 1638 1660 Warwick U K Helion amp Company pp 1 52 ISBN 978 1 9128666 2 5 Dunlop Robert 1895a O Neill Hugh third Baron of Dungannon and second Earl of Tyrone 1540 1616 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol XLII New York MacMillan and Co pp 188 196 OCLC 8544105 Dunlop Robert 1895b O Neill Phelim 1604 1653 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol XLII New York MacMillan and Co pp 204 208 OCLC 8544105 Ekin Des 2016 The Last Armada New York Pegasus Books ISBN 978 1 60598 944 0 Fryde Edmund Boleslaw Greenway D E Porter S Roy I eds 1986 Handbook of British Chronology Royal Historical Society Guides and Handbooks No 2 3rd ed London Offices of the Royal Historical Society ISBN 0 86193 106 8 for timeline Gilbert John Thomas 1885 Barry Gerat or Gerald fl 1624 1642 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol III New York MacMillan and Co pp 319 320 OCLC 8544105 Hayes McCoy Gerard Anthony 1976 Chapter IV The Completion of the Tudor Conquest and the Advance of the Counterreformation In Moody Theodore William Martin F X Byrne Francis John eds A New History of Ireland Vol III Oxford Oxford University Press pp 94 141 ISBN 978 0 19 820242 4 1534 1691 Joyce Patrick Weston 1903 A Concise History of Ireland from the Earliest Times to 1837 12th ed Dublin M H Gill amp Son OCLC 815623752 Lenihan Maurice 1866 Limerick its History and Antiquities Dublin Hodges Smith and Co OCLC 1048327570 Lenihan Padraig 2004 Barry Gerat d 1646 In Matthew Henry Colin Gray Harrison Brian eds Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 4 New York Oxford University Press pp 130 131 ISBN 0 19 861354 7 Lewis Samuel 1840 A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland Vol II 2nd ed London S Lewis amp Co OCLC 1040258496 G to Z McGrath Brid 1997 Donough Mc Carthy 1594 1665 Cork County A Biographical Dictionary of the Membership of the Irish House of Commons 1640 to 1641 Ph D Vol 1 Dublin Trinity College pp 203 204 hdl 2262 77206 Parliaments amp Biographies PDF downloadable from given URL M Enery M J 1904 A Diary of the Siege of Limerick Castle 1642 The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland 5th 34 2 163 187 JSTOR 25507363 Mesa Eduardo de 2014 The Irish in the Spanish Armies in the Seventeenth Century Woodbridge The Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 84383 951 4 Preview o Siochru Micheal October 2009 McGuire James Quinn James eds MacCarthy Donough Dictionary of Irish Biography Retrieved 26 January 2022 Silke John J 1970 Kinsale The Spanish Intervention in Ireland at the End of the Elizabethan Wars Liverpool Liverpool University Press ISBN 9780853230908 Stafford Thomas 1896 1st pub 1633 O Grady Standish ed Pacata Hibernia Vol II London Downey and Co OCLC 4313009 1601 to 1602 Thuillier John R 2014 Kinsale Harbour A History Dublin Gill amp MacMillan ISBN 978 1 84889 848 6 Preview Townshend Dorothea 1904 The Irish Attack on Youghal in 1642 PDF Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society 10 62 100 102 Warner Ferdinand 1768 History of the Rebellion and Civil War in Ireland Vol I Dublin James William OCLC 82770539 1641 to 1643 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Garret Barry soldier amp oldid 1151137285, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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