“Don’t be destitute, but be poor…. Have nothing to give away, but enough to remain alive. That’s the plot. If you are destitute you will end up in the Barbadoes. And if you are poor, they can’t take anything away from you, not even your life.” And many of those lives they did take.
A brutal period in Irish history when an estimated 600,000 thousand men, women and children were slaughtered out of an estimated population of 1.4 m. Staggering, horrific, and heartbreaking.
However, it was justifiable to a few because they preached all was being done in God’s name. What an opportunity to throw off all habiliments of civilisation and conscience, knowing that what brutality was endured by the Irish people was ‘pleasing to God’. And so, in 1649, God’s work was everywhere, and so too were the dregs of so many tattered Irish souls, belonging to children, women and men.
The Plot
Dominick is a fictional character in Irish history but what he was subjected to was endured by so many Irish families during Cromwell’s campaign aimed at conquering and wiping out the Irish, which is regarded by many historians and political figures as the most brutal and savage periods in Irish history.
Like many families Dominick is faced with death when his wife is tortured and then murdered by Cromwell’s foot soldiers, during the siege of Drogheda. With a campaign aimed at wiping out the population “no nits no lice”, Dominick goes into hiding with the two children that survived the massacre. Accompanied by a priest he helped save, they move from town to town hiding in dense woodland and burnt-out buildings until they reach Connaught – the most barren province in Ireland where they are given land by Murdoc a man sympathetic to their cause and one of the few remaining Catholics with a voice.
Hot on their heels is one of Cromwell’s rulers, Sir Charles Coote. You know the history, so be prepared to have your heart broken all over again.
Factual Historical Events (Wikipedia)
The Cromwellian conquest completed the British colonisation of Ireland, which was merged into the Commonwealth of England, Scotland and Ireland in 1653–59. It destroyed the native Irish Catholic land-owning classes and replaced them with colonists with a British identity.
Review and Comments
My new campaign this year is a world tour of books to fulfil my love of history and wanting to understand even more cultures, key figures, and historical periods. I do read a lot of history books which has and will accompany my fictional journey and world book tour.
In this case, I don’t need to supplement my Irish history, as an Irish women, I know only too well what ugliness took place in Ireland. The bitterness caused by the Cromwellian conquest was to become a powerful source of Irish nationalism from the 17th century onwards - the effects of which are still felt today. Many Irish people do not accept the argument presented by some historians that this was a period of ‘conquest and colonisation’ and many countries participated in such practices and was therefore permissible. I agree England was not alone but in no way can this level of savagery be justified.
A very moving and heartbreaking story, a light that shines on the ruthless and genocidal campaign undertaken by Cromwell in 1649, and a touching story of survival when people had nothing else left but self-respect and dreams. Dreams that may not have come true for many, but I suspect they will in my lifetime.
I couldn’t take my tour without starting in Ireland, especially with St Patricks Day in a few weeks. I will finish my tour here too, although, my final book will be a celebration of Irish humour. I couldn’t do this to myself again.
A wonderful story and tribute to all the innocent lives lost in Ireland over the years, from all sides.
and to finish with a typical Irish blessing that most family homes will display
☘️☘️☘️☘️☘️
“May the road rise up to meet you.
May the wind be always at your back.
May the sun shine warm upon your face;
The rains fall soft upon your fields and until we meet again,
May God hold you in the palm of His hand.” (and to the non-religious, may your life be happy and peaceful)