Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Grace O’Malley – Ireland’s 16th Century Pirate Queen

           

Modern representation of Grace O’Malley. (Makerva/Deviant Art)

            Clew Bay was home to Rockfleet Castle, the stronghold of Grace O’Malley, or Granuaile as she was known. O’Malley was the leader of a clan of pirates that controlled the Irish coastline through violence and intimidation. She had hundreds of men and over twenty ships under her command, raiding rival clans and merchant ships at will.

Eventually, government officials had had enough and in 1574 a fleet was sent to raid O’Malley’s castle. She and her men turned the fleet away in a violent counterattack which caused the government ships to retreat. However, she was captured and imprisoned in 1577 but was soon out and plundering again.

Gráinne Ní Mháille

Grace O’Malley (Gráinne Ní Mháille) was born in Ireland around 1530 as a daughter of the wealthy nobleman and sea trader, Dubhdara O'Malley, who commanded the biggest fleet of ships in Ireland. For hundreds of years, the O’Malleys had been sailing their ships around the coasts of Ireland, Scotland and northern Spain, trading, fishing, and plundering.

Clew Bay (c) By Mariusz Z - flickr.com, CC BY-SA 2.0
            During her reign, she acquired several other castles through conquest and marriage, including Doona on Blacksod, Kildavnet on Achill Island, and the O’Malley Castle on Clare Island.

Queen Elizabeth used the feuding between Irish chieftains to her advantage, replacing Chieftains with those who promised to be loyal to her and adopt English law.

Sir Richard Bingham

At the age of fifty-six, Grace O’Malley was finally captured by Sir Richard Bingham (1528 – 1599), a ruthless governor that was appointed to rule over Irish territories. She closely escaped the death sentence, but over the course of time her influence, wealth, and lands faded, until she was on the brink of poverty.

She wrote to Queen Elizabeth explaining her plight. She asked the queen to give her “free liberty during her life to invade with fire and sword all your highness’ enemies without any interruption of any person whatsoever.” In the guise of fighting for the queen, she could continue her life at sea, unhindered by the English and free from Bingham’s control.

The meeting of Grace O'Malley and Queen Elizabeth I.’ (Public Domain)

Historic Meeting

Her situation took a turn for the worst when her dearest son, Tibbot na Long (‘Toby of the Ships’), was captured by Bingham and was facing execution. In September 1593, O’Malley secured an historic meeting with Queen Elizabeth I, the woman against whom she had rebelled and in whose hands her life and her son’s life now lay. The meeting took place at Greenwich Castle. Their conversation was conducted in English, as Grace spoke no Latin and Elizabeth spoke no Irish.

Sir Richard Bingham 
from Wikipedia

Grace explained to the queen that her actions were merely to protect her family and her people. The queen listened with admiration and pity as Grace told her story and how she suffered at the hands of the English, and particularly Sir Richard Bingham. In this amazing meeting of two powerful women, Grace managed to convince the queen to free her family and restore much of her lands and influence.

Decline and Death

However, growing political unrest and turmoil in Ireland, culminated in the demise of the old Gaelic way of life and the end of the world of clans and chieftains. By this time, Grace was old and weary. She lived out her last years in the comfort of her fortress at Rockfleet Castle where she died around 1603.

                          Rockfleet Castle. (Mikeoem/CC BY SA 4.0)

Grace O'Malley is not mentioned in the Irish annals, so documentary evidence for her life comes mostly from English sources. As a pirate, she was largely written out of Irish history, so limited information exists of her life. She successfully defended the independence of her territories at a time when much of Ireland fell under the English rule and is still considered today ‘the pirate queen of Ireland.’ Her story lives on in the many folk stories, songs, poems, and musicals which help to preserve the legend of the Pirate Queen.

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