- Philip O'Reilly
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Colonel Philip O’Reilly was a Member of Parliament for County Cavan, Ireland in the Irish Parliament from 1639 to 1641.
Contents
Ancestry
His Gaelic name was Phillip mac Aodh mac Sean mac Aodh Conallach O’Raghallaigh and by the English he was named Philip McHugh McShane O'Rely. His father, grandfather and several other ancestors were chiefs of the O’Reilly clan and Lords of Breifne O’Reilly. His mother was Catherine MacMahon. He resided at Bellanacargy Castle, Drung Parish, Tullygarvey, Co. Cavan.
Career
When a young man he served for some time in the Spanish army but returned to Ireland. He was appointed Commissioner of the Peace in 1625 and High Sheriff of Cavan in 1629. He was elected as M.P. for Cavan County in 1639.
During the Parliamentary session of 1640 he was enlisted by Rory (Roger) O'Moore in the plot to start a rebellion against English rule in Ireland. O'Moore was a distant relation as his sister Cecilia O'Moore was married to O'Reilly's first cousin, Tirlagh O'Neill. On the outbreak of the Irish Rebellion in October 1641 he was elected chief of the O’Reillys. As a result the Irish Parliament expelled him on the 16th November 1641. On the 6th November 1641 he ordered a general gathering of his clansmen from 16 to 60 years of age, to be held at Virginia, and on the 11th of December 1641 he had possession of the whole county, except the castles of Keelagh and Croghan which were defended by Sir Francis Hamilton and Sir James Craig. He raised a brigade of twelve hundred men, composed chiefly of his name and family, and served with distinction as lieutenant-general in the service of the Confederate Catholics of Ireland. The Assembly of Kilkenny appointed him Lord President of Ulster. His second cousin Myles O’Reilly was High Sheriff of Cavan in 1641 at the outbreak of the Rebellion.
Philip O'Reilly was attainted for treason by the English government in 1642 and was further denounced by Cromwell's Act of 1652 at the end of the Rebellion. Being then obliged to leave Ireland, he retired with his brigade into Spain and thence to the Netherlands, where he served in the Spanish army for about three years and died in 1655. He was buried in the Irish monastery of St. Dominick in the city of Louvain, Belgium.
Family
Philip O’Reilly married Rose O’Neill, the sister of Owen Roe O'Neill, the military leader of the Irish in Ulster during the Confederate Wars of the 1640s. His children by her were 1. Aodh Ruadh, his only legitimate son, who was killed by the Cromwellians; 2. Eibhlin, who married Colla Dubh Mac Mahon, and whose son was Most Reverend Hugh MacMahon, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Armagh; 3. Maire, who married firstly Aodh Maguire and secondly Ruaidhri Og Maguire, the 5th Lord Enniskillen.
Phillip also had an illegitimate son, Sean O’Reilly.
Poem XXVIII in James Carney's 'Poems on the O'Reillys' is dedicated to Philip O’Reilly. John Colgan, the eminent Donegal hagiographer, dedicated his treatise on Duns Scotus, published at Antwerp in 1655, to Philip O’Reilly.
References
- ”Commentarius Rinuccinianus”, Ed. by O’Ferrall & O’Connell, Vol V, pp 97, 205.
- ”A Genealogical History of the O’Reillys”, by Eoghan O’Raghallaigh, Section 3, pp. 27 & 78.
- “Poems on the O’Reillys”, Ed. by James Carney 1950, pp. 139–146 & 232-233
- “A Contemporary History of Affairs in Ireland 1641-1652”, 3 vols, Ed. by John T. Gilbert 1880, pp. 45 et seq.
Categories:- People from County Cavan
- People of the Irish Confederate Wars
- 17th-century Irish people
- High Sheriffs of Cavan
- Members of the Parliament of Ireland (pre-1801)
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