Hugh Ó Néill was born around 1550 to Feardorcha Ó Néill, Baron Dungannon, and Joan Macguire. Feardorcha Ó Néill was an illegitimate son of Conn Ó Néill, the first Earl of Tyrone and the last King of Tír Eoghain. The Earldom was received when Ireland became a Kingdom in 1542. 1/10
Ó Néills hailed from the ancient Kingdom of Uí Néill in Ireland. Hugh Ó Néill's family had their base in Cenél nEógain, centred around Tír Eoghain from late 1100s. In 1542, King Henry VIII of England was declared King of Ireland and Conn Ó Néill submitted to the new King. 2/10
Feardorcha accompanied his father to England and was designated his father's heir by the English, much to the chargin of his half brother, Seán, possibly appointed Tánaiste (Designated heir) already. This led to a tiff between the brothers, and Feardorcha was killed in 1558. 3/10
Conn died in 1559 and Seán took control of Tyrone. Hugh grew up under the care of Henry Sidney growing up in the Pale, while his brother Brian succeeded as Baron Dungannon. Brian was killed in 1562 by the Tánaiste, Turlough Ó Néill, grandson of Conn Ó Néill's predecessor. 4/10
After resisting English control, Seán made peace with Queen Elizabeth, who had ascended to the throne in 1558, in 1562. But as his ambitions got the better of him, he was undone by the Ó Domhnaills of Tyrconnell with English help and was later killed in 1567. 5/10
In 1568, Hugh Ó Néill returned to Ireland under the protection of Henry Sidney, now Lord Deputy of Ireland. Sidney attempted to bring in more English control in Ireland by bringing settlers to set up plantations. But he met with resistance from the English Earls in Ireland. 6/10
Hugh Ó Néill fought on the English side in putting down the rebellion by Desmond. The FitzGeralds of Desmond also looked for help from the continent, with Spain, France and Rome interested in a Catholic outcome against a Protestant England. 7/10
While fighting for the English, Hugh also developed his base in Ireland. In 1574, he married Siobhán, daughter of Aodh Ó Domhnaill of Tyrconnell. In 1595, he became the head of the Ó Néills and allied with Aodh 'Ruadh' Ó Domhnaill, his brother-in-law, to resist the English. 8/10
The Irish held firm for a decade, with major victories at Clontibert (1595) and Yellow Ford (1599) , and received minor military support from Spain and Rome. But the momentum reversed after the siege of Kinsale (1601), where the Spanish contingent was based. 9/10
With Spain ending their war with England in 1603, the Irish ended their war as well. Though Ó Néill and his colleagues were pardoned, they left Ireland in 1607 ending up in Rome. It left a power vacuum in Ireland, allowing for British settlers to set up plantations. 10/10
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Encomium Emmae reginae, written in the 11th century, perhaps at the request of Emma of Normandy, Queen of England, who sons ruled England from 1040 to 1066. 1/5
Richard de Clare was born around 1130 to Gilbert de Clare and Isabel de Beaumont. The de Clares were an influential family in Norman England, descended from Geoffroy de Brionne, an illegitimate son of Duke Richard of Normandy. 1/10
Gilbert's grandfather, Richard de Brionne, had come with Guillaume of Normandy in 1066 and was rewarded with the Lordship of Clare and Tonbridge. Gilbert was made Earl of Pembroke in 1138 by King Etienne de Blois, though he changed sides on and off during Anarchy. 2/10
Very Jenneric (Is that a word ?) leap of thought from a veterinarian relative, based on anecdotal data of low infection of Covid among vets. (Cannot verify if that is a real thing) connecting immunity to bovine coronavirus. Google popped up this. 1/3
I first read about the Kalmar Union when I was in school. The idea that the entirety of Scandinavia used to be a single country, albeit briefly, was surprising - Denmark, Sweden with parts of Finland in tow, Norway with Iceland, Greenland, Faroe Islands and parts of Scotland. 1/6
It was an initiative of Queen Margrethe who was the ruler of all three Kingdoms in 1397. Though the union was stable during her rule, it started having trouble after her death in 1412. 2/2
It was during this time that the German House of Oldenburg became a regnal dynasty. During the Napoleonic period, this family's rule stretched from the north western end of Europe to the north eastern end of Asia. 3/3
Caterina de' Medici was born in 1519 to Lorenzo de' Medici, Duke of Urbino and Madeleine de la Tour of Auvergne. Both her parents died in 1519, leaving her under the care of her father's uncle, Giovanni de' Medici (Pope Leo X) and Giulio de' Medici (Pope Clement VII). 1/10
She had an illegitimate half brother, Alessandro, who would later become the Duke of Florence. She also inherited Auvergne from her aunt Anne in 1524. In 1533, she married Henri, a younger son of the French King, who became the heir to the throne in 1536. 2/10
Marguerite d'Anjou was born in 1430 to René d'Anjou, Duke of Bar, and Isabelle de Lorraine. In 1431, Isabelle and René inherited Lorraine, but Isabelle's cousin, Antoine de Vaudémont, disputed the inheritance. With the help of Burgundy, he imprisoned René at Dijon. 1/10
The cousins made up in 1433, with Emperor Sigmund confirming the inheritance. René also inherited Anjou in 1434 from his brother and the next year, the Kingdom of Naples, from an heirless Queen Jeanne II. But by 1442, René was expelled from Naples by Alfonso de Castilla. 2/10