.... to
the Crown and pay homage and in return, would receive a ‘grant’ of their lands
back and perhaps, an English title, to boot.
The
English agent Nicholas Bagenal is believed to have been instrumental in
facilitating this tactic, by persuading Conn Bacach O’Neill to accept the
policy. Indeed his later promotion to Marshall of the Queen’s forces in Ireland, and
Lord of the manors of Newry and of Mourne followed in consequence. Whether or not you would choose to celebrate
Nicholas Bagenal on this account would depend largely on your own political
outlook today!
The
Iveagh Magennis leaders Donal Og and Arthur were among the first to submit to
Henry VIII. The latter proposed - as
against Henry’s determined will to dissolve and seize the lands, buildings and
assets of Newry’s Cistercian Monastery - that instead it be ‘converted to a
college for secular priests’. For a few
years it was. The then Abbott John
Prowte (incidentally the name Prunty is still common in Mid-Ulster) became a
warden of the college and the remaining monks (by name, Art McGillebury, Donal
McGillebury and Eneas O’Sheyll) became vicars choral.
Henry,
and the ministers of his minor successor, Edward VI would brook no rival. Two years later in August 1550 two
inquisitions were ordered. They tell us
that the abbey contained a church with a steeple, a chapter house, a dormitory,
a hall, an orchard and a garden. These
were seized but that the monks continued to hold some position was testified to
by ..
a. the appearance, on the contested 1568 Map of
Newry, of the name of Patrick Creely (or variation) – thought by some to be the
resident abbot. In any event ..
b. the name Creely is listed in 1630 as being
the last Cistercian Monastery monk of Newry
(see: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~rosdavies/SURNAMES/C/CraCri.htm).
That certain families dominated the position of monk is testified to
above!
The
Ordnance Survey Memoirs of Ireland
(Co Down, 1834-6 p. 108-9) notes, in relation to the Elizabethan (two monarchs
later) era in Newry …..
‘..
during her reign one of her generals arrived there with troops and took
possession of these lands, destroyed the convent and put some monks to death on
a hill near to Newry, which has ever since been called Monks Hill’.
Are
we in Newry about to write the monks of the Cistercian Monastery out of history
along with the ancient Gaelic clans and their chiefs?
Is
this the price of appeasing certain elements determined to immortalise the
fugitive murderer, Bagenal? That
Nicholas Bagenal worked to build up the town of Newry is undeniable but we need a sense of
perspective here (something the alleged cartographer Robert Lythe certainly
lacked!).
We
need to think twice about naming our new museum after Bagenal!