Owen McGee

A History of Ireland in International Relations


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had sent family members to Spanish Flanders to acquire more modern military expertise. In the 1590s, Ulster chieftains made the unusual move of considering pledging their allegiance to the Spanish Hapsburg dynasty, in an attempt to acquire Spanish assistance, whilst endeavouring to appeal to a distinct sense of Irish nationality based on Catholicism. They mounted a resistance to English rule that, in the wake of a couple of military victories, seemed likely to stimulate a nationwide rebellion, but this endeavour was defeated in 1602 in the wake of a very small Spanish invasion attempt on the southern coast of Ireland.30 Meanwhile, on a national level, the formation of over a dozen Irish Colleges on the European continent, located in Spain, Portugal, Belgium, France, Italy and even Prague, was of limited significance because they were designed primarily for the training of priests. Although no longer complete unknowns in European court society, Irishmen were generally viewed in Europe only as a potential source of additional manpower, be it for political intrigues on the continent itself or against England, rather than as representatives of a distinct nation in international relations.31 This was because the Irish parliament served little purpose other than to make requests for English subsidies to sustain an insolvent Irish administration that was nevertheless able to facilitate extensive exchequer returns to London, based upon rents, customs and taxes, that helped to ensure that ‘Irish money balanced the royal books’ of England.32