In 1593, as the Nine Years' War began, Ó hÉilidhe was dispatched to Spain by noblemen Red Hugh O'Donnell and Hugh Maguire, with the aim of obtaining military assistance from the Spanish.[5] He carried letters from O'Donnell, Maguire, Brian Oge O'Rourke and Archbishop Edmund MacGuaran, Primate of Ireland.[6][7][1] Ó hÉilidhe arrived in Spain in July, and was present at the Spanish court by September.[8]
He met with councillor Don Juan de Idiáquez, the royal secretary,[6] who supervised King Philip II's dealings in the British Isles.[5][1] At the Escorial, Ó hÉilidhe presented the Council of War "with a complete account of the warlike potential and strategic possibilities of the confederate Irish". He described the forces controlled by O'Donnell (3,000 men plus his maternal family's Redshank mercenaries), Maguire (2,000 men), O'Rourke (1,000 men) and the Burke family (1,000 men).[6]
The archbishop emphasised to Idiáquez the persecution the Irish were suffering as fellow Catholics. He urgently requested between 8,000 and 10,000 Spanish soldiers to supplement Irish forces.[5] Ó hÉilidhe was supported by émigré Maurice Fitzgerald and Lisbon exile Cornelius O'Mulrian, Bishop of Killaloe.[6] Anglo-Irish loyalistRichard Stanyhurst was summoned so that the authenticity of Ó hÉilidhe's pleas could be verified, but Stanyhurst would not contradict Ó hÉilidhe's claims.[9]
"The Irish archbishop of Tuam says that it will be of great importance for the success of the confederacy of Irish Catholics, that Your Majesty should write very affectionately to the earl of Tyrone, whose name is O’Neill to induce him to enter into the confederacy openly. He already belongs to it secretly, and he should be assured that Your Majesty’s aid shall not fail them. The archbishop begs Your Majesty to order a letter to be written to the earl to that effect."
Philip II thought these demands were heavy, but ultimately felt pity for the plight of Irish Catholics. Idiáquez was instructed to give the Irish "the very smallest aid that will be needed. If it be so small that we can give it, we will help them."[5] Idiáquez arranged for a ship to take Ó hÉilidhe, Spanish experts and Irish émigrés back to Ireland to gather intelligence and assist in the rebellion.[5][7] The ship would be commanded by the highly regarded Captain Mérida, a "Spanish mulatto".[10][7] Accompanying Ó hÉilidhe were Irishmen Thomas FitzGerald ("Don Tomás Geraldino") and John de Lacey ("Don Juan de Lacey"), who had served in the Spanish navy.[6][10][7] According to a second-hand report in the Calendar of State Papers, 100 soldiers were also on board.[10]
Shipwreck
The ship with Ó hÉilidhe set sail in March 1594, probably from Ferrol,[7] but was shipwrecked in a sandbar off the coast of Santander, Cantabria, which halted any further lobbying.[5][6][7]
According to Philip O'Sullivan Beare, Mérida docked the ship at Santander and, while waiting for a storm to subside, killed a man in a quarrel. He ordered Ó hÉilidhe and the crew to quickly depart so he could avoid arrest, but the ship was destroyed in the storm and all on board died.[7][9] Historian Micheline Walsh has raised doubts on the trustworthiness of this account. Nevertheless, in a 1610 letter to Philip III, De Lacey's son mentions that the crew were "lost on the bar of Santander".[7]Hiram Morgan and Darren McGettigan believe that Ó hÉilidhe indeed died in a shipwreck on the bay of Biscay in early 1594.[1][11]
In the confusion, a Spanish barque was sent to Ireland to find Mérida and Ó hÉilidhe. In October 1594, their fates were still unclear to the Spanish administration, causing great concern in Spain.[10]
The Calendar of State Papers mentions a ship from Waterford which was sent to find the missing crew. It travelled to Cádiz and arrived back in Ballyshannon on 2 January 1595, with no news.[10]
Death and legacy
Most sources give Seamus Ó hÉilidhe's death date as 25 September 1595.[4][3][2] It is possible that this is simply the date that Ó hÉilidhe's death at sea was confirmed by authorities. Indeed, on this date Hugh O'Neill and O'Donnell wrote to the King of Spain referencing the failure of Ó hÉilidhe's mission: "By the timidity or negligence of the messengers our former letters have not reached you".[12]
In his writings, O'Sullivan Beare described Ó hÉilidhe as "a man of approved learning and innocence of life".[9]
^ abFryde, E. B.; Greenway, D. E.; Porter, S.; Roy, I. (1986). Handbook of British Chronology (3rd ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 443. ISBN0-521-56350-X.