Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 35.djvu/60

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MacDonnell
54
MacDonnell

places, and finally finds her with Aoibhell of the rock, the banshee of the Dal Cais in the fairy hill of Firinn. He asks when the Gael will be free, and she vanishes. 2. ‘An bonnaire fiadna phuic’ (‘The cruel, lowborn Tyrant’), a poem urging the immediate expulsion of the English. 3. ‘Mac an Cheannaigh’ (‘The Merchant's Son’), in which help from Spain is foretold for Ireland. 4. ‘An Fhocain Breatain’ (‘Britain's Danger’), pointing out her foes on the continent. 5. To the tune of the ‘White Cockade,’ a lament of the woman of Scotland for her husband, King Charles, often called ‘Clárach's Lament.’

He died in 1754, and was buried in the old churchyard of Ballyslough, near Charleville; in the Latin inscription on his tomb he is called Johannes McDonald. John O'Tuama [q. v.] wrote a lament for him in Irish (Hardiman, Irish Minstrelsy, ii. 252).

[John Daly's Reliques of Irish Jacobite Poetry, Dublin, 1844, pt. i.; J. Hardiman's Irish Minstrelsy, ii. 413-14.]

N. M.


MACDONNELL, Sir RANDAL, Viscount Dunluce and first Earl of Antrim (d. 1636), called Abbaxach, from his having been fostered in the island of Arran, in Scotland, was fourth son of Sorley Boy MacDonnell [q. v.], and succeeded on the death of his brother Sir James in April 1601 to the lordship of the Glynns and Route in Ireland.

In 1597 he gave offence to government by assisting Sir James to fortify Dunluce Castle' and took part in the defeat which the MacDonnells inflicted that year upon Sir John Chichester and the garrison of Carrickfergus. He joined O'Neill in his rebellion, and accompanied him on his expedition into Munster early in 1600, but, becoming by his brother's death head of his house, and foreseeing the failure of the rebellion, he in August 1602 made a timely submission to the lord deputy, Lord Mountjoy, at Tullaghoge, offering to serve against O'Neill in Fermanagh with five hundred foot and forty horse at his own expense. His example exercised a good effect in the north, and he was knighted by Lord Mountjoy.

On the accession of James I, MacDonnell, on 28 May 1603, received a grant of the entire district of the Route and the Glynns, extending from Larne to Coleraine, and containing 333,907 acres. To this in the following year was added the island of Rathlin. In 1606 Dunluce Castle, the priorv of Coleraine, three-parts of the fishing of the river Bann, the castle of Olderfleet (Larne), and all lands belonging to the dioceses of Down and Connor were for different reasons excepted out of his grant; but on 21 June 1615 Dunluce Castle was restored to him. His fourth part of the fishing of the Bann, which he regarded as 'the best stay of his living,' involved him in a long and profitless controversy with Mr. Hamilton, afterwards Lord Clandeboye. In 1607, probably on account of his old connection with O'Neill, and because he had about 1604 married O'Neill's daughter Elice, he was charged by Lord Howth with being concerned in the events which culminated in the flight of the two northern earls. He appeared voluntarily before the lord deputy, denied the truth of the charge, and experienced no further trouble.

His prudent conduct was not approved by his kinsmen, and part of the 1614 conspiracy was to depose him in favour of Alexander, son of his elder brother James. But it strengthened his influence at court, and having by his judicious conduct in the matter of the Londoners' plantation at Coleraine, and the zeal with which he strove to civilise his own country, effaced all memory of his early conduct, he was, on 29 June 1618, created Viscount Dunluce. Shortly afterwards he was admitted a privy councillor, appointed lord-lieutenant of the county of Antrim, placed in command of a regiment, and on 12 Dec. 1620 advanced to the earldom of Antrim.

Like his father and the MacDonnells generally he was a Roman catholic. In 1621 he was charged, on the information of a certain Alexander Boyd, with harbouring priests in his house. He at once confessed his fault, promised never to fall into the like error again, and was graciously pardoned, but compelled to pay the reward due to Boyd for his information against him. On seeking a confirmation of his estates under the commission of grace in 1629 he was opposed by Cahil O'Hara of Kildrome, who claimed certain lands included in the original grant, and either by course of law or from dictates of prudence O'Hara's claims were allowed.

During his declining years Antrim suffered from dropsy. He sat in parliament on the first day of sessions 1634, but was excused from further attendance. In January 1635 he concluded a bargain with James Campbell, lord Cantire, afterwards earl of Irvine, for the purchase of the lordship of Cantire, originally in the possession of the MacDonnells, but they had been expelled in 1607. The arrangement was opposed by the Lord of Lorne, afterwards earl of Argyll, and Antrim's death intervening the matter sank for a time into abeyance.

He died at Dunluce on 10 Dec. 1636, and was buried in the vault he had built at