The Confederate Assembly of Kilkenny

In May 1642, the Roman Catholic clergy of Ireland held a national synod at Kilkenny in Leinster to discuss ways of controlling the Irish Uprising and of achieving national unity against the Protestant invaders. With representatives of the native Irish nobility and the Catholic "Old English" aristocracy in attendance, an alternative government for Ireland was proposed. Asserting their loyalty to King Charles, the Confederates drew up an Oath of Association, in which they swore to restore Roman Catholicism to a reunited Ireland. Agents were appointed to lobby support from Catholic powers in Europe and to persuade Irish soldiers serving in foreign armies to return and fight for the Confederate cause.

The first Confederate General Assembly was held at Kilkenny in October 1642. It was attended by leading nobles, clergymen and gentry sitting together in the same room and forming two Houses: the Lords (nobles and clergy) and Commons (gentry), with the lawyer and politician Nicholas Plunkett acting as Chairman. The delegates insisted upon their loyalty to the Crown. The Confederacy was a provisional government to direct Irish affairs only until such times as King Charles had resolved his quarrel with the English Parliament. The constitution was drawn up by lawyer Patrick Darcy in consultation with a committee of noblemen, clergy and gentry.

In November 1642, a Supreme Council of twenty-four members was elected, with six representatives from each of the four provinces Leinster, Ulster, Munster and Connacht. Richard Butler, Viscount Mountgarrett, was elected President, and a bureaucracy for the civil, legal and military administration of Ireland was established. A mandate was issued requiring priests to administer the Confederate Oath of Association in all parishes throughout Ireland. Money was authorised to be minted, a press set up to publish the Assembly's acts and decrees, and arrangements for collecting taxes were put in place. Confederate ambassadors were appointed and recognised in Paris, Madrid and the Vatican, from where it was hoped that money and weapons would be supplied to continue the Confederate War that had developed from the 1641 uprising. Meanwhile, four regional military commands (Leinster, Ulster, Munster and Connacht) were formed to direct the war.

The Assembly met annually at Kilkenny until 1648. Although a sophisticated parliamentary system began to emerge, the Assembly never succeeded in gaining full control over Ireland's administrative structure like the Parliamentarians in England or the Covenanters in Scotland. Roman Catholics regarded the Confederacy as a means of restoring the Catholic Church to its former power in Ireland and in 1645, Pope Innocent X sent Archbishop Rinuccini as papal nuncio to Kilkenny. Rinuccini was instructed to work for the expulsion of all Protestants from Ireland. While Owen Roe O'Neill and the Gaelic Irish supported Rinuccini, most of the Anglo-Irish aristocracy regarded the Pope's demands as unrealistic and worked for a negotiated religious settlement with King Charles. Rinuccini's refusal to compromise in negotiations with the King's deputy, the Protestant Marquis of Ormond, opened deep divisions within the Confederacy.

The Confederacy was formally dissolved under the terms of the Second Ormond Peace in January 1649, which was negotiated by the Marquis of Ormond and which secured an alliance between the Confederates and the Royalists. News of the Second Ormond Peace, coupled with the arrival of Prince Rupert's fleet at Kinsale in February 1649, greatly alarmed the English Parliament. One of the earliest acts of the Commonwealth Council of State after the execution of King Charles was to appoint Oliver Cromwell commander of an expeditionary force for the final subjugation of Ireland.

Sources:
Pádraig Lenihan, Confederate Catholics at War 1641-49 (Cork 2001)
C.P. Meehan, The Confederation of Kilkenny ( Dublin 1846)
Jane Ohlmeyer, The Civil Wars in Ireland (in The Civil Wars, a military history of England, Scotland and Ireland 1638-60), (Oxford 1998)
C.V. Wedgwood, The King's War ( London 1958)

Links:
Wikipedia article on Confederate Ireland

David Plant, The Confederation of Kilkenny, British Civil Wars and Commonwealth website
http://www.british-civil-wars.co.uk/glossary/confederation-kilkenny.htm

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License
Text updated: 26 September 2007