As an Australian my schooling in the 70s glossed over many aspects of English history. It never explained in depth the who what and where. Your series has been marvellous insight into answering those questions that until now I didn't have answers to. Thanks again for educating me .looking forward to your next post. From Mick.D.
Great video and very well timed. Having grew up in a Protestant house hold in Ulster, this video sums it up really well. Looking forward to the Sir George White VC video.
I thoroughly enjoyed this story, it always amazes me how all of these groups which are closely linked do not get along at all, they always seem to be in dispute about something. I guess I cannot talk because of the state of our country. I really enjoy learning more about British history especially the parts I know so little about, well done, friend. Feliz cuatro del julio tambien!
I can't lie, I find this the most head-spinning period of English history. Thanks for setting the background to the battle; the context really helped with what followed.
House of Stuart took over in 1603 under King James 6th of Scotland not sure why English Historians always say James 1st or Charles 2nd of England James 6th was already King of Scotland and took the English crown in 1603 and Charles 2nd was already King of Scotland!!!
@@Valhalla88888there were were no pureblooded "English in 1066. The Kingdom of England was variously inhabited by a hodgepodge of the descendants of Britons Angles Saxons Freisans Jutes and Danes. The various kings of that Kingdom were of mixed ancestry including a bunch of Danish kings. With the English language only later eclvolving from various germanic dialects having little if any similarities to the English language spoken today which has evolved from Anglisc Norman French Latin and who knows what else
While not Boyne related, when I went on holiday last year to Torquay and then did a day trip to Brixham, I was rather surprised by how involved it was with William of Orange and the Glorious Revolution.
A small number of Dutch ships had sailed up the Thames. Rover not many years b4 and destroyed a large number of British ships. They failed to stop them getting away. And then not many years after the Dutch. King is on the throne of England. He did this unipped. A great revolution or a coup delay. It's for u to decide what it was
This battle is engrained in the local mind-set so much where I live, that some people revere certain random locations where William of Orange reputedly camped for a night or briefly visited on his way to the Boyne...
In Ireland and The Netherlands we refer to it as the Dutch conquest of England. Of course it is still illegal for the British monarch, or his spouse to be a Catholic.
Thanks for telling this story. I had absolutely no idea. I have long known of the historical conflicts between Catholics and Protestants in Ireland but did not know of this battle. This battle is one of the many reasons the practice of both Christian faiths must be tolerated for the sake of getting along.
A great re-telling of an old story! Battles and campaigns in Ireland are like the paragraphs of an endless unpunctuated chronicle. The great punctuation marks of Aughrim and the Boyne seemed in 1691 and 90 to be full stops, after which Ireland was to be forever Anglo-Scots and Protestant. But they were mere commas in the story. Many paragraphs, and 230 years later, the fields where these battles were fought reverted to Irish control.
I would love to hear the story of the battle of Quebec. Which has a direct link with this video. The marine troops that crossed the English channel with William, and then crossed the Boyne, eventually became the 35th of foot, (later, Royal Sussex Regt and later still, 3rd Battalion The Queen's regiment). The 35th of foot were the soldiers that were ousted and retreated by Montcalm (see the film; "Last of the Moheicans), and despite being given assurances that their retreat would be safe, they were attacked by naitive indians as they withdrew. This was never forgotten, and the ancestors of these troops were one of the main regiments (35th foot) that climbed the heights of Abraham, and then ironically, were placed on the right of the line, facing the 'elite' (sic) Royal Rousillon. For them it was a chance to avenge the perceived betrayal by Montcalm, which they did by wiping out the Rousillon. The Rousillon plumes were taken by the 35th, and became part of the badge of the Royal sussex and 3rd Battalion Queen's regiment. As I said, I would love to see a detailed and accurate video regarding all of the above, which culminated in the battle of Quebec, where General Wolf lost his life.
You're a brave man for covering this one Chris - and for insisting on 'Londonderry' as well! Great work bringing out the political and dynastic aspects of this conflict - it wasn't just sectarian and was quite complicated in some ways as you rightly say. Appreciate that the video was already quite long but it's hard to really make sense of Irish history without making clear that the Irish Protestant population were and are almost entirely settlers from Scotland and England deliberately planted there to displace the Gaelic (and Catholic) natives. This wasn't an intra-Irish argument about religious doctrine, it was a war of conquest and colonisation, and the plantation was only a few generations old in 1690 as well.
Quite poor on the Irish context all right. Needs to mention the Ulster Plantation, 1641 rebellion and subsequent wars, Cromwellian Plantation and Restoration in Ireland. At a minimum.
My great gran brought my gran & all her brood to Scotland from Ireland way back , later my gran married & had my dad who in turn met & married my mum resulting in me & my siblings . I did a DNA no surprises that it came back very Celtic with : 83% Irish Scottish Welsh 11.4 % South Italian & Greek 5.6 % Baltic. I’m very proud of my roots both in Scotland & Ireland. Interestingly my son had English DNA from a grandparent he’s also extremely happy about .
I think it was one of the most important battles from Scotland’s perspective, although fought in Ireland. If James had won the battle of the Boyne, a religious war was inevitable in Scotland. It would’ve been a brutal,sectarian war . The outcome of the Boyne prevented that.
You should come to northern Ireland then every year the protestant community to this day try to march up and down Catholic streets singing victory songs and playing flutes and banging drums and chsntting hate fulfilled anti Catholic songs....the only way to explain it is the KKK walking up and down the streets of harlem.and is still going on today.
Another classic, as always, though I am an American, I can never get enough of British history. Thank you for the English language and all that you've done for the world!!!!
Twenty years or. So b4. The Dutch ha. Won a marritme war against the British. Forgive. Me for saying this that. The ditch king on the British tone lookore like a coup. Delat. Than a revolution from my reading of the history.
Will be out on Saturday in Glasgow celebrating on the streets then over to Belfast for the big one ,loved the intro Chris 😅. The comments will be interesting on this .
@@TheHistoryChappeople die around this subject still, show at least some recognition of the nature of this problem. Playing the sash marks you as a participant not an observer. It's not just history, it's very real and very now for thousands of people.
My sister married into a northern Catholic family. The vitriol and hatred, from both sides, even in the policing and security around a gaelic football game, shocked her. Literally, when in Rome...
Because this is what makes Britain the wonderful country we are, the Glorious Revolution, the Bill of Rights, the Act of Toleration, the preservation of Magna Carta, freedom, justice, democracy, constitutional monarchy. This is what makes us better than everyone else. Plus of course it's the battle with all the romantic drama, William vs James, William being wounded but carrying on, crossing the river on his charger, hard to imagine a more heroic image.
A nice musical start to the video 😄 When Marshal Schomberg spied the French troops in the Jacobite army, he turned to his Huguenot soldiers whilst pointing at the Frenchmen and said, "Gentleman, there are your oppressors!". Marshal Schomberg is still remembered and honoured to this day by the Unionist community of Northern Ireland.
The Irish nationalist community in the North of Ireland don't have to look so far back in history or too far in distance to recognise their oppressors.
@duncanstirling5206and wtf had any of that got to do with Ireland or the Irish people other than Ireland was used once again as a theatre for the English Crowns political ambitions
A right good stab at the battle and the story surrounding it. While Aughrim was indeed the coup de grace, when James fled Ireland after the Boyne the gig was up. True the Julian - Gregorian calendar shift has muddied things, I think the Boyne settled things dynastically. Whichever you choose, Julian or Gregorian, Boyne or Aughrim, they settled the modern constitution of the United Kingdom . In any case, 'Boyne' lends itself better to the many songs sung in the North to celebrate the battles.
Well once again, you wow me so much as always with a history lesson I had absolutely no clue as to the existence of until you announced it as today's update, Chris old bean, and that includes all the other historical facts you mentioned in this one also, including that of the Glorious Revolution, which was the reason the Catholic devotee James II was overthrown in the first place. Seriously, just HOW d'ya keep this up every time, huh, always furthering your well deserved status as a TH-cam superstar when it comes to delivering some of the undeniably best ever IMO British military history, cos every time you announce what's to come you deliver something my school history lessons never covered, hence I've had to rely on you and of course online reading itself to deliver the incredible facts about whatever into my head, hahaha. So, what's next then from ya, I wonder? Could we at last FINALLY be a step closer to at last having the Battle of Sedgemoor in a video coverage, considering that it was cos of James II's Catholic devotion in a Protestant England that his own nephew the Duke of Monmouth attempted to lead a rebellion against him in 1685, but which all came to a head, and disaster for Monmouth, at the Battle of Sedgemoor, and as well as James himself Colonel Percy Kirke was another big significant figure of the Monmouth Rebellion, certainly during the aftermath of the Battle of Sedgemoor in particular with him, Kirke that is. But whatever ya do, we'll always be awaiting ya to astound and surprise us all, Chris old bean, and certainly the Jacobites, again a topic I'm practically lacking ANY knowledge of myself personally, would be a topic to cover indeed, yes, siree
As an Englishman with both Protestant Scots-Irish and Catholic Irish ancestors, I grew up with the history of the conflict. Northern England has a great many who are of Catholic Irish ancestry as it was the place with the largest population of recusant Catholics in it's rural backwaters. It was also the seat of the Industrial Revolution and the west was close to the ports in Ireland. Growing up, I knew several Irish men and women who'd moved here during the 20th century looking for work. My Irish grandfather was a REME diesel fitter who served in Burma with the predominately Orange 8th (Belfast) Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery. After the war, he still visited his old comrades in Ulster, much to the bemusement of the local Catholics.
Well done Chris! Since you asked fans what we'd like to see, I'll be hones but I've never seen many documentaries about the Mediterranean during the Napoleonic Wars outside the battle of the Nile. There's my native Malta which featured in a campaign 1798-1800 and then an Italian campaign (with, I believe, a regiment of Maltese troops seeing action at Capri in 1807). Malta also featured somewhat importantly as a "supermarket" for British goods during the Continental Blockade; and perhaps the huge amount of activity and shipping is what brought us the final (and terrible) plague outbreak in 1813-14. I'm also really interested in WW1 and the British contribution especially to the Hundred Days, but also the lesser-known Palestine, Mesopotamian, East African and Western Desert theatres.
Perhaps I am mistaken. I thought you had made a video on this piece of history before. William's victory marked the end of autocratic rule of Kings in Britain. It would have been interesting if you had discussed more of the political changes the Glorious Revolution brought about with the Bill of Rights in 1689, one of the landmarks in our Constitution. Best wishes, it is a fascinating story, as is the growth of the Orange Order.
If you were Catholic living in the UK their was no bill of rights , no rights what do ever , in Ireland they where called the penal laws , priests were hunted down, the majority in Ireland who were Catholic, were not allowed to practice their faith, that is why there are Mass rocks all over Ireland, also Catholics has to paid a tax to the state Protestant church of Ireland, Catholics were the majority in Ireland but only owned about 3% of the land , the rest were basically slaves to the Protestant land class , who were in most cases planted in Ireland , so there was no glorious revolution, only pure tyranny, for Catholics in their own lands
I would like to see more of the jacobites. Don't know if you have enough supporters in North America but the French and Indian war is very interesting. Would like to see more of those British units in America.
Its been a long while since ive heard the true story of the battle of the Boyne. I never knew about the calander change on the dates though. Growing up on the West Coast of Scotland in the 70's being the only non-catholic at a catholic school (thanks stepdad) i was very aware of the dates but kept my mouth shut!!
There are factions on both sides that benefit from keeping the hatred alive. Both governments are very happy to keep it going too especially since brexit. Divide and conquer. The Battle of the Boyne museum near Drogheda here in the south is a really great place to visit. I have met more than a few Protestants, English and even a Dutch couple walking the grounds and their reason for being there is always for historical interest. Never politics.
Thanks for posting. The glorious revolution was really a blatant userpation. One small correction if l may. The name Tyrconnell isn't pronounced Tie connell, it is pronounced Teer connell, probably from the Gaelic "Tír" meaning land (as in "Connell Land")
There is very little information on the internet about the East Africa campaign during the second world war. So many colonial troops from all over the empire contrbuted to the British victory over the Italins. It would be great if you would do a few episodes about this neglected campaign. I enjoy all your work very much well done.
Chris, My historical knowledge of the Pike and Shot period is woefully thin. My personal family history was already firmly in America by this time. A member of my family has participated in every American conflict since (for us) Queen Anne's war. Anything dealing with Randolph Churchill would be wonderful.
It not only shapes Ireland, but also America. A lot of WASPs still resent the Catholics, particularly the Irish; they're just blocked by the First Amendment.
I thought there was fighting in Drogheda too? My old teacher (in Drogheda) used to frighten us with tales of the ‘blood running down Constitution Hill’!
@@TheHistoryChap I have realized my old teacher was talking about the Siege of Drogheda - Cromwell, forty years earlier! Just goes to show how much I was listening! My excuse, I was 9-10 years old
A friend who grew up in northern Ireland once told me that before the troubles the glorious 12th was a time for both communities to celebrate as well it might be the Boyne happening where and when it did probably prevented a new civil war God Bless Ireland it probably prevented the whole British Isles from once more being drowned in blood
@@dowdallerno1 Have you ever lived in NI? I have and I can remember all sides out watching the parades. Never any problems. Is Dolly’s Brae all you have?
@@rickc8865 I have lived and worked in the North. And I know most normal people, fuck off for the 12th, because they can't be dealing with the bollocks around it. 😉
Chris, as usual im not going to make any suggestions as to what subject i would like you to teach me about. I did manage to scrape an o level but didnt actually love the subject until my early forties when i ( occasionaly put jack higgins, wilbur smith and tom sharpe down and got back into non lit books) and then came u tube. You pick the subject and i will always watch. If you ever explained the role of the fleet air arm in korea then i would be personally very interested as my father flew fireflys of hms glory in that conflict. I love reading your viewers comments as some of them are from folks with far more knowledge than me and i love it when they challenge you! If you were my history teacher 45 years ago i believe i would have chosen history as an A level.... still contemplating taking an online history a level at the age of 60 because of you and drachinefel ❤
Revolution House the old Cock & Pynot alehouse where the Glorious Revolution was hatched, is only a few minutes walk from where I live in Chesterfield Uk . A very interesting presentation as per 🙂👍
Ah yes the so called British Empire which no longer exists and Chelsea FC Chelsea FC which is owned by a consortium of investors led by Los Angeles Dodgers part-owner Todd Boehly and private equity giant Clearlake. With Behdad Eghbali and José E. Feliciano all being the co-founders of Clearlake Capital 👍
@Britishempire-hv6rb ah you mean celebrating some Dutch bloke who fought an English king in Ireland lol. Amazing what Orange lodges celebrate - it's not British history though lol
After research which took me some time i found out it was called boyne after most of the people living in the village had thick elastics tied around their ankles and used to bounce up and down while walking going boyne boyne boyne etc
Live and let live I say...native of Limavady now an adopted son of Birkenhead....my family have fought for the crown stretching back to the Regiment of foot ( O,Cahan) ,led by the Marquis of Montrose..and of course there is the Rebel branch of the family...I have a brother in law who used to play in an Orange Lodge band....I,m not bad on the Bhodran....😅😅😅
Chris - I would highly recommend a visit to Londonderry it is a fabulous city in its own right and has a great history museum but I have been told the walking history tours are a must as well.
Recently I had a bit of an odd discussion with an Englishman on Facebook: he talked about the 'Dutch invasion'. I (as a Netherlander) said to him that I wasn't aware the Netherlands ever invaded England: my history book said (just like History Chap) that the English wanted Mary II to be queen and so they got her husband Willem III van Oranje as part of the deal. But he insisted that we invaded the place and 'put our guy on the throne'. I didn't know what to say. The only explanation I can think of why the guy would think of it that way if he is a staunch catholic...
@@Johnny-Thunder I'm from Glasgow mate every house including my own has a framed picture of William Prince of Orange crossing the boyne ,I cannot comment for Catholics 😂, my football team in glasgow the fans sings songs in praise of King William they have done for over 100 years,it goes from generation to generation, during ww1 the 36th Ulster division went over the top at the somme on July 1st wearing orange sashes .
@@LeggieGlasgow Well I am very much flattered :D Seeing as the Scots and English were helping the Netherlanders during our war of independence against Spain it is only right we did a favour in return.
It's a very interesting campaign. Also a civil war I think within Ireland itself although it's themes are not linked to those of the English Civil War. And yet they appear similar to me.
Derry is the original name of the city, Derry is the Irish word for Oak, , just like co Kildare, meaning the church of the Oak, so nothing to do with London what so ever , London which is from Latin and the Romans called Londinium, and the Romans never came to Ireland and founded any towns , So Derry is the original name and what the majority of Irish people call it , and always did and always will ,
What you're completely omitted from your narrative is that derry monastery was not on the ground where londonderry is now there has never been a town or city named derry
@@colhughes3892 the name of the area comes from the Irish word Derry, meaning Oak , because the area was 100% Irish people who spoke only Irish , as I said no Romans speaking Latin lived in or named the area,
lol zzzz a name of a city . Yet the Republic of Ireland is the most Anglo Norman part zzz . Today the Republic of Ireland remains under EU occupation via the papal crown . The real oppressor of Irish people who order the “ Protestant “ / evangelical Irish church of Patrick worked for to be crushed and forced the papacy upon the Irish people.
0:54 History Chap - Please feature an episode on the Glorious Revolution . James II ( VII ) dismissed Parliament and thought he had the divine right to rule . Then during their Coronation Oath in April 1689 , William of Orange and Mary II swore to recognize the Sovereignty of Parliament . So James II ( VII ) was the last Absolute Monarch - then William and Mary were the first Constitutional Monarchs. Then in November , the 1689 the English Bill of Rights was passed . At the time , only land owners had the vote , but this is when democracy started to take hold in the modern world . * Then Enlightenment ideas started to become accepted and started to spread . - Issac Newton used physics laws of motion to predict physics of the planets . So people started thinking , how can we solve economics , politics and other subjects with empirical measurement and rational thinking - John Locke's ideas of the social contract - The Promotion of equal rights of all citizens - Adam Smith detested massive wealth inequality and said there should be a social contract where all citizens should have the opportunity to participate in the economy . * It could be argued that the 1569 Polish - Lithuanian Commonwealth was the first , or the 1588 The Justificatie of Deductie in the Dutch Republic was the first . .
As an Australian my schooling in the 70s glossed over many aspects of English history. It never explained in depth the who what and where. Your series has been marvellous insight into answering those questions that until now I didn't have answers to. Thanks again for educating me .looking forward to your next post. From Mick.D.
Many thanks Mick. I'm glad that you are finding them interesting.
A stunning well made video, one of the best channels on the internet.All our kids should see this channel.
Thanks for watching my video & for your kind comment.
This is a solid condensed but complete description of just so many factors. I learned so many extras over what I already knew. Superb.
Great video and very well timed.
Having grew up in a Protestant house hold in Ulster, this video sums it up really well.
Looking forward to the Sir George White VC video.
Thanks for watching, glad you enjoyed my video
very well done sir
Thank you for this post, much appreciated.
Thanks for our comment.
I thoroughly enjoyed this story, it always amazes me how all of these groups which are closely linked do not get along at all, they always seem to be in dispute about something. I guess I cannot talk because of the state of our country. I really enjoy learning more about British history especially the parts I know so little about, well done, friend. Feliz cuatro del julio tambien!
Thanks for watching my video, glad you enjoyed it.
I can't lie, I find this the most head-spinning period of English history. Thanks for setting the background to the battle; the context really helped with what followed.
you forget it was Scottish history as the English kings got wiped out in 1066 by the Normans
House of Stuart took over in 1603 under King James 6th of Scotland not sure why English Historians always say James 1st or Charles 2nd of England James 6th was already King of Scotland and took the English crown in 1603 and Charles 2nd was already King of Scotland!!!
Also Elizabeth ll of England should be referred to as the 1st of Scotland.
@@Valhalla88888there were were no pureblooded "English in 1066. The Kingdom of England was variously inhabited by a hodgepodge of the descendants of Britons Angles Saxons Freisans Jutes and Danes. The various kings of that Kingdom were of mixed ancestry including a bunch of Danish kings. With the English language only later eclvolving from various germanic dialects having little if any similarities to the English language spoken today which has evolved from Anglisc Norman French Latin and who knows what else
Thanks for the feedback.
While not Boyne related, when I went on holiday last year to Torquay and then did a day trip to Brixham, I was rather surprised by how involved it was with William of Orange and the Glorious Revolution.
Thanks for watching my video & your comment.
A small number of Dutch ships had sailed up the Thames. Rover not many years b4 and destroyed a large number of British ships. They failed to stop them getting away. And then not many years after the Dutch. King is on the throne of England. He did this unipped. A great revolution or a coup delay. It's for u to decide what it was
Didn't know that. Wonder why that is. Interested to know more
As a proud Irish Catholic, I appreciate the unbiased overview from an Englishman, very good content 👍
Thanks for watching & for your comment.
Fantastic as always ❤
Glad you enjoyed my video, thanks for watching.
Thanks, FANTASTIC AGAIN.🙏🇬🇧
GOD BLESS FELLA🥇😇🎬
Thanks for your support, glad you enjoyed the video
This was excellent. Thank you.
Nice flag
Glad you enjoyed it, thanks for watching.
@@lindawilliams4933 Thank you. 😁
This battle is engrained in the local mind-set so much where I live, that some people revere certain random locations where William of Orange reputedly camped for a night or briefly visited on his way to the Boyne...
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@@TheHistoryChap Your content is amongst the best on TH-cam. 👍
In Ireland and The Netherlands we refer to it as the Dutch conquest of England. Of course it is still illegal for the British monarch, or his spouse to be a Catholic.
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Great video and you're right its fascinating. Will you be covering the Battle of Aughrim too ?
Yes I will. Watch this space!
@TheHistoryChap looking foward to it :)
Will you be covering the battle of the bogside @TheHistoryChap
Great video. Have been to the battle site a few times. Only about 15 miles from where I live here in County Meath.
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The face of that horse is hilarious! Great painting.
Thanks for watching my video.
Another great story well told. Thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it, thanks.
You make history so accessible 👌
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Great video!
Thanks for watching, glad you enjoyed it.
An excellent video as always! Thank you!
Thanks for watching my video, glad you enjoyed it.
Thanks for telling this story. I had absolutely no idea. I have long known of the historical conflicts between Catholics and Protestants in Ireland but did not know of this battle. This battle is one of the many reasons the practice of both Christian faiths must be tolerated for the sake of getting along.
Thanks for watching my video & for your feedback.
Hardly between Catholics and Protestants, the Pope supported William
Fascinating stuff as always Chris - many thanks for your usual detailed explanation.
Glad you enjoyed it, thanks for watching.
A great re-telling of an old story!
Battles and campaigns in Ireland are like the paragraphs of an endless unpunctuated chronicle. The great punctuation marks of Aughrim and the Boyne seemed in 1691 and 90 to be full stops, after which Ireland was to be forever Anglo-Scots and Protestant. But they were mere commas in the story. Many paragraphs, and 230 years later, the fields where these battles were fought reverted to Irish control.
Thanks for watching my video & for the feedback.
I would love to hear the story of the battle of Quebec. Which has a direct link with this video. The marine troops that crossed the English channel with William, and then crossed the Boyne, eventually became the 35th of foot, (later, Royal Sussex Regt and later still, 3rd Battalion The Queen's regiment). The 35th of foot were the soldiers that were ousted and retreated by Montcalm (see the film; "Last of the Moheicans), and despite being given assurances that their retreat would be safe, they were attacked by naitive indians as they withdrew. This was never forgotten, and the ancestors of these troops were one of the main regiments (35th foot) that climbed the heights of Abraham, and then ironically, were placed on the right of the line, facing the 'elite' (sic) Royal Rousillon. For them it was a chance to avenge the perceived betrayal by Montcalm, which they did by wiping out the Rousillon. The Rousillon plumes were taken by the 35th, and became part of the badge of the Royal sussex and 3rd Battalion Queen's regiment. As I said, I would love to see a detailed and accurate video regarding all of the above, which culminated in the battle of Quebec, where General Wolf lost his life.
Thanks for watching my video & your suggestion which I will add to my ever growing list.
You're a brave man for covering this one Chris - and for insisting on 'Londonderry' as well!
Great work bringing out the political and dynastic aspects of this conflict - it wasn't just sectarian and was quite complicated in some ways as you rightly say.
Appreciate that the video was already quite long but it's hard to really make sense of Irish history without making clear that the Irish Protestant population were and are almost entirely settlers from Scotland and England deliberately planted there to displace the Gaelic (and Catholic) natives. This wasn't an intra-Irish argument about religious doctrine, it was a war of conquest and colonisation, and the plantation was only a few generations old in 1690 as well.
Quite poor on the Irish context all right. Needs to mention the Ulster Plantation, 1641 rebellion and subsequent wars, Cromwellian Plantation and Restoration in Ireland. At a minimum.
It's already 25 mins long. You'd need a Ridley Scott epic to keep everyone happy.
My great gran brought my gran & all her brood to Scotland from Ireland way back , later my gran married & had my dad who in turn met & married my mum resulting in me & my siblings . I did a DNA no surprises that it came back very Celtic with :
83% Irish Scottish Welsh
11.4 % South Italian & Greek
5.6 % Baltic.
I’m very proud of my roots both in Scotland & Ireland.
Interestingly my son
had English DNA from a grandparent he’s also extremely happy about .
Thanks for watching my video & for your interesting feedback
Well it is Londonderry 🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
I think it was one of the most important battles from Scotland’s perspective, although fought in Ireland.
If James had won the battle of the Boyne, a religious war was inevitable in Scotland. It would’ve been a brutal,sectarian war . The outcome of the Boyne prevented that.
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I Didn't know about that battle. Thanks so much!
My pleasure. Thanks for watching
You should come to northern Ireland then every year the protestant community to this day try to march up and down Catholic streets singing victory songs and playing flutes and banging drums and chsntting hate fulfilled anti Catholic songs....the only way to explain it is the KKK walking up and down the streets of harlem.and is still going on today.
Another excellent factual account Chris, keep up the good work !!
Thanks for watching my video, glad you enjoyed it.
Another classic, as always, though I am an American, I can never get enough of British history. Thank you for the English language and all that you've done for the world!!!!
Same here
Happy 4th of July...😊😊😊
Twenty years or. So b4. The Dutch ha. Won a marritme war against the British. Forgive. Me for saying this that. The ditch king on the British tone lookore like a coup. Delat. Than a revolution from my reading of the history.
Thanks for watching my video, glad you enjoyed it.
Irish and British history???
Will be out on Saturday in Glasgow celebrating on the streets then over to Belfast for the big one ,loved the intro Chris 😅. The comments will be interesting on this .
Was over from Belfast did the Glasgow walk and all to do again on the 12th. Love it 😍
Thanks for watching my video
WATP
We all know who won-as Simon Schama said- “No one”.
Seems like a good viewpoint.
an eye for an eye left everyone blind
Religion is the worst thing God invented. Thank God i'm an atheist!
William III became kept the throne, you don’t regard that as a win ?
@@British_loyalist Not my quote-take it up with Simon Schama.
having worked in Northern Ireland I have first-hand experience of the fun and games that goes with the 12 of July
Never sure quite what to make of it if I was there. Probably depends who I was staying with.
Try being a soldier posted there😉
@@TheHistoryChappeople die around this subject still, show at least some recognition of the nature of this problem. Playing the sash marks you as a participant not an observer.
It's not just history, it's very real and very now for thousands of people.
The battle of benburb June 5th 1646
My sister married into a northern Catholic family. The vitriol and hatred, from both sides, even in the policing and security around a gaelic football game, shocked her. Literally, when in Rome...
Another great video, thank you for sharing.
Thanks, glad you enjoyed it.
Because this is what makes Britain the wonderful country we are, the Glorious Revolution, the Bill of Rights, the Act of Toleration, the preservation of Magna Carta, freedom, justice, democracy, constitutional monarchy. This is what makes us better than everyone else. Plus of course it's the battle with all the romantic drama, William vs James, William being wounded but carrying on, crossing the river on his charger, hard to imagine a more heroic image.
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The battle of Beachy Head would be good to know about as you've now brought it to our attention 😁
Thanks for watching & your comment which I will add to my ever growing list.
Good analysis of the battle & its consequences
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Excellent video and very well presented 👍
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A nice musical start to the video 😄
When Marshal Schomberg spied the French troops in the Jacobite army, he turned to his Huguenot soldiers whilst pointing at the Frenchmen and said, "Gentleman, there are your oppressors!".
Marshal Schomberg is still remembered and honoured to this day by the Unionist community of Northern Ireland.
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The Irish nationalist community in the North of Ireland don't have to look so far back in history or too far in distance to recognise their oppressors.
It's funny then that the protestant orange men were the oppressor in northern Ireland.
@duncanstirling5206and wtf had any of that got to do with Ireland or the Irish people other than Ireland was used once again as a theatre for the English Crowns political ambitions
@malachytully5469 Ah OK lol I see
Very interesting Chris so they arrived on my birthday and I certainly did not expect for one of his man to almost kill him
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A right good stab at the battle and the story surrounding it. While Aughrim was indeed the coup de grace, when James fled Ireland after the Boyne the gig was up. True the Julian - Gregorian calendar shift has muddied things, I think the Boyne settled things dynastically. Whichever you choose, Julian or Gregorian, Boyne or Aughrim, they settled the modern constitution of the United Kingdom . In any case, 'Boyne' lends itself better to the many songs sung in the North to celebrate the battles.
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Neither of those battles settled the modern constitution of the United Kingdom.
Love this. Thank you very much
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Very well explained, well done.
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Well once again, you wow me so much as always with a history lesson I had absolutely no clue as to the existence of until you announced it as today's update, Chris old bean, and that includes all the other historical facts you mentioned in this one also, including that of the Glorious Revolution, which was the reason the Catholic devotee James II was overthrown in the first place. Seriously, just HOW d'ya keep this up every time, huh, always furthering your well deserved status as a TH-cam superstar when it comes to delivering some of the undeniably best ever IMO British military history, cos every time you announce what's to come you deliver something my school history lessons never covered, hence I've had to rely on you and of course online reading itself to deliver the incredible facts about whatever into my head, hahaha.
So, what's next then from ya, I wonder? Could we at last FINALLY be a step closer to at last having the Battle of Sedgemoor in a video coverage, considering that it was cos of James II's Catholic devotion in a Protestant England that his own nephew the Duke of Monmouth attempted to lead a rebellion against him in 1685, but which all came to a head, and disaster for Monmouth, at the Battle of Sedgemoor, and as well as James himself Colonel Percy Kirke was another big significant figure of the Monmouth Rebellion, certainly during the aftermath of the Battle of Sedgemoor in particular with him, Kirke that is. But whatever ya do, we'll always be awaiting ya to astound and surprise us all, Chris old bean, and certainly the Jacobites, again a topic I'm practically lacking ANY knowledge of myself personally, would be a topic to cover indeed, yes, siree
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As an Englishman with both Protestant Scots-Irish and Catholic Irish ancestors, I grew up with the history of the conflict.
Northern England has a great many who are of Catholic Irish ancestry as it was the place with the largest population of recusant Catholics in it's rural backwaters.
It was also the seat of the Industrial Revolution and the west was close to the ports in Ireland.
Growing up, I knew several Irish men and women who'd moved here during the 20th century looking for work.
My Irish grandfather was a REME diesel fitter who served in Burma with the predominately Orange 8th (Belfast) Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regiment, Royal Artillery.
After the war, he still visited his old comrades in Ulster, much to the bemusement of the local Catholics.
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Another great video Chris! Would love to see you cover the American Revolution from the British perspective.
Yes, this is on the cards, especially as we are approaching the 25th anniversay
Well done Chris! Since you asked fans what we'd like to see, I'll be hones but I've never seen many documentaries about the Mediterranean during the Napoleonic Wars outside the battle of the Nile. There's my native Malta which featured in a campaign 1798-1800 and then an Italian campaign (with, I believe, a regiment of Maltese troops seeing action at Capri in 1807). Malta also featured somewhat importantly as a "supermarket" for British goods during the Continental Blockade; and perhaps the huge amount of activity and shipping is what brought us the final (and terrible) plague outbreak in 1813-14.
I'm also really interested in WW1 and the British contribution especially to the Hundred Days, but also the lesser-known Palestine, Mesopotamian, East African and Western Desert theatres.
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There used to be a pub in the Ibrox Area of Glasgow called, "The Duke of Schomberg" - only in Glasgow !!!!
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Perhaps I am mistaken. I thought you had made a video on this piece of history before.
William's victory marked the end of autocratic rule of Kings in Britain.
It would have been interesting if you had discussed more of the political changes the Glorious Revolution brought about with the Bill of Rights in 1689, one of the landmarks in our Constitution.
Best wishes, it is a fascinating story, as is the growth of the Orange Order.
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If you were Catholic living in the UK their was no bill of rights , no rights what do ever , in Ireland they where called the penal laws , priests were hunted down, the majority in Ireland who were Catholic, were not allowed to practice their faith, that is why there are Mass rocks all over Ireland, also Catholics has to paid a tax to the state Protestant church of Ireland, Catholics were the majority in Ireland but only owned about 3% of the land , the rest were basically slaves to the Protestant land class , who were in most cases planted in Ireland , so there was no glorious revolution, only pure tyranny, for Catholics in their own lands
Very interesting as usual 🎉🎉🎉
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I would like to see more of the jacobites. Don't know if you have enough supporters in North America but the French and Indian war is very interesting. Would like to see more of those British units in America.
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It also takes place in the west of Scotland
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You celebrate the defeat of a Scottish King Jame's?
and the East, and in Fife
Fascinating!!!
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Its been a long while since ive heard the true story of the battle of the Boyne.
I never knew about the calander change on the dates though.
Growing up on the West Coast of Scotland in the 70's being the only non-catholic at a catholic school (thanks stepdad) i was very aware of the dates but kept my mouth shut!!
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The catholics were fighting to keep an English King on the throne
@@Delwyn-l6q That's why the irish are thick.
Hello Chris, Great video as always. How telling the story of Hassan's Dervish insurgency into British Somaliland in 1920?
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Excellent
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Fascinating well done ✌
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Excellent as usual 👌. Are the Emin Pasha and the battle of Um Diwaykarat on your list in the near future to wrap up the Sudan campaigns?
Yes, but not in the immediate future
I'm recommending this video all around. Well done mr. Green!
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Brilliant 😊
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There are factions on both sides that benefit from keeping the hatred alive. Both governments are very happy to keep it going too especially since brexit. Divide and conquer.
The Battle of the Boyne museum near Drogheda here in the south is a really great place to visit. I have met more than a few Protestants, English and even a Dutch couple walking the grounds and their reason for being there is always for historical interest. Never politics.
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Drogheda is quite distanced from the Troubles to be able to leave politics out of it.
Thanks for posting. The glorious revolution was really a blatant userpation. One small correction if l may. The name Tyrconnell isn't pronounced Tie connell, it is pronounced Teer connell, probably from the Gaelic "Tír" meaning land (as in "Connell Land")
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@@TheHistoryChap and Aughrim is not pronounced Aug-rim but augh(och) rim
There is very little information on the internet about the East Africa campaign during the second world war. So many colonial troops from all over the empire contrbuted to the British victory over the Italins.
It would be great if you would do a few episodes about this neglected campaign. I enjoy all your work very much well done.
Great idea, I will add to my ever growing list. Please watch this space or better still please subscribe to my channel
"It was worn at Derry, Aughrim, Enniskillen and the Boyne"
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Hi Chris. Will you be doing any vids on the ww1 German colonies campaigns?
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Some of my distant ancestors were in the north of Ireland before moving to what became Scotland. Best information was they were Danish Vikings.
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Chris, My historical knowledge of the Pike and Shot period is woefully thin. My personal family history was already firmly in America by this time. A member of my family has participated in every American conflict since (for us) Queen Anne's war. Anything dealing with Randolph Churchill would be wonderful.
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It not only shapes Ireland, but also America. A lot of WASPs still resent the Catholics, particularly the Irish; they're just blocked by the First Amendment.
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Rightly So.
Could you simplify the partition of India for us laymen please guvna.
I have always found this is not often discussed
Thank you 🙏
I thought there was fighting in Drogheda too? My old teacher (in Drogheda) used to frighten us with tales of the ‘blood running down Constitution Hill’!
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@@TheHistoryChap I have realized my old teacher was talking about the Siege of Drogheda - Cromwell, forty years earlier! Just goes to show how much I was listening! My excuse, I was 9-10 years old
A friend who grew up in northern Ireland once told me that before the troubles the glorious 12th was a time for both communities to celebrate as well it might be the Boyne happening where and when it did probably prevented a new civil war God Bless Ireland it probably prevented the whole British Isles from once more being drowned in blood
No, it was always a sectarian hate fest.
@@dowdallerno1Rubbish.
@@rickc8865 look it up, if you don't believe me, always trouble around the 12th since time immemorial. You ever hear of Dolly's Brae??😂😂😂
@@dowdallerno1 Have you ever lived in NI? I have and I can remember all sides out watching the parades. Never any problems. Is Dolly’s Brae all you have?
@@rickc8865 I have lived and worked in the North. And I know most normal people, fuck off for the 12th, because they can't be dealing with the bollocks around it. 😉
Chris, as usual im not going to make any suggestions as to what subject i would like you to teach me about. I did manage to scrape an o level but didnt actually love the subject until my early forties when i ( occasionaly put jack higgins, wilbur smith and tom sharpe down and got back into non lit books) and then came u tube.
You pick the subject and i will always watch.
If you ever explained the role of the fleet air arm in korea then i would be personally very interested as my father flew fireflys of hms glory in that conflict.
I love reading your viewers comments as some of them are from folks with far more knowledge than me and i love it when they challenge you!
If you were my history teacher 45 years ago i believe i would have chosen history as an A level.... still contemplating taking an online history a level at the age of 60 because of you and drachinefel
❤
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Wow that was great Chris. This part of British History has always confused me. I still say the last Great King was Alfred the Great!
James iv. Died fighting in tbe front rank of his men. Unlike queer English kings
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Wow, can you make a video on the battle of culloden, it a famous battle that made Bonnie prince Charles to be defeated
Oh yes, the Jacobite risings are on my agenda. Please subscribe to my channel (if you haven't already) so you don't miss them.
Revolution House the old Cock & Pynot alehouse where the Glorious Revolution was hatched, is only a few minutes walk from where I live in Chesterfield Uk . A very interesting presentation as per 🙂👍
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Im in Ulster now on the 12 with my orange lodge looking forward to a great day celebrating British history 🇬🇧
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Ah yes the so called British Empire which no longer exists and Chelsea FC Chelsea FC which is owned by a consortium of investors led by Los Angeles Dodgers part-owner Todd Boehly and private equity giant Clearlake. With Behdad Eghbali and José E. Feliciano all being the co-founders of Clearlake Capital 👍
@@emcc8598football is used by people with no arguments and legacy of empire will outlive us all
Youre in Northern Ireland now*
@Britishempire-hv6rb ah you mean celebrating some Dutch bloke who fought an English king in Ireland lol. Amazing what Orange lodges celebrate - it's not British history though lol
After research which took me some time i found out it was called boyne after most of the people living in the village had thick elastics tied around their ankles and used to bounce up and down while walking going boyne boyne boyne etc
I'd be interested in a video on Operation Mana, the RAF airlift to Holland in 1945.
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Live and let live I say...native of Limavady now an adopted son of Birkenhead....my family have fought for the crown stretching back to the Regiment of foot ( O,Cahan) ,led by the Marquis of Montrose..and of course there is the Rebel branch of the family...I have a brother in law who used to play in an Orange Lodge band....I,m not bad on the Bhodran....😅😅😅
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@@TheHistoryChapslainte/cheers....go England tonight...from the birthplace of England....Wirral...Brunanburh/Bromborough to be precise...😅😅..E
and of course William sailed for Ireland from Holyoake
Chris - I would highly recommend a visit to Londonderry it is a fabulous city in its own right and has a great history museum but I have been told the walking history tours are a must as well.
Have only been to Belfast, which was both a great city and an eye opener at the same time.
When your Derry make sure to call it Londonderry loudly and proudly in front of the locals...😂😂
Londonderry all day long 🇬🇧💪
@@HoneyRanger
You should visit also...
@@johntheball I Iwill do in the future, I love the Ulster people 😊🇬🇧💪
Excellent presentation of a difficult history. Helps in the present to better understand sectarianism, especially the origins.
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Recently I had a bit of an odd discussion with an Englishman on Facebook: he talked about the 'Dutch invasion'. I (as a Netherlander) said to him that I wasn't aware the Netherlands ever invaded England: my history book said (just like History Chap) that the English wanted Mary II to be queen and so they got her husband Willem III van Oranje as part of the deal. But he insisted that we invaded the place and 'put our guy on the throne'. I didn't know what to say. The only explanation I can think of why the guy would think of it that way if he is a staunch catholic...
@@Johnny-Thunder I'm from Glasgow mate every house including my own has a framed picture of William Prince of Orange crossing the boyne ,I cannot comment for Catholics 😂, my football team in glasgow the fans sings songs in praise of King William they have done for over 100 years,it goes from generation to generation, during ww1 the 36th Ulster division went over the top at the somme on July 1st wearing orange sashes .
@@LeggieGlasgow Well I am very much flattered :D Seeing as the Scots and English were helping the Netherlanders during our war of independence against Spain it is only right we did a favour in return.
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Mary was from the House of Stuart - A Scottish Family).
Would love to hear about the fraser/Frazer clans of Scotland
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Please do a history of the Malayan emergency!
Have already done one, please look at my channel.
It's a very interesting campaign. Also a civil war I think within Ireland itself although it's themes are not linked to those of the English Civil War. And yet they appear similar to me.
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Could the French st Barthomlew day be explained
Maybe in a future video.
Chris how about the battle of Shaiba and the siege at Kut in the Mesopotamian campaign in WW I?
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Happy Battle of the Boyne for tomorrow 12th July.
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The Battle in the modern calendar was 11 July
Derry is the original name of the city, Derry is the Irish word for Oak, , just like co Kildare, meaning the church of the Oak, so nothing to do with London what so ever , London which is from Latin and the Romans called Londinium, and the Romans never came to Ireland and founded any towns , So Derry is the original name and what the majority of Irish people call it , and always did and always will ,
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@@TheHistoryChap 👍 thanks love your videos
What you're completely omitted from your narrative is that derry monastery was not on the ground where londonderry is now there has never been a town or city named derry
@@colhughes3892 the name of the area comes from the Irish word Derry, meaning Oak , because the area was 100% Irish people who spoke only Irish , as I said no Romans speaking Latin lived in or named the area,
lol zzzz a name of a city . Yet the Republic of Ireland is the most Anglo Norman part zzz . Today the Republic of Ireland remains under EU occupation via the papal crown . The real oppressor of Irish people who order the “ Protestant “ / evangelical Irish church of Patrick worked for to be crushed and forced the papacy upon the Irish people.
It's a great story...thank you..maybe back to the days of King Arthur ...but whatever...I'm learning
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👍👍👍
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Can you tell the story of John Paul Jones from the British view?
He was a Scotsman not an American
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My graandfather and grandmother met in canada. They were both dr. Bernardo children
Maybe a show on that. I have done well. Musician, author. Stock broker. More achievements
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Interesting that Dr Barnardo himself was a prominent member of the orange order.
One was sent to Toronto and one to quebec. Met. And my Bubba gave me my first read. War of the world's. Now author. 7 books
I thought Tyrconnell (Tirconnell) was pronounced “cheer-Connell) not “tyre-Connell”.
Really?
0:54 History Chap - Please feature an episode on the Glorious Revolution .
James II ( VII ) dismissed Parliament and thought he had the divine right to rule .
Then during their Coronation Oath in April 1689 , William of Orange and Mary II swore to recognize the Sovereignty of Parliament . So James II ( VII ) was the last Absolute Monarch - then William and Mary were the first Constitutional Monarchs.
Then in November , the 1689 the English Bill of Rights was passed .
At the time , only land owners had the vote , but this is when democracy started to take hold in the modern world . *
Then Enlightenment ideas started to become accepted and started to spread .
- Issac Newton used physics laws of motion to predict physics of the planets . So people started thinking , how can we solve economics , politics and other subjects with empirical measurement and rational thinking
- John Locke's ideas of the social contract - The Promotion of equal rights of all citizens
- Adam Smith detested massive wealth inequality and said there should be a social contract where all citizens should have the opportunity to participate in the economy .
* It could be argued that the 1569 Polish - Lithuanian Commonwealth was the first ,
or the 1588 The Justificatie of Deductie in the Dutch Republic was the first .
.
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Good .
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Why do you say Tighconnell when you mean Tyrconnell?
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😮Michael Tsarion, a Northern Irish person with Indian heritage has an entirely different perspective on all this.
Probably would .
If the Dutch defeat England in the euros ,it will be celebrated as an English win over the irish
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BTW it's derry not London derry
Rather depends upon which member of the community in NI you are talking to.