Norreys, having fallen foul of his French …
Years: 1595 - 1595
April
Norreys, having fallen foul of his French colleagues at the end of 1594, had returned from Brest.
He is in April 1595 selected as the military commander under the new lord deputy of Ireland, Sir William Russell.
The waspish Russell had been governor of Flushing, but the two men are on bad terms.
Sir Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, had wanted his men placed as Russell's subordinates, but Norreys rejects this and is issued with a special patent that makes him independent of the lord deputy's authority in Ulster.
It is expected that the terror of the reputation he has gained in combating the Spanish will be sufficient to cause the rebellion to collapse.
Locations
People
Groups
- Christians, Roman Catholic
- England, (Tudor) Kingdom of
- Protestantism
- Ireland, (English) Kingdom of
- Spain, Habsburg Kingdom of
Topics
- Protestant Reformation
- Counter-Reformation (also Catholic Reformation or Catholic Revival)
- Elizabethan Period
- Nine Years' War in Ireland, or Tyrone's Rebellion
