The Irish rebel James Fitzmaurice Fitzgerald, called …
Years: 1578 - 1578
March
The Irish rebel James Fitzmaurice Fitzgerald, called Fitzmaurice, had fled in 1575 to the European continent, despite his pardon.
He had been warmly received the following year at Rome, where Father William Allen, close to Gerald Fitzgerald, 15th Earl of Desmond, was also present, having presented to the pope a plot for the invasion of England through Liverpool, with five thousand musketeers under Thomas Stukley's command.
The Geraldine connection had been made, and in 1578 Stukley is provided by the pope with infantry and sets out with two thousand men, including musketeers (or maybe swordsmen); the force has been raised by enlisting Appennine highwaymen and robbers in return for pardons and fifty-day indulgences, the latter to be gained by contemplation of crucifixes supplied to Stukley—although there are also professional officers, including the commander, Hercules of Pisano, and also Giuseppi, who will go on on to command the Smerwick garrison at the beginning of the Second Desmond Rebellion.
In sum, Stukley's ranks rise to four thousand.
Stukley sails for Ireland from Civitavecchia in March 1578.
Locations
People
Groups
- Papal States (Republic of St. Peter)
- England, (Tudor) Kingdom of
- Ireland, (English) Kingdom of
- Spain, Habsburg Kingdom of
