Wexford has been held by Irish Catholic …

Years: 1649 - 1649
September

Wexford has been held by Irish Catholic forces throughout the Irish Confederate Wars.

In the Irish Rebellion of 1641, over fifteen hundred local men had mustered in the town for the rebels.

Lord Mountgarret, the local Commander of the Confederate Catholic regime, had in 1642 ordered Protestants to leave Wexford.

About eighty English Protestant had refugees drowned when the boat evacuating them from Wexford sank.

Wexford is also the base for a fleet of Confederate privateers, who raid English Parliamentary shipping and contribute ten percent of their plunder to the Confederate government based in Kilkenny.

There are by 1649 over forty such vessels operating from the town, many of them originating in Dunkirk, but attracted to Wexford by the prospect of plunder.

English Parliamentary sources report that the privateer's raids are severely disrupting shipping between Dublin, Liverpool and Chester.

The Confederate privateers fight a "dirty war" with English Parliamentarian naval forces.

Parliamentary ships had in 1642 begun throwing captured Wexford sailors overboard with their hands tied.

In reprisal, one hundred to one hundred and seventy English prisoners are kept in Wexford and threatened with death if such killing continues.

The Confederates and Royalists in Ireland in 1648 had signed a treaty joining forces against the English Parliament.

After Cromwell's landing in Ireland in August 1649, therefore, Wexford is a key target for the Parliamentarians, being an important port for the Royalist alliance and a base for the privateers.

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