ID |
Painting |
Oil Pantings, Sorted from A to Z |
Painting Description |
49419 |
|
A rebel ambush in the woods of County Wicklow,from a contemporary Print |
mk197
Led by Michael Dwyer and Joseph Holt,rebels adopted guerrilla war in Wicklow,which took several years to burn itself out
|
49405 |
|
A reconstruction by William Sadler of the Battle of Vinegar Hill painted in about 1880 |
mk197
Well directed artillery gave the British regulars and Irish militia a crushing advantage
|
49416 |
|
Admiral Warren-s ships pounding the Brest fleet of Genceral Hardy after intercepting it off Lough Swilly |
mk197
The French and their Irish allies fought with desperate courage |
49379 |
|
Arthur O-Connor,Lord Edward-s ally |
mk197
who left for London-Perhaps bound for France
|
49399 |
|
Belfast Assembly Rooms |
mk197
where McCracken was tried and condemned to be hanged
|
49377 |
|
Charles James Fox,Leader of the Whig Opposition and Grattan-s most important ally in London |
mk197
But both men had now decide that it was a waste of breath to speak in their respective Parliaments
|
49408 |
|
Charles James Fox,the British leader of the opposition |
mk197
supposed to have corrupted his cousin.Lord Edward Fitzgerald,whose ghost haunts him in his villa near London,together with the headless bodies of the Sheares brothers and other conspirators
|
49396 |
|
Cruikshank-s grim picture of the scene at Scullabogue barn,Country Wexford on June 5 |
mk197
About 200 men,women and children,almost all Protestant,were piked or burnt to death by United Irishmen.
|
74992 |
|
daughter |
The daughter of a wealthy landowner in Jamaica, Sarah Goodin Barrett Moulton was born in 1783. |
49383 |
|
Dublin Castle in the 1790s,seat fo the Viceroy and hub of Briish Power |
mk197
But it was a castle only in name and quite indefensible
|
49384 |
|
Dublin harbour with the domed Custom House in the background |
mk197
On the eve of the rebellion Dublin-s Population was estimated at 200000,making Dublin the second city of the empire |
49372 |
|
Edward Cooke,under-secretary at Dublin castle |
mk197
More robust thn Camden,he tended to side with Camden-s anti Catholic advisers
|
49392 |
|
Erin Go Brach |
mk197
James Gillray-s caricature of an Irish rebel,often erroneously said to be Grattan
|
49413 |
|
Erin Go Bray |
mk197
An English caricature drawn by Samson in 1798
|
49393 |
|
Father Murphy, |
mk197
the United Irish leader in Wexford
showing his flock what he thought of heretic bullets
|
49403 |
|
General John Moore |
mk197
later to win fame in the Peninsular War,recaptured Wexford on 2 June
|
49386 |
|
General Lake |
mk197
The heavy-handed English general who succeeded Abercromby as Irish commander-in-chief |
49414 |
|
General Lake accepts General Humbert-s sword as a token of surrender at Ballinamuck |
mk197
Less chivalrous was Lake-s treatment of France-s Irish allies capturad after the battle
|
49366 |
|
General Lazare Hoche the 28-year-old |
mk197
Commander-in Chief of the 15000 French soldiers sent to Liberate Ireland in December 1796
|
49415 |
|
General Napper Tandy |
mk197
Tone-s bitter rival
|
49370 |
|
George III,King of Britain and Ireland since 1760 |
mk197
Humiliated by the loss of the American colonies,he had reluctantly agreed to Pitt-s Catholics. |
49376 |
|
Henry Grattan |
mk197
once the darling of the Irish Parliament but now denounced as a covert United Irishman |
49412 |
|
Heroic conduct of the Highland Sentinel |
mk197
Cruikshank-s Picture of an act of heroism at the Battle of Castlebar
|
49418 |
|
His death mask in his alma mater |
mk197
Trinity College,Dublin
|
49424 |
|
Hunted Down |
mk197
By the time of the first 98 centenary the rebellion was rememb er not as a horrific civil war but as a simple story of a people-s Struggle against their oppressors
|
49409 |
|
In Mid-july the survivors of the Wexford and Wicklow armies tried to cut their way through to the Midlands |
mk197
but 2000 rebels were repulsed by twenty-seven yeomen in a fortified post at Clonard,County Meath
|
49380 |
|
John Sheares,radical barrister |
mk197
With his brother Henry he supposedly joined the new Executive after the arrest of most of the United Irish Leaders at Bond-s House.
|
49420 |
|
Joseph Holt,one of the few Protestants who fought with the rebels in Wicklow |
mk197
He was later transported to Botany Bay
|
49388 |
|
Kildare rebels piking an old man |
mk197
George Crawford,and his granddaughter,another scene from Cruikshank |
49371 |
|
Lord Camdern |
mk197
the Irish Viceroy,high-minded and humane,but unterly demoralized by trying to govern Ireland.
|
49373 |
|
Lord Castlereagh Pitt-s 28-year-old Protege and acting chief secretary |
mk197
Inexperienced as he was,he had to manage the wild Irish gentry who controlled the Dublin Parliament
|
49374 |
|
Lord Clare |
mk197
the formidable Lord Chancellor and one of the leader of the informal cabinet |
49406 |
|
Lord Cornwallis,who succeeded |
mk197
Lord Camden as Viceroy in mid June was determined to impose peace on Irland
|
49378 |
|
Lord Edward Fitzgerald |
mk197
Younger brother of the great Kidare magnate,the Duke of Leinster, and first cousin of James Fox
|
49389 |
|
Loyalists awaiting attack by the rebels on a country house in Wicklow |
mk197
A contemporary watercolour by an eye-witness,Caroline Hamilton,showing how ware is an odd mixture of terror and boredom
|
49398 |
|
McCracken-s United and twentieth century portrait |
mk197
As commander of the United army of Antrim he was one of the few original political leaders of the movement to take part in a battle
|
49368 |
|
Most of the French armada sent to Bantry By Limped back in January 1797 to their bases in France |
mk197
one battleship,the Droits de I-homme with 600 troops under general Humbert.was intercepted off brest by two british frigates.
|
49382 |
|
Napoleon Bonaparte during his victorious campaign in Italy |
mk197
After Hoche-s Sudden death in
1797
|
49387 |
|
On 19 May,Lord Edward Fitzgerald |
mk197
the reputed commander in chief of the United Irish armies,Stabbed to death Captain Ryan who was sent t arrest him and was then shot and mortally wounded by Town Major Sirr |
49395 |
|
Rebels dancing the Carmagnolle in a captured house by cruikshank |
mk197
|
49421 |
|
Robert Emmet 24-year-old brother of Thomas Addis Emmet |
mk197
the United Irish leader
|
49397 |
|
The Battle of Arklow on 9 June,the Turning point of the Wexford rising |
mk197
An army of Wexford rebels
led by Father Murphy and reupted 19000 Strong,stormed the Wicklow borker town Like madmen and were Flung back with huge losses.
|
49400 |
|
The Battle of Ballynahinch on 13 June by Thomas Robinson,the most detailed and authentic picture of a battle painted in 1798 |
mk197
Robinson,who lived nearby,shows the closing stages of the battle in Lord Moira-s demesne at Montalto
|
49410 |
|
The French are on the sea,says the Shan Van Vocht |
mk197
William Sadler-s reconstruction of Humbert-s troop landing at Killala on 22 August
|
49375 |
|
The Irish House fo Commons addressed by Henry Grattan in 1780 during the campaign to force Britain to give Ireland free trade and legislative independ |
mk197
Grattan,and many of the MPs,are wearing Volunteer uniform to show they mean business.
|
49381 |
|
The Port of Brest |
mk197
the naval base from which the French sent their expeditions to invade Ireland. |
49402 |
|
The rebels executing their prisoners on the bridge at Wexford |
mk197
on 20 June,
ninety-seven loyalists were piked and their bodies thrown in the river
|
49411 |
|
The Revolutionary army in action |
mk197
A detail from a contemporary picture of Napoleon-s victory at the Battle of the Pyramids in 1798
|
49385 |
|
The Royal Exchange |
mk197
Dublin in the 1790s
the centre of fashionable life.Despite the threat of rebellion,the city was wide open to attack ,and none of the bridges had
guard-posts |
49407 |
|
The Unfortunate Henry Sheares |
mk197
With his brother John
he was arrested before the rising convicted of high treason in July,and hanged in Dublin
|
49401 |
|
The United army of Down has been broken b the King-s troops |
mk197
Gerneral Nugent wave to some dragoons rideing in with the rebel-s Liberty standards
|
49423 |
|
The United Irish Patriots of 1798 |
mk197
reincarnated in 1898 for the first centenary of the rebellion
|
49367 |
|
Theobald Wolfe Tone,the 33-year-old |
mk197
United Irish Leade who persuaded the French to try to Liverate Ireland |
49422 |
|
Thomas Street,Dubli the Scene of Rober Emmet-s execution in 1803 |
mk197
Late nineteenth-century engraving
|
49390 |
|
United Irishmen in Training |
mk197
Gillray-s carica ture,Published in 1798
|
49391 |
|
United Irishmen upon Duty |
mk197
Another Gillray caricature of 1798 |
49394 |
|
Wexford rebels helping themselves at the table of the Bishop of Ferns |
mk197
By Cruikshank
|
49369 |
|
William Pitt |
mk197
Britain-s war-weary Prime Minister
Ireland,he knew,was the weakest link in Britain-s line of defence against France
|
49404 |
|
William Sadler-s dramatic reconstruction of a calvary charge in 1798 |
mk197
painted in the 1880s
The Hessians were German mercenaries,notorious for atrocities against unarmed men and women
|
49417 |
|
Wolfe Tone in the Uniform of a French Adjutant general as he apeared at his court-martial in Dublin |
mk197
He had no illusions of what was in store for him
|