Bushmills - Irish Whiskey History
Chapter Four
Tudor Law
The Old Bushmills distillery can trace its heritage back to a patent to distil that was granted 20th April 1608. But this being Ireland, nothing is as simple as it first appears. For a start a distillery was not built in 1608, and if aqua vitae was made in the area, it was no different from the stuff that was distilled in 1607. The first thing the patent, or licence shows is that whiskey making has been going on in these parts for a very, very long time. The second is that this was the first time the State saw a way of making money out of alcohol.
By the end of the 16th century, England was refocusing its
attention on Ireland. The Ulster armies of Hugh O’Neill, along
with those of his son-in-law Hugh O’Donnell, were locked in
battle with the troops of Queen Elizabeth I of England, in
what became known as the Nine Years War. O’Neill, with the
aid of many – but not all – Irish chieftains was slowly pushing
back Elizabeth’s armies. By 1580, their power base greatly
reduced, the English imposed martial law in the nominally
loyal province of Munster. Among those who could be executed
were “idle persons…aiders of rebels…makers of aqua vitae”.
Spirits were clearly seen as one of the causes of unrest.
What made the situation in Ireland intolerable for the
Protestant Queen Elizabeth I was O’Neill’s success in
getting aid from the Catholic armies of Spain. Unlike the
‘old English’ who arrived before the Reformation, the ‘new
English’ were Protestant; Christendom was on fire and
Europe was dividing along sectarian lines. Elizabeth I felt she
had to secure Ireland, otherwise she was leaving the Realm
open to a Catholic invasion. The Spanish, who had already
sent a failed Armada, would next time come through Ireland.
Their lines of supply now secure, they would then sweep
across the narrow Irish Sea. It was something she could not
allow. The fuse had been lit, religion and politics had been
mixed, and over the following 400 years there would be
horrific consequences for both communities.
The armies of Elizabeth of England and King Philip of
Spain, backed up by O’Neill’s forces, finally met not far from
Cork city, on a wet day in December 1601. After all the build
up, and given what was at stake, the battle was little more
than a brief skirmish. The Spanish surrendered, the Irish
were routed and the forces of the Crown won their most
important victory in Ireland. The Gaelic order collapsed,
and O’Neill and the Gaelic chiefs of Ulster fled to Europe
in what became known as the Flight of the Earls. This left
the province of Ulster, the area most resistant to the English
crown, leaderless.
Two worlds had collided. The Irish and the English had
different legal systems, culture, language and religion – they
even used a different calendar. The English followed the old
Julian calendar and the Irish the Gregorian as decreed by
Pope Gregory XIII in 1582. With the departure of the Gaelic
Lords, the way was clear for what became known as the
Plantation of Ulster. Following the death of Elizabeth, this
was a unique opportunity for the newly crowned James I to
reward the many who had claims on his patronage.
One of those patrons was about to move into the Route
in the then County of Coleraine, an area that contains the
modern-day town of Bushmills.
extracted from chapter 4 of 'Bushmills: 400 Years in the Making'
written by Peter Mulryan, published by Appletree Press:
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