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CALVAGH O'DONNELL (d . 1566), eldest son of Manus O'Donnell, in the course of his above-mentioned See also: quarrel with his See also: father and his See also: half-See also: brother Hugh, sought aid in Scotland from the MacDonnells, who assisted him in deposing Manus and securing the lordship of Tyrconnel for himself
.
Hugh then appealedto See also: Shane O'Neil., who invaded Tyrconnel at the See also: head of a large army in 1557, desiring to make himself supreme throughout
.
See also: Ulster, and encamped on the See also: shore of Lough Swilly
.
Calvagh, acting apparently on the advice of his father, who was his prisoner and who remembered the successful See also: night attack on See also: Conn O'Neill at Knockavoe in 1522, surprised the O'Neills in their See also: camp at night and routed them with the loss of all their spoils
.
Calvagh was then recognized by the See also: English See also: government as See also: lord of Tyrconnel; but in 1561 he and his wife were captured by Shane O'Neill in the monastery of Kildonnell
.
His wife, See also: Catherine Maclean, who had previously been the wife of the See also: earl of See also: Argyll, was kept by Shane O'Neill as his See also: mistress and See also: bore him several See also: children, though grossly See also: ill-treated by her savage captor; Calvagh himself was subjected to atrocious torture during the three years that he remained O'Neill's prisoner
.
He was released in 1564 on conditions which he had no intention of fulfilling; and See also: crossing to See also: England he threw himself on the mercy of See also: Queen See also: Elizabeth
.
In 1566
See also: Sir See also: Henry
See also: Sidney by the queen's orders marched to Tyrconnel and restored Calvagh to his rights
.
Calvagh, however, died in the same See also: year, and as his son Conn was a prisoner in the hands of Shane O'Neill, his half-brother Hugh MacManus was inaugurated The O'Donnell in his place
.
Hugh, who in the See also: family See also: feud with Calvagh had allied himself with O'Neill, now turned round and combined with the English to crush the hereditary enemy of his family; and in 1567 he utterly routed Shane at See also: Letterkenny with the loss of 1300 men, compelling him to seek See also: refuge with the Mac-Donnells of See also: Antrim, by whom he was treacherously put to See also: death
.
In 1592 Hugh abdicated in favour of his son Hugh Roe O'Donnell (see below); but there was a member of the elder branch of the family who resented the passing of the chieftainship to the descendants of Manus O'Donnell's second See also: marriage
.
This was Niall Garve, second son of Calvagh's son Conn .. His elder brother was Hugh of Ramelton, whose son See also: John, an officer in the
See also: Spanish army, was father of Hugh Baldearg O'Donnell (d
.
1704), known in See also: Spain as Count O'Donnell, who commanded an Irish regiment as brigadier in the Spanish service
.
This officer came to See also: Ireland in 1690 and raised an army in Ulster for the service of See also: James II., afterwards deserting to the
See also: side of See also: William III., from whom he accepted a pension
.
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