Lisagh Farrell or Lewis Farrell was an Irish soldier of the seventeenth century.
Confederate wars and exile
He was the younger brother of Richard Farrell, who had served as a General in the Irish Confederate Army during the 1640s. Following the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland he went into exile on the Continent and served in a force of Irish troops led by Richard in the French Army. During Richard's absences, Lisagh served as the de facto commander of the unit. Following the 1656 Treaty of Brussels between the exiled Charles and the Spanish, Farrell and his second-in-command Connell Ferrall defected to the Spanish and turned over the key Flanders fortress of Saint-Ghislain to them.[1] Farrell then served as commander of an Irish regiment for Charles in the Royalist Army in Exile fighting alongside the Spanish Army. Following the Restoration, the regiment waited at Dunkirk alongside another Irish unit led by John Fitzgerald. The penal laws against Catholics effectively barred them from serving in the restored Royal Irish Army.
Tangier
Following the 1661 Marriage Treaty between England and Portugal, Charles acquired the Mediterranean enclave of Tangier. As part of its new garrison he transferred his Irish regiments from Dunkirk.[2] Farrell was involved in much of the early fighting with the surrounding Moorish forces, but later left and returned to Ireland.
References
- ↑ "Longford musketeers". 12 February 2013.
- ↑ Childs p.115
Bibliography
- Childs, John. The Army of Charles II. Routledge, 1976.