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John Kelly of Killanne
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John Kelly of Killanne : ウィキペディア英語版
John Kelly of Killanne
John Kelly (Kelly of Killanne) (died c. 22 June 1798) lived in Killanne in the parish of Rathnure and was a United Irish leader who fought in the Irish Rebellion of 1798.
While Kelly was obviously well known to rebel and loyalist alike during the short duration of the Wexford rising, almost nothing is known of him outside this time. He was one of the leaders of the rebel victory at the Battle of Three Rocks which led to the capture of Wexford town but was later seriously wounded while leading a rebel column at the Battle of New Ross.
Robert Gogan〔50 Great Irish Fighting Songs, Music Ireland, 2005〕 describes how Kelly was under orders from the Wexford commander Bagenal Harvey to attack the British outposts around New Ross but on no account to attack the town itself.
The rebels outnumbered the British forces and so Harvey sent a messenger to give them an opportunity to surrender. The messenger was shot while carrying a white flag. This angered the rebels who began the attack without receiving the official order from Harvey.
Kelly’s column of 800 men attacked and broke through Ross’s "Three Bullet Gate" and proceeded into the town itself. After initial success, they were eventually beaten back by British troops and Kelly was wounded in the leg. He was moved to Wexford to recuperate but after the fall of Wexford on 21 June was dragged from his bed, tried and sentenced to death. He was hanged on 25 June 1798 along with seven other rebel leaders on Wexford bridge, after which his body was decapitated, the trunk thrown into the River Slaney and the head kicked through the streets before being set on display on a spike.〔p.255 "''The People's Rising, Wexford 1798''" (Dublin, 1995) Nicholas Furlong ISBN 0-7171-2323-5〕
==Music==
His exploits are commemorated in the famous Irish ballad ''Kelly the Boy From Killane'' written by Patrick Joseph McCall (1861–1919).
Liam Gaul 〔Glory O! Glory O! The Life of PJ McCall by Liam Gaul, The History Press Ireland, 2011〕 describes how McCall wrote the song to commemorate the centenary of the 1798 Rebellion, although it was not published in book form until it appeared in McCall’s Irish Fireside Songs in 1911.
Gaul says the origin of the melody used in the song is uncertain. There is no known reference to it before it was used in Kelly the Boy From Killane and so it’s likely that McCall, who was a talented musician, wrote the tune himself.

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