This arrangement was disputed by Matthew's legitimate half-brother
Shane O'Neill, who had a larger and more powerful following. Shane's violent response crushed the government's hope for a peaceful succession. Matthew was killed by Shane's men in 1558. At some point between May and August 1558, English statesman Sir
Henry Sidney organised the retrieval of Dungannon's sons Brian and Hugh, and for a brief time they stayed at Sydney's Dublin residence. Dungannon's father Conn O'Neill died in 1559. In his attempts to gain recognition of the title of Earl of Tyrone from the Crown, Shane suggested that Matthew had not really been Conn's son, and his real father was a
blacksmith from
Dundalk named Kelly. Shane tried to show Matthew's claims were weak under both the English law of
primogeniture as well as the Gaelic custom of the strongest member of the family inheriting. Shane received some recognition of his role as head of the Ó Néills, but he was never made an earl. Shane was killed by the MacDonnells of Antrim in 1567. == Notes and references ==