2s. georgian ireland protestant ascendancy
DESCRIPTION
Ireland from 1814 to 1850TRANSCRIPT
![Page 1: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Protestant Ascendancy
Early Georgian Ireland
![Page 2: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
![Page 3: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
In Dublin's Fair CityWhere the girls are so prettyI first set my eyes on sweet Molly MaloneAs she wheel'd her wheel barrowThrough streets broad and narrowCrying cockles and mussels alive, alive o!
ChorusAlive, alive o!, alive, alive o!Crying cockles and mussels alive, alive o!
![Page 4: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
She was a fishmongerBut sure 'twas no wonderFor so were her father and mother beforeAnd they each wheel'd their barrowThrough streets broad and narrowCrying cockles and mussels alive, alive o!
Chorus
![Page 5: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
She died of a feverAnd no one could save herAnd that was the end of sweet Molly MaloneBut her ghost wheels her barrowThrough streets broad and narrowCrying cockles and mussels alive, alive o!
Chorus
![Page 6: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
Foreign Affairs
• 1688-1697 England, Holland, HRE, Spain vs. France– Fear of Irish collaboration– Collaboration with HRE inhibits William from
supporting anti-Catholic measures• Treaty of Ryswick – Louis IV recognizes William
![Page 7: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
Irish Parliament of 1692
• Attempt to reject Treaty of Limerick• 1691 English Parliament prevents Catholics
from being elected• Penal Laws
![Page 8: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
House of Commons
• 300 members– 32 county constituencies– 8 county boroughs (including Dublin and Cork)– Trinity College– Pot-walloping boroughs– Many pocket boroughs
![Page 9: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
Irish House of Lords• Spiritual – Majority English - supported administration
• Temporal – Majority “Old Protestant” [from Tudor or early
Stuart periods] – supported administration– “Old English” - More sympathetic to Catholic
causes– Few Catholics
![Page 10: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
Penal LawsProtestant Ascendancy
• Acts– Against “papists”– Requiring an oath of “supremacy,” “abjuration” or
against transubstantiation– Preventing “the further Growth of Popery”
![Page 11: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
Penal Laws
• Restrict occupations: lawyers, doctors, teachers, civil or military officeholders
• Restrict education in Ireland or abroad• Restrict leases; land sales; inheritance
![Page 12: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
1697 Banish Bishops, etc.
• Three leave voluntarily• One transported• Two acquitted• Two pass as parish priests• 424 monastics transported
![Page 13: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
Test Act - Marriages
• Only Church of England marriages valid• Catholic parish registers often not kept• Mixed marriages– Daughters in mother’s faith– Sons in father’s faith
![Page 14: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/14.jpg)
Test Act - Marriages
• Presbyterian marriages clandestine– 1737 Bill of Indemnity’ exempts Presbyterian
marriage contracts from prosecution – 1782 Presbyterian ministers allowed to marry
Presbyterians– 1845 Marriages of Presbyterians and others
legalized
![Page 15: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/15.jpg)
Land and Catholics
• Leases less than 31 years• Rent not less than two thirds of the improved
yearly value• No Catholics in Limerick, Galway or their
suburbs except sailors, fishermen or day laborers
![Page 16: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/16.jpg)
Exceptions
• Brownes of Westport• Brownes of Kenmare
![Page 17: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/17.jpg)
Quaker Influence
• English Parliament exercised right to return bills to Dublin– Quaker concerns about forced tithes– Quaker concerns about marriage restrictions– Quaker concerns about oaths
![Page 18: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/18.jpg)
1703Catholic Land
Reduced to ~14%
![Page 19: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/19.jpg)
Penal Laws – Consequences?
• Absenteeism• Balance of payments• Failure to improve property• Conversion of tilled land to pasture
![Page 20: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/20.jpg)
Mass Rocks
![Page 21: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/21.jpg)
Hedge Schools
![Page 22: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/22.jpg)
Scotland & Presbyterian migration
1688-1697 30,000 from Scotland to Ulster1698-9 20,000 “ “• 1707 Scotland Act of Union– Forced on Scotland for economic reasons– Establishes Kirk (Presbyterian Church in Scotland)
• Irish request for union ignored
![Page 23: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/23.jpg)
Presbyterians
• Traditional County Armagh Presbyterian prayer “May the Lord protect his ain Kirk [own Church] from the Whore that sits on the Seven Hills and her bastard daughter, the Church of Ireland”
• Regulation of marriage and inheritance
![Page 24: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/24.jpg)
William Molyneux
• 1698 The Case of Ireland's being Bound by Acts of Parliament in England, Stated
![Page 25: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/25.jpg)
The Case for Ireland
• England and Ireland were separate Kingdoms, i.e. Ireland is not a colony
• The happiness of a constitution, depended on a proper balance between the king's and the people's rights.
• “All men are by nature in a state of equity” and have the right of “being free from all subjection to positive laws till by their own consent they give up their freedom by entering into civil societies.”
![Page 26: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/26.jpg)
Jacobites
• 1715 Jacobite Rising in Scotland– Most Presbyterians support the government
• 1745 Bonnie Price Charlie– Lack of support from Catholic middle class
![Page 27: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/27.jpg)
Economic issues – 1720’s
• Dependence on and cost of imported coal• Rising debt• Demands for “no new taxes”• Outflow of silver• Need to regulate baking industry
![Page 28: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/28.jpg)
Swift a Modest Proposal . . .
![Page 29: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/29.jpg)
Buy Irish
• Promoted by Swift in 1729• 1731 Dublin Society to foster textile industry• Wearing Irish linens• Non-importation boycotts
![Page 30: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/30.jpg)
The Proposal for the Uniform Use of Irish Manufacture• Burn every Thing that
came from England . . . except their Coals
• Printer tried nine times but grand juries refuse to indict
![Page 31: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/31.jpg)
Wood Half Penny
![Page 32: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/32.jpg)
1729 Famine• Embargo on exports• Riots in Cork, Limerick, Clonmel and Waterford
in early 1729• Mobs in Drogheda and Dublin prevent export
of oats and potatoes– Put down by Army with support of Catholic Church
– Prices lowered; public collections for poor
![Page 33: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/33.jpg)
Immigration through Delaware River Ports
DECADE SOUTHERN IRELAND
NORTHERN IRELAND
1729 723 2961730-39 3,328 2,5101740-49 4,106 5,2251750-59 3,639 8,0991760-69 3,811 12,0671770-74 1,689 7,202
![Page 34: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/34.jpg)
1740-41 Famine
• Pan European cooling• Inability to land coal• Frozen mills• Frozen potatoes• Spring drought
![Page 35: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/35.jpg)
Diet – Farm Family of 6
• Bread from 40 bushels• Potatoes 52 bushels• 6 qts. buttermilk or skim milk/day• Hundred of skim milk cheese• Hundred of butter• Beef from one carcass
![Page 36: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/36.jpg)
Prison Diet – 1840s
• Bread diet—2 lbs. bread, 1 quart of pure milk.• Potato—9 lbs potatoes, 1 pint of new milk, 1
pint buttermilk.• Mixed diet—8oz. meal for stirabout, 4 lbs.
potatoes, 1 pint of new milk and 1 pint of buttermilk
![Page 37: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/37.jpg)
Potatoes and oats
![Page 38: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/38.jpg)
Potatoes and NutritionYield per acre (Kg)
Energy Value(Calories/Kg)
Land needed for 10,000 Calories/day for a year
Wheat 650 3,260 1.7Barley 820 3,310 1.4Oats 690 3,209 1.6Potatoes 10,900 697 0.5
![Page 39: 2s. Georgian Ireland Protestant Ascendancy](https://reader033.vdocument.in/reader033/viewer/2022061201/547a3d15b4af9fe2158b4a77/html5/thumbnails/39.jpg)
Potatoes and Nutrition (1 Kg raw)
• 330 % of Vitamin C (DV)• 140 % of Iron• 60-90 % of Mg, P, K• Thiamine, niacin• Milk – Ca, Vitamins A and D, B12