The Roots of Ireland's Troubles
If the objective of colonization should be the establishment of economic benefit, in Ireland it was to enforce order. Settlers were required to usurp the traditional lands of its indigenous population. Their attempts to enforce Protestantism in all its forms onto the dogmatically Catholic locality were doomed to failure. With unrest continuing, Ireland became the battleground for the English Civil War fought out between Royalist and Parliamentarian to the detriment of its people.

The availability of cheap Irish labor soon led to calls to protect English agricultural prices. Fears that Irish goods would undercut English production costs led to calls to prevent the development of an Irish industrial revolution, despite the desperate need to employ the surplus rural population. This inevitably led to famine. No one believed the problem which was unfolding despite all the efforts of Nationalist politicians. English land owners in Parliament were only concerned to protect landlord interests and to score points off their political opponents. If home rule could not be delivered by political means, it was inevitable that it would be delivered by force.

Inextricably linked with the history of Britain, Stedall guides the reader through Ireland’s turbulent but rich history. To understand the causes behind the twentieth-century conflict, which continues to resonate today, we must look to the long arc of history in order to truly understand the historical roots of a nation’s conflict.
1130594371
The Roots of Ireland's Troubles
If the objective of colonization should be the establishment of economic benefit, in Ireland it was to enforce order. Settlers were required to usurp the traditional lands of its indigenous population. Their attempts to enforce Protestantism in all its forms onto the dogmatically Catholic locality were doomed to failure. With unrest continuing, Ireland became the battleground for the English Civil War fought out between Royalist and Parliamentarian to the detriment of its people.

The availability of cheap Irish labor soon led to calls to protect English agricultural prices. Fears that Irish goods would undercut English production costs led to calls to prevent the development of an Irish industrial revolution, despite the desperate need to employ the surplus rural population. This inevitably led to famine. No one believed the problem which was unfolding despite all the efforts of Nationalist politicians. English land owners in Parliament were only concerned to protect landlord interests and to score points off their political opponents. If home rule could not be delivered by political means, it was inevitable that it would be delivered by force.

Inextricably linked with the history of Britain, Stedall guides the reader through Ireland’s turbulent but rich history. To understand the causes behind the twentieth-century conflict, which continues to resonate today, we must look to the long arc of history in order to truly understand the historical roots of a nation’s conflict.
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The Roots of Ireland's Troubles

The Roots of Ireland's Troubles

by Robert Stedall
The Roots of Ireland's Troubles

The Roots of Ireland's Troubles

by Robert Stedall

Paperback(Reprint)

$29.95 
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Overview

If the objective of colonization should be the establishment of economic benefit, in Ireland it was to enforce order. Settlers were required to usurp the traditional lands of its indigenous population. Their attempts to enforce Protestantism in all its forms onto the dogmatically Catholic locality were doomed to failure. With unrest continuing, Ireland became the battleground for the English Civil War fought out between Royalist and Parliamentarian to the detriment of its people.

The availability of cheap Irish labor soon led to calls to protect English agricultural prices. Fears that Irish goods would undercut English production costs led to calls to prevent the development of an Irish industrial revolution, despite the desperate need to employ the surplus rural population. This inevitably led to famine. No one believed the problem which was unfolding despite all the efforts of Nationalist politicians. English land owners in Parliament were only concerned to protect landlord interests and to score points off their political opponents. If home rule could not be delivered by political means, it was inevitable that it would be delivered by force.

Inextricably linked with the history of Britain, Stedall guides the reader through Ireland’s turbulent but rich history. To understand the causes behind the twentieth-century conflict, which continues to resonate today, we must look to the long arc of history in order to truly understand the historical roots of a nation’s conflict.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781526751614
Publisher: Pen and Sword
Publication date: 11/27/2019
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 416
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.50(h) x 1.30(d)

About the Author

Robert Stedall has made a specialist study of Tudor history and is the curator of the popular www.maryqueenofscots.net. He has also written Men of Substance, on the London Livery Companies’ reluctant part in the Plantation of Ulster.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations 1

Preface 3

Introduction 7

Part 1 The Reformation and its impact on British efforts to dominate Ireland 9

Chapter 1 The arrival of British settlers in Ireland c. 1540-1635 11

Chapter 2 The development of Protestantism in Europe c. 1517-c. 1567 18

Chapter 3 The effect of Presbyterianism on British political thinking c. 1567 - c. 1649 23

Part 2 Events leading up to the English Civil War 27

Chapter 4 Growing conflict between Charles I and the English Parliament 1625 - 1641 29

Chapter 5 The Great Rebellion in Ireland 1641 - 1649 31

Chapter 6 The War of the Three Kingdoms 1642 - 1649 41

Chapter 7 Ireland under Parliamentary control 1649-1660 45

Part 3 The Restoration and the Williamite Wars 55

Chapter 8 Backlash against Dissenters following the Restoration 1660-1685 57

Chapter 9 James II and the Williamite Wars 1685 - 1691 67

Chapter 10 The Protestant Ascendancy's assertion of its authority 1691 - 1714 83

Part 4 The development of Dissenter theology in the cause of republicanism 91

Chapter 11 The development of Dissenter thinking in Ireland c. 1690-c 1760 93

Chapter 12 Growing seeds of Dissenter unrest c. 1714-c. 1783 100

Chapter 13 The development of the Unitarians' political objectives c. 1755 - c. 1792 106

Part 5 Britain's determination to retain control over Irish Government 113

Chapter 14 The rise to influence of Henry Grattan and the Irish Whigs c. 1770-c. 1791 115

Chapter 15 British Government efforts to end the Dissenter threat c.1780 - 1797 125

Chapter 16 Divergent political views in England on how to manage Catholic emancipation c.1792-c. 1795 129

Chapter 17 Fitzwilliam's Lord Lieutenancy in Ireland and its aftermath 1795 140

Part 6 The seeds of revolution to establish republicanism in Ireland 153

Chapter 18 The formation of the Society of United Irishmen 1783 - 1794 155

Chapter 19 United Irish efforts to influence reform in the Irish Parliament 1792 - 1797 168

Chapter 20 United Irish efforts to obtain French backing for a republican rebellion 1795 - 1798 178

Chapter 21 The rebellion of 1798 190

Part 7 Events leading to Union and emancipation 207

Chapter 22 The Act of Union 1789 - 1801 209

Chapter 23 The rebellion of 1803 214

Chapter 24 The Liberator 1806 - 1841 220

Part 8 Famine, destitution and agitation for independence 229

Chapter 25 Famine c. 1800-c. 1870 231

Chapter 26 Continuing evictions despite calls for tenant rights 1850-1870 258

Chapter 27 The Fenian movement 1848 - 1879 265

Part 9 Parliamentary agitation for Irish Home Rule 273

Chapter 28 Gladstone's initial approach to reform in Ireland 1867-1874 275

Chapter 29 The rise of Charles Stewart Parnell 1874-1882 282

Chapter 30 The thwarting of calls for Home Rule 1882-1889 301

Chapter 31 Attempts to blacken Parnell's name 1886-1891 311

Chapter 32 The legacy left by Gladstone and Parnell 1891 and thereafter 315

Postscript 320

Bibliography 323

References 331

Index 360

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