History of Irish Conflict
The Plantation Of Ulster
Ulster
is one of four provinces in Ireland. Geographically it is in the north of the
country and takes in nine counties: Antrim, Armagh,
Cavan, Derry, Donegal, Down, Fermanagh, Monaghan and Tyrone. Of these nine
counties, six are in the political and administrative unit which since 1921 has
formed the state of Northern Ireland.
Before the plantation of Ulster in the early
seventeenth century, Ulster was the most Gaelic part of Ireland and had
successfully resisted English colonial ambitions. There had been earlier
plantations throughout Ireland which had succeeded in confiscating land and
grafting on a new aristocracy. The Plantation of Ulster in 1609 was
comprehensive. By 1703, only14% of the land in Ireland remained in the hands of
the Catholic Irish. The colonists were Protestant and represented a culture
alien to Ulster. This policy of comprehensive colonization was a result of the
advice of the Solicitor General to King James I, and was an attempt to replace
one entire community with another. The Catholic Irish remained in conditions
which emphasized their suppression.
The sum of the Plantation was the introduction of a
foreign community which spoke differently, worshipped apart, and represented an
alien culture and way of life. The more efficient methods of the new farmers,
and the greater availability of capital which allowed the start of cottage
industries, served to create further economic differences between Ulster and the
rest of Ireland, between Catholics and Protestants. The deep resentment of the
native Irish towards the Planters, and the distrustful siege mentality of the
Planters towards the Irish, is a crude interpretation of the contemporary Irish
problem.
The next two centuries supplied many dates essential to
the conflict. The Rising of 1641 against the Planters caused a massacre of
Protestants, and the Cromwellian conquest in the 1650s resulted in a massacre of
Catholics.
The Battle of the Boyne in 1690 has been sanctified in
murals on a hundred gable walls as the victory of the "Prods" over the
"Micks" when William of Orange defeated King James II.
The aftermath of William of Orange's victory at the
Boyne was much more important than the campaign on the whole. It was a mark of
the sustained hostility between Planter and Gael that the Penal Laws were
enacted by the Irish parliament in Dublin. The laws accentuated the differences
between the Irish establishment and its opponents. Having established an
exclusively Protestant legislature in 1692, a comprehensive series of coercive
acts against Catholics were implemented during the 1690s. Catholics were
excluded from the armed forces, the judiciary and the legal profession as well
as from parliament; they were forbidden to carry arms or to own a horse worth
more than £5.00; Catholic bishops and clergy were banished in 1697; Catholics
could not hold long leases on land or buy land from a Protestant; when Catholics
made their wills, property had to be divided equally among children, unless the
eldest conformed to the Anglican faith; they were forbidden to run schools or to
send their children abroad to school. The Penal Laws entrenched the divide
between Catholics and Protestants and strengthened Irish Catholicism by adding a
political component to it.
During the second half of the eighteenth century
relations between the religious communities in Ireland were in a situation of
considerable flux. The fact that there were also penal laws against the
Presbyterians, which excluded them from a share of political power created a
Catholic-Presbyterian relationship which was sometimes closer than that between
the Protestant sects.
The early success of the Society of United Irishmen in
attracting both Presbyterians and Catholics into a revolutionary republican
movement during the 1790s appeared to indicate a new Irish cohesion, which
disregarded religious denominationalism and was determined to establish an
independent republic of Ireland. A skirmish in County Armagh led to the
formation of the Orange Order, which attempted to unite all brands of
Protestantism by stressing the common interests of all Protestants.
Early tolerance of Catholics in Belfast was related to
their numbers in the city. In 1707, George McCartney, the Sovereign of Belfast,
reported "thank God we are not under any great fears here, for... we have
not among us seven papists". The industrial expansion of Belfast at the
beginning of the nineteenth century attracted large numbers of Catholics to the
city. Between 1800 and 1830 the proportion of Catholics in Belfast rose from 10%
to 30% and the first signs of serious urban conflict occurred.
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