Ireland
GEOGRAPHY
Ireland lies in the Atlantic Ocean, west of Great Britain, from which
it is separated in the north-east by the North Channel, in the east by
the
Irish Sea, and in the south-east by
St.
George's Channel. Situated between the fifty-first and fifty-sixth
degrees of latitude, and between the fifth and eleventh parallels of
longitude (Greenwich), its greatest length is 302 miles, its greatest
breadth 174 miles, its area 32,535 square miles. It is divided into four
provinces, these being subdivided into thirty-two counties. In the
centre the country is a level plain; towards the coast there are several
detached mountain chains. Its rivers and bays are numerous, also its
bogs; its climate is mild, though unduly moist. In minerals it is not
wealthy
like Great Britain, but is soil is generally more fertile, and is
specially suitable for agriculture and pasturage.
EARLY HISTORY
In ancient times it was
known by the various names of Ierna, Juverna, Hibernia,
Ogygia, and Inisfail or the Isle of Destiny. It was also called Banba
and Erin, and lastly Scotia, or the country of the
Scots. From the eleventh century, however, the name
Scotia was exclusively applied to Caledonia, the latter country having
been peopled in the sixth century by a
Scottish
colony from
Ireland. Henceforth
Ireland was often called Scotia Major and sometimes
Ireland, until, after the eleventh century, the name
Scotia was dropped and
Ireland alone remained. Even yet it is sometimes called
Erin—chiefly by orators and poets. Situated in the far west, out of the
beaten paths of commercial activity, it was little known to the
ancients. Festus Avienus wrote that it was two days' sail from Britain.
Pliny thought that it was part of Britain and not an island at all;
Strabo that it was near Britain, and that its inhabitants were
cannibals; and all that Caesar
knew was that
it was west of Britain, and about half its size.
Agricola beheld its coastline from the opposite shores of
Caledonia, and had thought of accepting the invitation of an
Irish chief to come and conquer it,
believing he
could do so with a single legion. But he left
Ireland unvisited and unconquered, and Tacitus could only
record that in soil and climate it resembled Britain, and that its
harbours were then well known to foreign merchants.
But if we have not any detailed description from his lively pen, the
native chroniclers have furnished us with abundant materials, and, if
all they say be
true, we can understand the remark of Camden that
Ireland was rightly called Ogygia, or the Ancient Island,
because in comparison, the antiquity of all other nations is in its
infancy. Passing by the absurd story that it was peopled before the
Deluge, we are
told that, beginning with the
time
of
Abraham, several successive
waves of colonization rolled westward to its shores.
First came Parthalon with 1000 followers; after which came the Nemedians,
the Firbolgs, and the Tuatha-de-Dananns, and lastly the Milesians or
Scots. In addition, there were the Fomorians, a people of
uncertain origin, whose chief occupation was piracy and
war, and whose
attacks on the various settlers were incessant. These and the Milesians
excepted, the different colonists came from
Greece,
and all were of the same race. The Milesians came from Scythia; and from
that country to
Egypt, from
Egypt to Spain,
from Spain to
Ireland their adventures are recorded in detail. The name
Scot which they bore was derived from Scota, daughter of
Pharaoh of
Egypt, the wife
of one of their chiefs; from their chief Miledh they got the name
Milesians, and from another chief Goidel they were sometimes called
Gadelians, or Gaels. The
wars and
battles of these colonists are largely fabulous, and the Partholanians,
Nemedians, and Fomorians belong rather to mythology than to history. So
also do the Dananns, though sometimes they are taken as a real people,
of superior
knowledge and skill, the builders of those prehistoric sepulchral
mounds by the Boyne, at Dowth, Knowth, and Newgrange. The Firbolgs
however most probably existed, and were kindred perhaps to those warlike
Belgae of Gaul whom Caesar encountered in battle. And the Milesians
certainly belong to history, though the
date
of their arrival in
Ireland is unknown. They were Celts, and probably came
from Gaul to Britain, and from Britain to
Ireland, rather than direct from
Spain. Under
the leadership of Heremon and Heber they soon became masters of the
island. Some of the Firbolgs, it is said, crossed the seas to the Isles
of Arran, where they built the fort of Dun Engus, which still stands and
which tradition still associates with their name. Heber and Heremon soon
quarrelled, and, Heber falling in battle, Heremon became sole ruler, the
first in a long line of kings. This list of kings, however, is not
reliable, and we are warned by Tighearnach, the most trustworthy of
Irish chroniclers, that all events before the reign of
Cimbaeth (300 B.C.) are uncertain. Even after the dawn of the
Christian Era
fact and
fiction are interwoven and events are often shrouded
in shadows and mists. Such, for instance, are the exploits of Cuchullain
and
Finn
Macumhael. Nor have many of these early kinds been remarkable, if we
except Conn of the Hundred Battles, who lived in the first century after
Christ; Cormac, who lived a century later; Tuathal, who established the
Feis of Tara; Niall, who invaded Britain; and Dathi, who in the fifth
century lost his life at the foot of the Alps.
The
Irish were then
pagans, but not
barbarians. Their roads were indeed ill-constructed, their wooden
dwellings rude, the dress of their lower orders scanty, their implements
of agriculture and
war primitive, and so were their land vehicles, and the boats in
which they traversed the sea. On the other hand, some of their swords
and shields showed some skill in metal-working, and their war-like and
commercial voyages to Britain and Gaul argue some proficiency in
shipbuilding and navigation. They certainly
loved music;
and, besides their inscribed Ogham writing, they had a
knowledge of
letters. There was a high-king of
Ireland (ardri), and subject to him were the
provincial kings and chiefs of tribes. Each of these received tribute
from his immediate inferior, and even in a sept the political and legal
administration was complete. There was the
druid who
explained
religion, the brehon who
dispensed
justice, the brughaid or public hospitaller, the bard who sang the
praises of his chief or urged his kinsman to battle; and each was an
official and had his appointed allotment of land. Kings, though taken
from one family,
were elective, the tanist or heir-apparent being frequently not the
nearest relation of him who reigned. This peculiarity, together with
gavelkind by which the lands were periodically redistributed,
impeded industry and settled government. Nor was there any legislative
assembly, and the
Brehon law under which
Ireland lived was judge-made
law.
Sometimes the ardri's tribute remained unpaid and his authority nominal;
but if he was a strong
man
he exacted
obedience and tribute. The Boru tribute levied on the
King of Leinster was excessive and
unjust, and led
to many
evils.
The pagan
Irish
believed
in Druidism,
resembling somewhat the
Druidism Caesar
saw in Gaul; but the
pagan
creed
of the
Irish was indefinite and their gods do not stand out
clear. They held the
immortality and
the transmigration of
souls,
worshipped the sun and moon, and, with an inferior worship,
mountains, rivers, and wells. And they
sacrificed to idols, one of which, Crom Cruach, they are said to
have propitiated with human
sacrifices.
They also
believed
in fairies, holding that the Tuatha-de-Dananns, when defeated by the
Milesians, retired into the bosom of the mountains, where they held
their fairy revels. One of the
women fairies
(the banshee) watched the fortunes of great
families, and
when some great misfortune was impending, the doomed
family was
warned at night by her mournful wail.
EARLY CHRISTIAN PERIOD
Intercourse with Britain and the Continent through commerce and
war
sufficiently accounts for the introduction of
Christianity
before the fifth century. There must have been then a considerable
number of
Christians in
Ireland; for in 430
Palladius, a
bishop and
native of Britain, was sent by
Pope
Celestine "to the
Scots
believing in
Christ". Palladius,
however, did little, and almost immediately returned to Britain, and in
432 the same pope
sent St. Patrick.
He is the
Apostle
of
Ireland, but this does not imply that he found
Ireland altogether
pagan and left
it altogether
Christian. It is however quite
true that when
St. Patrick did
come paganism
was the predominant
belief, and that at his death it had been supplanted as such by
Christianity.
The extraordinary work which
St. Patrick
did, as well as his own attractive personal
character, has furnished him with many biographers; and even in
recent years his life and works have engaged erudite and able pens. But
in spite of all that has been written many things in his life are still
doubtful and
obscure. It is
doubtful when and where he was born, how he spent his life between
his first leaving
Ireland and his return, and in what year he died. It has
been maintained that he never existed; that he and
Palladius were
the same
man;
that there were two St. Patricks; again, some, like
Jocelin, have multiplied his
miracles beyond
belief. These
contradictions and exaggerations have encouraged the scoffer to sneer;
and Gibbon was sure that in the sixty-six lives of
St. Patrick
there must have been sixty-six thousand lies. In reality there seems no
solid
reason
for rejecting the traditional account, viz., that
St. Patrick was
born at Dumbarton in
Scotland about
372; that he was captured and brought to
Ireland by the
Irish king, Nial; that he was sold as a
slave
to an Ulster chief Milcho, whom he served for six years; that he then
escaped and went back to his own people; that in repeated
visions
he, a pious
Christian,
heard the plaintive cry of the
pagan
Irish inviting him to come amongst them; that,
believing he
was called by God
to do so, he went first to the
monastery of
St. Martin of Tours,
then to that of St.
Germanus of Auxerre, after which he went to
Lérins
and to Rome;
and then, being
consecrated
bishop, he was sent by
Pope
Celestine to
Ireland, where he arrived in 432.
From Wicklow, where he landed, his course is traced to Antrim; back
by Downpatrick, near which he
converted
Dichu and got from him a grant of land for his first
church at
Saul; then by Dundalk, where
Benignus was
converted; and to Slane, where in sight of Tara itself he lighted
the paschal fire. The enraged
druids pointed
out to the ardri the heinousness of the offence, for during the great
pagan festival
then being celebrated it was death to light any fire except at Tara. But
St. Patrick
came to Tara itself,
baptized the
chief poet, and even the ardri; then marched north and destroyed at
Leitrim the idol, Crom Cruach, after which he entered Connaught, and
remained there for seven years. Passing through Connaught to Ulster, he
went through Donegal, Tyrone, and Antrim,
consecrated
Macarten Bishop
of Monaghan, and Fiace
Bishop of
Sletty; after which he entered
Munster. Finally he returned to Ulster, and died at
Saul in 493. His early captivity in
Ireland interfered seriously with his
education, and
in his
Confession and in his Epistle to Caroticus, both of which
have survived the wreck of ages, we can discover no
graces of
style. But we see his great familiarity with the
Scripture. And the man himself stands revealed; his
piety, his
spirit of
prayer, his
confidence in God,
his zeal, his
invincible courage.
But while putting his entire
trust
in God, and
giving Him all the
glory,
he rejected no human aid. Entering into a
pagan territory
he first preached to the chief men, knowing that when they were
converted the people would follow. Wonderful indeed was his labour,
and wonderful its results. He preached in almost every district in
Ireland, confounded in argument the
druids and won
the people from their side; he built, it is said, 365
churches
and consecrated
an equal number of
bishops, established
schools and
convents, and
held synods;
and when he died the whole machinery of a powerful
Church
was in operation, fully equal to the task of confirming in the
faith those
already
converted and of bringing those yet in darkness into the
Christian fold.
One of the
apostle's first anxieties was to provide a native ministry. For this
purpose he selected the leading men—chiefs, brehons, bards—men likely to
attract the respect of the people, and these, after little training, and
often with little
education, he had
ordained. Thus
equipped the priest
went among the people, with his
catechism,
missal, and
ritual, the bishop
in addition his
crosier and
bell.
In a short
time,
however, these primitive
conditions ceased. Abut 450 a
college
was established at
Armagh under
Benignus; other
schools arose
at
Kildare,
Noendrum, and Louth; and by the end of the fifth century these
colleges
sent forth a sufficient supply of trained
priests.
Supported by a grant of land from the chief of the clan or sept and by
voluntary
offerings, bishop
and priests
lived together, preached to the people, administered the
sacraments,
settled their disputes, sat in their banquet halls. To many ardent
natures this state of things was abhorrent. Fleeing from men, they
sought for
solitude and
silence,
by the banks of a river, in the recesses of a wood, and, with the
scantiest allowance of food, the water for their drink, a few wattles
covered with sods for their houses, they spent their
time
in mortification
and prayer.
Literally they were
monks, for they were alone with
God. But their
retreats
were soon invaded by others anxious to share their penances and their
vigils, and to learn wisdom at their feet. Each newcomer
built his little hut, a
church was erected, a grant of land obtained, their
master became abbot,
and perhaps bishop;
and thus arose
monastic
establishments the fame of which soon spread throughout
Europe. Noted
examples in the sixth century were
Clonard,
founded by St. Finian,
Clonfert
by St. Brendan,
Bangor by
St. Comgall,
Clonmacnoise by
St. Kieran, Arran by St. Enda; and, in the seventh
century,
Lismore
by St. Carthage
and
Glendalough by
St. Kevin.
There were still bardic
schools, as
there was still
paganism, but in the seventh century
paganism had
all but disappeared, and the bardic were overshadowed by the
monastic
schools.
Frequented by the best of the
Irish, and by students from abroad, these latter diffused
knowledge over
western Europe,
and
Ireland received and merited the title of Island of
Saints and Scholars. The
holy
men who laboured with
St. Patrick and
immediately succeeded him were mostly
bishops and
founders of
churches; those of the sixth century were of the
monastic
order; those of the seventh century were mostly
anchorites who
loved
solitude,
silence,
continued prayer,
and the most rigid austerities. Nor were the
women
behindhand in this contest for
holiness. St.
Brigid is a name still dear to
Ireland, and she, as well as
St. Ita, St.
Fanchea and others, founded many
convents
tenanted by pious
women, whose
sanctity and
sacrifices it
would be indeed difficult to surpass. Nor was the
Irish
Church,
as has been sometimes asserted, out of communion with the
See of Rome.
The Roman and
Irish
tonsures
differed, it is
true, and the methods of computing
Easter, and it
may be that
Pelagianism found some few adherents, though
Arianism did
not, nor the errors
as to the natures and wills of Christ. In the number of its
sacraments, in
its veneration for the
Blessed Virgin,
in its belief
in the Mass and in
Purgatory, in its
obedience to the
See of Rome,
the
creed
of the early
Irish
Church
was the Catholic
creed
of today (see
CELTIC RITE). Abroad as well as at home
Irish
Christian
zeal was
displayed. In 563
St. Columba, a native of Donegal, accompanied by a few
companions, crossed the sea to Caledonia and founded a
monastery on
the desolate island of
Iona.
Fresh arrivals came from
Ireland; the
monastery with
Columba as its
abbot was soon
a flourishing institution, from which the Dalriadian
Scots in the south and the Piets beyond the Grampians
were evangelized; and when
Columba died in 597,
Christianity
had been preached and received in every district in Caledonia, and in
every island along its west coast. In the next century
Iona had so
prospered that its
abbot, St.
Adamnan, wrote in excellent Latin the "Life of
St. Columba", the best biography of which the
Middle Ages can
boast. From Iona
had gone south the
Irish Aidan and his
Irish companions to compete with and even exceed in
zeal the Roman
missionaries under St. Augustine, and to evangelize Northumbria, Mercia,
and Essex; and if
Irish
zeal had
already been displayed in
Iona, equal
zeal was now
displayed on the desolate isle of
Lindisfarne.
Nor was this all. In 590
St.
Columbanus, a student of
Bangor, accompanied by twelve companions, arrived in
France and
established the
monastery of
Luxeuil,
the
parent
of many monasteries,
then laboured at Bregenz, and finally founded the
monastery of
Bobbio,
which as a centre of
knowledge and
piety was long
the light of northern
Italy. And
meantime his friend and fellow-student
St. Gall laboured with conspicuous success in
Switzerland,
St. Fridolin
along the Rhine,
St. Fiacre near
Meaux,
St. Kilian at
Wurzburg, St. Livinus in Brabant,
St. Fursey on
the Marne, St. Cataldus in southern
Italy. And when
Charlemagne
reigned (771-814),
Irishmen were at his court, "men incomparably skilled in
human learning".
In the civil history of the period only a few facts stand out
prominently. About 560, in consequence of a quarrel with the ardri
Diarmuid about the
right
of
sanctuary,
St. Columba and Rhodanus (Reudan) of Lorrha publicly
cursed
Tara, an unpatriotic act which dealt a fatal blow at the prospect of a
strong central government by blighting with maledictions its
acknowledged seat. Nearly thirty years later the National Convention of
Drumceat restrained the insolence and curtailed the
privileges of the bards. In 684
Ireland was invaded by the King of Northumbria, though no
permanent conquest followed. And in 697 the last Feis of Tara was held,
at which, through the influence of
Adamnan,
women were
interdicted from taking part in actual battle. At the same time the
ardri Finactha, at the instance of St. Moling, renounced for himself and
his successors the Boru tribute. As the eighth century neared its close,
religion and learning still flourished; but unexpected
dangers approached and a new enemy came, before whose assaults
monk and
monastery and
saint and scholar disappeared.
These invaders were the
Danes
from the coasts of Scandinavia.
Pagans and
pirates, they loved
plunder and war,
and both on land and sea were formidable foes. Like the fabled Fomorians
of earlier times they had a genius for devastation. Descending from
their ships along the coast of western
Europe, they
murdered the
inhabitants or made them captives and
slaves.
In
Ireland as elsewhere they attacked the
monasteries and
churches,
desecrated the
altars, carried away the gold and silver vessels, and
smoking ruins and
murdered monks
attested the fury of their assaults.
Armagh and
Bangor,
Kildare
and
Clonmacnoise,
Iona and
Lindisfarne thus fell before their fury. Favoured by disunion among
the
Irish chiefs, they crept inland, effected permanent
settlements at Waterford and
Limerick
and established a powerful kingdom at
Dublin; and,
had their able chief Turgesius lived much longer, they might perhaps
have subdued the whole island. For a century after his death in 845
victory and defeat alternated in their
wars; but they
clung tenaciously to their seaport possessions, and kept the
neighbouring
Irish in cruel bondage. They were, however, signally
defeated by the Ardri Malachy in 980, and
Dublin
was compelled to pay him tribute. But, able as Malachy was, an abler
man
soon supplanted him in the supreme position. Step by step Brian Boru had
risen from being chief of Thomond to be undisputed ruler of
Munster. Its chiefs were his tributaries and his allies;
the
Danes
he had repeatedly chastised, and in 1002 he compelled Malachy to
abdicate
in his favour.
It was a bitter humiliation for Malachy thus to lay down the sceptre
which for 600 years had been in the hands of his
family. It gave
Ireland, however, the greatest of her high-kings and
unbroken peace for some years.
War
came when the elements of discontent coalesced. Brian had irritated
Leinster by reviving the Boru tribute; he had crushed the
Danes;
and these, with the
Danes
of the Isle of Man and those of
Sweden
and the
Scottish
Isles, joined together, and on
Good Friday,
1014, the united strength of
Danes
and Leinstermen faced Brian's army at Clontarf. The victory gained by
the latter was great; but it was dearly bought by the loss of Brian as
well as his son and grandson. The century and a half which followed was
a weary waste of turbulence and
war. Brian's
usurpation encouraged others to ignore the claims of descent. O'Loughlin
and O'Neill in the North, O'Brien in the South, and O'Connor beyond the
Shannon fought for the national
throne with equal energy and persistence; and as one set
of disputants disappeared, others replaced them, equally determined to
prevail. The lesser chiefs were similarly engaged. This ceaseless strife
completed the work begun by the
Danes.
Under native and
Christian chiefs
churches were destroyed,
church lands appropriated by
laymen,
monastic
schools
deserted,
lay abbots
ruled at
Armagh and elsewhere.
Bishops
were consecrated
without sees and conferred orders for money, there was chaos in
church government and corruption everywhere. In a series
of synods
beginning with Rathbreasail (1118) and including
Kells,
at which the pope's
legate
presided, many salutary enactments were passed, and for the first time
diocesan
episcopacy was
established. Meanwhile,
St. Malachy,
Archbishop of
Armagh, had
done very remarkable work in his own
diocese
and elsewhere. His early death in 1148 was a heavy blow to the cause of
church reform. Nor could so many
evils
be cured in a single
life, or by the labours of a single
man;
and in spite of his efforts and the efforts of others the
decrees
of synods were
often flouted, and the new
diocesan
boundaries ignored.
THE ANGLO-NORMANS
In
Henry II of
England an
unexpected reformer appeared. The murderer of Thomas a' Becket seemed
ill-fitted for the role, but he undertook it, and in the first year of
his reign (1154) he procured a
Bull from the
English-born Pope
Adrian IV authorizing him to proceed to
Ireland "to check the torrent of wickedness to reform
evil manners,
to sow the seeds of
virtue." The many troubles of his extensive kingdom thwarted his
plans for years. But in 1168 Macmurrogh, King of Leinster, driven from
his kingdom sought Henry's aid, and then Adrian's
Bull was
remembered. a first
contingent of Anglo-Normans came to
Ireland in 1169 under Fitzgerald, a stronger force under
Strongbow (de Clare, Earl of
Pembroke)
in 1170, and in 1171 Henry himself landed at Waterford and proceeded to
Dublin, where
he spent the winter, and received the submission of all the
Irish chiefs, except those of Tyrconnell and Tyrowen.
These submissions, however, aggravated rather than lessened existing
ills. The
Irish chiefs submitted to Henry as to a powerful ardri,
still preserving their
privileges and
rights under
Brehon law. Henry, on his side, regarded them as vassals holding the
lands of their tribes by military service and in accordance with
feudal
law.
Thus a conflict between the clan system and
feudalism
arose. Exercising his supposed
rights, Henry
divided the country into so many great fiefs, giving
Meath
to be Lacy, Leinster to Strongbow, while de Courcy was encouraged to
conquer Ulster, and deCogan Connaught. At a later
date
the deBurgos settled in
Galway, the
Fitzgeralds in
Kildare
and Desmond, the Butlers in
Ossory. Discord
enfeebled the capacity of the
Irish chiefs for resistance; nor were kernes and
gallowglasses equal to mail-clad
knights, nor
the battle-axe to the Norman lance, and in a short
time
large tracts had passed from native to foreign hands.
The new Anglo-Irish lords soon outgrew the position of
English subjects, and to the natives became tyrannical
and overbearing. Ignoring the many evidences of culture in
Ireland, her Romanesque architecture, her high crosses,
her illuminated
manuscripts, her shrines and
crosiers,
the scholars that had shed lustre on her
schools, the
saints that had
hallowed her fame throughout
Europe —
ignoring all these, they despised the
Irish as rude and barbarous, despised their language,
their laws
their dress, their arms; and, while not recognizing the
Brehon law,
they refused
Irishmen the status of
English subjects or the protection of
English
law.
At last,
despairing of union among their own chiefs, or of
justice from
Irish viceroy or
English king, the oppressed
Irish invited Edward Bruce from
Scotland. In
1315 he landed in
Ireland and was
crowned king.
Successful at first, his allies beyond the Shannon were almost
annihilated in the battle of
Athenry
(1316); and two years later he was himself defeated and slain at
Faughart. His ruin had been effected by a combination of the Anglo-Irish
lords, and this still further inflated their
pride. Titles
rewarded them.
Birmingham became Lord of
Athenry
and Earl of Louth, Fitzgerald Earl of
Kildare,
his kinsman Earl of Desmond, de Burgo Earl of Ulster,
Butler
Earl of Ormond. But these titles only increased their insolence and
disloyalty. Favoured by the weakness of the viceroy's government the
native chiefs recovered most of the ground they had lost.
Meanwhile the De
Burgos in Connaught changed their name to Burke, and became
Irish chiefs; many others followed their example; even
the ennobled Butlers and Fitzgeralds used the
Irish language, dress, and customs, and were as turbulent
as the worst of the native chiefs. To recall these colonists to their
allegiance the Statute of Kilkenny made it penal to use
Irish customs, language, or
law,
forbade intermarriage with the mere
Irish, or the conferring of
benefices on
the native-born. But the barriers of race could not be maintained, and
the intermarrying of
Irish with Anglo-Irish went on. The long
war with
France,
followed by the
Wars
of the Roses, diverted the attention of
England from
Irish affairs; and the viceroy, feebly supported from
England, was
too weak to chastise these powerful lords or put
penal laws in
force. The hostility of native chiefs was bought off by the payment of
"black rents". The loyal colonists confined to a small district near
Dublin, called
"the Pale", shivered behind its encircling rampart; and when the
sixteenth century dawned,
English power in
Ireland had almost disappeared. Those within the Pale
were impoverished by grasping officials and by the payment of "black
rents". Outside the Pale the country was held by sixty chiefs of
Irish descent and thirty of
English descent, each making peace or
war as he
pleased. Lawlessness and irreligion were everywhere. The
clergy of
Irish quarrelled with those of
English descent; the
religious houses
were corrupt, their
priors and
abbots great landholders with seats in Parliament, and more attached
to secular than to
religious concerns; the great
monastic
schools had
disappeared, the greatest of them all,
Clonmacnoise, being in ruins; preaching was neglected except by the
mendicant orders,
and these were utterly unable to cope with the disorders which
prevailed.
THE TUDOR PERIOD
Occupied with
English and Continental affairs,
Henry VIII, in
the beginning of his reign, bestowed but little attention on
Ireland, and not until he was a quarter of a century on
the
throne were
Irish affairs taken seriously in hand. The king was then
in middle age, no longer the defender of the
Faith
against Luther,
but, like Luther,
a rebel against
Rome; no longer generous or attractive in
character, but rather a cruel capricious tyrant whom it was
dangerous to provoke and fatal to disobey. In
England his
hands were reddened with the best blood of the land; and in
Ireland the
fate
of the Fitzgeralds, following the rebellion of Silken Thomas, struck
Irish and Anglo-Irish alike with such terror that all
hastened to make peace. O'Neill, renouncing the inheritance of his
ancestors, became Earl of Tyrone; Burke became Earl of Clanrickard,
O'Brien Earl of Thomond, Fitzpatrick Lord of
Ossory;
the Earl of Desmond and the other Anglo-Irish nobles were pardoned all
their offences, and at a Parliament in
Dublin
(1541) Anglo-Irish and
Irish attended. And Henry, who like his predecessors had
been hitherto but Lord of
Ireland (Dominus Hiberniae), was now unanimously
given the higher title of king. This Parliament also passed the Act of
Supremacy by which Henry was invested with
spiritual
jurisdiction, and, in substitution for the
pope,
proclaimed head of the
Church. As the
proctors of the
clergy refused to agree to this measure, the irate monarch deprived
them of the
right
of voting, and in revenge confiscated
church lands and suppressed
monasteries, in
some cases shed the blood of their inmates, in the remaining cases sent
them forth homeless and
poor.
These severities, however, did not win the people from their
faith. The
apostate
friar
Browne, whom Henry made
Archbishop of
Dublin, the
apostate
Staples, Bishop
of Meath, and
Henry himself, stained with so many adulteries and
murders, had
but
poor
credentials as preachers of reform; whatever time-serving chiefs might
do, the clergy
and people were unwilling to make Henry
pope, or to
subscribe to the varying tenets of his
creed.
His successor, an ardent
Protestant,
tried hard to make
Ireland
Protestant, but
the sickly plant which he sowed was uprooted by the
Catholic Mary,
and at Elizabeth's
accession all
Ireland was
Catholic.
Like her father Henry, the young queen was a cruel and capricious
tyrant, and in her
war with Shane O'Neill, the ablest of the
Irish chiefs, she did not
scruple
to employ assassins. She was neither a sincere
Protestant nor
a willing persecutor of the
Catholics; and
though she re-enacted the Act of Supremacy and passed the Act of
Uniformity, making
Protestantism the state
creed,
she refused to have these acts rigorously enforced. But when the
pope and the
Spanish king declared against her, and the
Irish
Catholics were
found in alliance with both, she yielded to her
ministers and
concluded, with them, that a
Catholic was
necessarily a disloyal subject. Henceforth
toleration gave way to
persecution.
The tortures inflicted on O'Hurley,
Archbishop of
Cashel, and
O'Hely,
Bishop of
Mayo,
the Spaniards
murdered in
cold blood at Smerwick, the desolation of
Munster during Desmond's rebellion, showed how cruel her
rule could be. Far more formidable than the rebellion of Desmond, or
even than that of Shane O'Neill, was the rebellion of
Hugh
O'Neill, Early of Tyrone. No such able
Irish chief had appeared since Brian Boru. Cool,
cautious, vigilant, he laid his plans with care and
knew how to
wait patiently for results. Never impulsive, never boastful, wise in
council and wary in speech, from his long residence in
London in his
youth he learned dissimulation, and was as crafty as the craftiest
English
minister.
Repeatedly he foiled the queen's diplomatists in council as he did her
generals in the field, and at the Yellow Ford (1598) gained the greatest
victory ever won in
Ireland over
English arms. What he might have done had he been loyally
supported it is hard to say. For nearly ten years he continued the
war; he
continued it after his
Spanish allies had brought upon him the disaster of
Kinsale; after his chief assistant,
O'Donnell, had been struck down by an assassin's hand;
after Carew had subdued
Munster, and Mountjoy had turned Ulster into a
desert; after
the
Irish chiefs had gone over to the enemy. And when he
submitted it was only on condition of being guaranteed his titles and
lands; and by that
time
Elizabeth, who
hated him so much and so longed for his destruction, had breathed
her last.
UNDER THE STUARTS
James I (1603-25) was the first of the Stuart line, and from the son
of Mary Stuart
the
Irish
Catholics
expected much. They were doomed, however, to an early disappointment.
The cities which rejoiced that "Jezabel was
dead", and that now they could practise their
religion openly, were warned by Mountjoy that James was a
good
Protestant and as such would have no
toleration of popery.
Salisbury, who had poisoned the
mind
of the queen against the
Catholics, was
equally successful with her successor, with the result that
persecution
continued. Proclamations were issued ordering the
clergy to quit
the kingdom; those who remained were
hunted
down; O'Devany,
Bishop of Down,
and others were done to death. The Acts of Supremacy and uniformity were
rigorously enforced. The Act of Oblivion, under which participants in
the late rebellion were pardoned, was often forgotten or ignored.
English
law,
which for the first time was extended to all
Ireland, was used by corrupt officials to oppress rather
than to protect the people. The Earl of Tyrone and the Early of
Tyroconnell (Rory
O'Donnell) was so spied upon and worried by
false charges
of disloyalty that they fled the country,
believing that
their lives were in danger; and to all their pleas for
justice the
king's response was to
slander their
characters and confiscate their lands. It is indeed
true that
Irish juries found the earls guilty of high
treason,
and an
Irish Parliament, representing all
Ireland, attained them. But these results were obtained
by carefully packing the juries, and by the
creation
of small boroughs which sent creatures of the king to represent them in
Parliament. And the
Catholic members acquiesced under threat of having enacted a fresh
batch of penal laws.
Thus, aided by corrupt juries and a complaisant Parliament, James I was
enabled to plant the confiscated lands of Ulster with
English Protestants
and Scotch
Presbyterians. Other plantations had fared badly. That of King's and
Queen's County in Mary's reign had decayed; and the plantation of
Munster after the Desmond
war had been
swept away in the tide of O'Neill's victories. The plantation of Ulster
was more thorough and effective than either of these. Whole districts
were given to the settlers, and these, supported by a
Protestant
Government, soon grew into a powerful and prosperous colony, while the
despoiled Catholics,
driven from the richer to the poorer lands, looked helplessly on, hating
those colonists for whose sake they had been despoiled.
Under the new king, Charles I (1625-49), the policy of
persecution and
plantation was continued. Under pretence of advancing the public
interest and increasing the king's revenue, a crowd of
hungry adventurers spread themselves over the land, inquiring into the
title by which lands were held. With venal judges, venal juries, and
sympathetic officials to aid them,
good titles were declared bad, and lands seized, and the
adventurers were made sharers in the spoil. The O'Byrnes were thus
deprived of their lands in Wicklow, and similar confiscations and
plantations took place in Wexford, King's County, Leitrim, Westmeath,
and Longford.
Hoping
to protect themselves against such
robbery, the
Catholics
offered the king a subsidy of £120,000 in exchange for
certain
privileges called "graces", which among other things would give them
indefeasible titles to their estates. These "graces" granted by the
king, were to have the
sanction
of Parliament to make them
good. The money was paid, but the "graces" were withheld,
and the viceroy, Strafford, proceeded to Connaught to confiscate and
plant the whole province. The projected plantation was ultimately
abandoned; but the sense of
injustice
remained. All over the country were insecurity, anxiety, unrest, and
disaffection;
Irish and Anglo-Irish were equally menaced. Seeing the
futility of appealing to a helpless Parliament, a despotic viceroy, or a
perfidious king, the nation took up arms.
To describe the rebellion as the "massacre of 1641" is
unjust. The
details of cruel
murders committed and horrible tortures inflicted by the rebels are
mischievously
untrue. On the other hand, it is
true that the
Protestants
suffered grievous wrong, and that many of them lost their lives,
exclusive of those who fell in
war. The
Catholics
wanted the planters' lands; when driven away in wintry weather, without
money, or food, or sufficient clothes, many planters perished of hunger
and cold. Others fell by the avenging hand of some infuriated
Catholic whom
they might have wronged in the days of their power. Many fell defending
their property
or the property
and lives of their friends. The plan of the rebel leaders, of whom Roger
Moore was chief, was to capture the garrison towns by a simultaneous
attack. But they failed to capture
Dublin
Castle, containing large stores of arms, owing to the imprudence of
Colonel MacMahon. He imparted the secret to a disreputable Irishman
named O'Connolly, who at once informed the Castle authorities, with the
result that the Castle defences were strengthened, and MacMahon and
others arrested and subsequently executed. In Ulster, however, the whole
open country and many towns fell into the rebels' hands, and
Munster and Connaught soon joined the rebellion, as did
the Catholics
of the Pale, unable to obtain any
toleration of their
religion, or security of their
property, or
even of their lives. Before the new year was far advanced the
Catholic
Bishops
declared the rebellion just, and the
Catholics
formed a confederation which, from its meeting place, was called the
"Confederation of Kilkenny". Composed of
clergy and
laity its
members swore
to be loyal to the king, to strive for the free exercise of their
religion, and to defend the lives, liberties, and
possessions of all who took the Confederate
oath. Supreme
executive authority was vested in a supreme council; there were
provincial councils also, all these bodies deriving their powers
from an elective body called the "General Assembly".
The Supreme Council exercised all the powers of government,
administered
justice, raised taxes, formed armies, appointed generals. One of the
best-known of these officers was General Preston, who commanded in
Leinster, having come from abroad with a
good supply of arms and ammunition, and with 500 trained
officers. A more remarkable
man
still was General
Owen Roe O'Neill, nephew of the great Earl of Tyrone, who took
command in Ulster, and whose defence of
Arras
against the
French
caused
him to be recognized as one of the first soldiers in
Europe. He
also, like Preston, brought officers, arms, and ammunition to
Ireland. At a later state came
Rinuccini, the
pope's
nuncio,
bringing with him a supply of money. Meanwhile, civil
war raged in
England between
king and Parliament; the Government at
Dublin, ill
supplied from across the Channel, was ill fitted to crush a powerful
rebellion, and, in 1646, O'Neill won the great victory of Benburb. But
the strength of which this victory was the outcome was counterbalanced
by elements of weakness. The
Catholics of
Ulster and those of the Pale did not agree; neither did Generals O'Neill
and Preston. The Supreme Council, with a feeble old man, Lord
Mountgarret, at its head, and four provincial generals instead of a
commander-in-chief, was ill-suited for the vigorous prosecution of a
war. Moreover,
the influence of the Marquis of Ormond was a fatal
cause of discord. A personal friend of the king, and
charged by him with the command of his army and with the conduct of
negotiations, a
Protestant with
Catholic friends on the Supreme Council, his desire ought to have
been to bring
Catholic and Royalist together. But his
hatred of the
Catholics was
such that he would grant them no terms, even when ordered to do so by
His Majesty. The
Catholics' professions of loyalty he despised, and his great
diplomatic abilities were used to sow dissensions in their councils and
to thwart their plans. Yet the Supreme Council, dominated by an
Ormondist faction, continued fruitless negotiations with him, agreed to
a cessation when they themselves were strong and their opponents weak,
and agreed to a peace with him in spite of the victory of Benburb, and
in spite of the remonstrances of the
nuncio and of
General O'Neill. Nor did they cease these relations with him even after
he had treacherously surrendered
Dublin
to the Parliament (1647), and left the country. On the contrary, they
still put faith
in him, entered into a fresh peace with him in 1648, and when he
returned to
Ireland as the Royalist viceroy they received him in
state at Kilkenny. In disgust, General O'Neill came to a temporary
agreement with the Parliamentary general, and
Rinuccini,
despairing of
Ireland, returned to
Rome.
The Civil War in
England was then over. The Royalists had been vanquished, the king
executed, the monarchy replaced by a commonwealth; and in August, 1649,
Oliver Cromwell came to
Ireland with 10,000 men. Ormond meanwhile had rallied his
supporters, and, with the greater part of the
Catholics of
Leinster,
Munster, and Connaught, the
Protestants of
the Pale and of
Munster, and great part of the Ulster
Presbyterians,
his strength was considerable. His obstinate bigotry would not allow him
to make terms with the Ulster army, and he thus lost the support of
General O'Neill at a critical
time.
Early in August he had been disastrously beaten by the
Puritan general
Jones, at Rathmines; in consequence he offered no opposition to
Cromwell's landing and made no attempt to relieve Drogheda. It was soon
captured by Cromwell and its garrison put to the sword. A month later
the same
fate
befell Wexford. Waterford repelled Cromwell's attack, and Clonmel and
Kilkenny offered him a stout resistance; but other towns were easily
captured, or
voluntarily surrendered; and when he left
Ireland, in May, 1650,
Munster and Leinster were in his hands. His successors,
Ireton and Ludlow, within two years reduced the remaining provinces.
Meanwhile Owen Roe
O'Neill had died after making terms with Ormond, but before meeting
with Cromwell. The
Catholic
Bishops,
however, repudiated Ormond, who then left
Ireland. Some negotiations subsequently between Lord
Clanricarde and the Duke of
Lorraine
came to nothing, and the long
war was ended
in which more than half the inhabitants of the country had lost their
lives.
In the beginning of the rebellion many Englishmen subscribed money to
put it down, stipulating in return for a share of the lands to be
forfeited, and thus
hatred of the
Catholics was mingled with
hope
of gain. The
English Parliament accepted the money on the terms
proposed, and the subscribers became known as "adventurers", because
they adventured their money on
Irish land. When the rebellion was over, the problem was
to provide the lands promised, and also to provide lands for the
soldiers who were in arrears of pay. It was a difficult problem. There
was an Act for Settling
Ireland, and Act for the Satisfaction of Adventurers in
Lands and Arrears due to the soldiers and other public
Debts;
there was a High Court of
Justice
to determine who were guilty of rebellion; there were soldiers who had
got special terms when laying down their arms; and there were those who
had never had a share in the rebellion, but had merely lived in the
rebel quarters during the
war. The best
of the lands east of the Shannon were for the adventurers and soldiers,
the dispossessed being driven to Connaught. To determine where the
planters were to be settled and where the transplanted, and what amount
they were to get, there were commissions, and committees, and surveys,
and court of claims. Nor was it till 1658 that the Cromwellian
Settlement was complete, and even then many of the transplanted
protested their innocence of any share in the rebellion, and many of the
adventurers and soldiers complained that they had been defrauded of
their due. In the amount of suffering it entailed and wrong inflicted
the whole scheme far exceeded the plantation of Ulster. But it failed to
make
Ireland either
English or
Protestant, and
in setting up a system of alien landlords and native tenants it
proved the
curse
of
Ireland and the fruitful
parent
of many ills.
To the
Irish Cromwell's death in 1658 was welcome news, all the
more so because Charles II (1660-85) was restored. For their attachment
to the cause of the latter they had suffered much; and now the
Catholic
landlord in his Connaught cabin and the
Irish soldier abroad felt equally assured that the
recovery of their lands and homes was at hand. They soon learned that
Stuart gratitude meant little and that Stuart promises were written on
sand. Had Charles been free to act, the Cromwellian Settlement would not
have endured; for he
loved the
Catholics much
more than he loved
the Puritans.
But the planters were a dangerous body to provoke, sustained as they
were by the
English Parliament and by the king's chief adviser,
Ormond, who indeed
hated the Cromwellians, but
hated the
Catholics much
more. Some attempt, however, was made to
right
the wrong that had been done, and by the
Act of Settlement,
six hundred innocent
Catholics were
restored to their lands. Many more would have been restored had the
court of claims been allowed to continue its sittings. The irate
planters wanted to
know what was to become of them if the despoiled papist thus back
their lands; utterings threats and even breaking out into rebellion they
alarmed the king. Under Ormond's advice the Act of Explanation was then
passed (1665) and the court of claims set up by the
Act of Settlement
closed its doors, though three thousand cases remained untried. Thus the
Cromwellians who had
murdered the
king's father were, with few exceptions, left unmolested while the
Catholics were
abandoned to their
fate.
Before the rebellion two-thirds of the lands of the country were in the
hands of the latter; after the Act of Explanation scarcely one-third was
left them, a sweeping confiscation especially in the case of men who
were denied even the
justice of a
trial. After this the
toleration of the
Catholics was
but a small concession. Not, however, during the whole of Charles's
reign; for Ormond, now a duke, filled the office of viceroy for many
years; he at least would maintain
Protestant
ascendancy, and exclude the
Catholics from
the bench and the
corporations. In the
English Council and in Parliament he bitterly attacked
and defeated the proposed revision of the
Act of Settlement.
He does not appear to have had any sympathy with the
lying
tales of Oates and Bedloe, or with the storm of
persecution
which followed, and he disapproved of the judicial
murder of
Oliver Plunket.
But his aversion from the
Catholics
continued, and was in no way chilled by advancing age. One of the last
acts of Charles was to dismiss him from office as an enemy to
toleration. The king himself soon after died in the
Catholic
Faith, and
James II, an avowed
Catholic, succeeded, the first
Catholic
sovereign since the death of
Mary Tudor.
Religious
toleration had then made little progress throughout
Europe, and
England,
aggressively
Protestant, looked with special disfavour on
Catholicism. In
these circumstances James II should have moved with caution. He should
have taken account of national prejudices and the temper of the times,
and respected established institutions; while conscientiously practising
his own
religion, he should have sought for no favour for it, at
least until the nation was in a more tolerant and yielding mood. Instead
of this, and in defiance of
English bigotry and
English
law,
he appointed
Catholics to high civil and military offices, opened the
corporations and the
universities to
them, had a papal
nuncio at his court, and issued a declaration of
Indulgence
suspending the
penal laws. When the
Protestant
bishops refused
to have this declaration read from their
pulpits he
prosecuted them. Their acquittal was the signal for revolt, and James,
deserted
by all classes, fled to
France leaving
the
English
throne to William of Orange, whom the
Protestants
invited from
Holland. Meanwhile sweeping changes had been effected in
Ireland by the viceroy, the Duke of Tyreconnell, a
militant Catholic
and a special favourite of King James.
Protestant
magistrates, sheriffs, and judges had been displaced to make room for
Catholics; the
army and
corporations underwent similar changes; and the
Act of Settlement
was to be repealed. Timid
Protestants
trembling for their lives fled to
England; others
formed centres of resistance to the viceroy in
Munster and Connaught, and, in Ulster,
Derry and
Enniskillen expelled the
Catholics and
closed their gates against the viceroy's troops. This was rebellion, for
James, though repudiated in
England, was
still King of
Ireland. In March, 1689, he arrived at Kinsale from
France to
subdue these rebels. But the task was beyond his strength.
Derry and Enniskillen defied all his attacks, and a
Wiliamite force, issuing from the latter town, almost annihilated a
Jacobite army at Newton-Butler.
Disaffection became general among the
Protestants
when the
Irish Parliament repealed the
Act of Settlement
and attained eighteen hundred
persons who had
fled to England
through
fear;
and when, in August, a Williamite force of twenty thousand landed at
Carrickfergus, the
Protestants everywhere welcomed it. This great force, however,
effected nothing, and in June, 1690, William himself came and
encountered James on the banks of the Boyne. The battle was fought on 1
July, and resulted in the defeat of James. Hastening to
Dublin
he told the Duchess of Tyrconnell that the
Irish soldiers had shamefully run away, to which the lady
is said to have replied; "But your Majesty won the race." The retort was
just. The
Irish cavalry behaved with conspicuous gallantry, as did
the greater part of the infantry. Some of the latter did run away, but
not so fast as James himself, who fled taking the ablest of the
Irish generals,
Sarsfield, with
him. That the
Irish were no cowards was soon shown by their defence of
Athlone and the still more
glorious
defence of
Limerick.
After being compelled to raise the siege of the latter city, King
Williams left for
England, committing the
civil authority
to lords justices and the military command to General Ginkel. In the
following year Ginkel captured Athlone, owing to the carelessness of the
Jacobite general, St-Ruth; and on 12 July, 1691, the last
great battle of the
war was fought at Aughrim. The
Irish were not inferior to their opponents in numbers,
discipline, or valour, and though overmatched in heavy guns they had
the advantage of position. Nor was St-Ruth inferior to Ginkel in
military capacity. His dispositions were excellent, and after several
hours' desperate fighting Ginkel was driven back at every point. Just
then St-Ruth was struck down by a cannon ball. Panic-stricken, the
Irish fell back, allowing their opponents to advance and
inflict on them a crushing defeat. The surrender of
Galway and
Sligo followed, and in a short
time
Ginkel and his whole army were before the walls of
Limerick.
When he had effectually surrounded it and made a breach in the walls,
further resistance was seen to be hopeless, and
Sarsfield and
his friends made terms. By the end of the year the
war was over,
King William had triumphed, and
Protestant
ascendancy was secure.
THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
By the Treaty of
Limerick
the Catholic
soldiers of King James were pardoned, protected against forfeiture of
their estates, and were free to go abroad if they chose. All
Catholics might
substitute an oath
of allegiance for the
oath of supremacy,
and were to have such
privileges "as were consistent with the
laws of
Ireland, or as they did enjoy in the reign of Charles
II". King William also promised to have the
Irish Parliament grant a further relaxation of the
penal laws in
force. This treaty, however, was soon torn to shreds, and in spite of
William's
appeals
the
Irish Parliament refused to ratify it, and embarked on
fresh penal legislation. Under these new
laws
Catholics were
excluded from Parliament, from the bench and bar, from the army and
navy, from all civil offices, from the
corporations, and even from the corporate towns. They could not have
Catholic
schools at home
or attend foreign
schools, or inherit landed
property, or
hold land under lease, or act as executors or
administrators, or have arms or ammunition, or a horse worth £5.
Neither could they bury their dead in
Catholic ruins,
or make pilgrimages
to
holy
wells, or observe
Catholic holidays. They could not intermarry with the
Protestants,
the clergyman
assisting at such
marriages being liable to death. The wife of a
Catholic
landlord turning
Protestant got separate maintenance; the son turning
Protestant got
the whole estate; and the
Catholic
landlord having only
Catholic
children was
obliged at death to divide his estate among his children in equal
shares. All the
regular clergy,
as well as bishops
and
vicars-general should quit the kingdom. The
secular clergy
might remain, but must be registered, nor could they have on their
churches either steeple or
bell.
This was the Penal Code, elaborated through nearly half a century with
patience, and care, and ingenuity, perhaps the most
infamous code
ever elaborated by civilized
man.
Such legislation does not generate conviction, and, in spite of all,
the Catholics
clung to their
Faith.
Deprived of schools
at home, the young
clerical student sought the halls of Continental
colleges,
and being ordained
returned to
Ireland, disguised perhaps as a sailor and carried in a
smuggler's craft. And in secrecy and obscurity he preached, taught,
lived, and died, leaving another generation equally
persecuted to
carry on the
good fight. Poverty was his portion, and frequently the
prison and the
scaffold; and yet, while
Protestantism
made no progress,
Catholicism more than held its own. In 1728 the
Catholics were
to the Protestants
as five to one, and half a century later Young calculated that to make
Ireland
Protestant
would take 4000 years. Indeed the
Protestant
clergy made no
serious effort to
convert
the Catholics;
nor was this the object of the Penal Code. Passed by
Protestants
possessing confiscated
Catholic lands,
it object was to impoverish, to debase, to
degrade,
to leave the despoiled
Catholics
incapable of rebellion and
ignorant of
their wrongs. In this respect it succeeded. A few
Catholics, with
the connivance of some friendly
Protestants,
managed to hold their estates; the remainder gradually sank to the level
of cottiers and day-labourers, living in cabins, clothed in rags, always
on the verge of famine. Shut out from every position of influence,
rackrented by absentee landlords, insulted by grasping agents and
drunken
squireens, paying
tithes to a
Church
they abhorred, hating the Government which oppressed them and the
law which made
them
slaves,
their
condition was the worst of any peasantry in
Europe. From a
land blighted by such
laws the
enterprising and
ambitious fled, seeking an outlet for their enterprise and
ambition in
happier
lands. In the
time
of Elizabeth and James, and still more in Cromwell's
time,
thousands joined the army of
Spain. But in
the latter half of the seventeenth century the stream was diverted to
France, then
the greatest military power in
Europe. Thither
Sarsfield and
his men went after the fall of
Limerick,
and in the fifty years which followed 450,000
Irish died in the service of
France. They
fought and fell in
Spain and Italy,
in the passes of the Alps, in the streets of
Cremona, at
Ramillies and Malplaquet, at Blenheim and Fontenoy.
Irishmen were marshals of
France; an
Irishman commanded the armies of
Maria Theresa;
another the army of
Russia; and there were
Irish statesmen, generals, and ambassadors all over
Europe. Beyond
the Atlantic,
Irish had settled in
Pennsylvania
and Maryland,
in Kentucky and
Carolina and the New England states;
Irish names were appended to the Declaration of
Independence; and
Irish soldiers fought throughout the War of Independence.
Now were soldiers and statesmen the only
Irish exiles whom
penal laws had
sent abroad. The decay of
schools and
colleges
continued from the eleventh to the sixteenth century; nor did
Ireland in that period produce a single great scholar,
except Duns Scotus,
who was partly
educated broad. Any
hope
of a revival of learning in the sixteenth century was blasted by the
suppression of
monasteries and the
penal laws;
early in the seventeenth century, however,
Irish
colleges
were already established at
Louvain,
Salamanca, and
Seville, at
Lisbon, Paris,
and Rome. In
these
colleges
the brightest
Irish intellects learned and taught, and
Colgan and
O'Clery, Lynch and
Rothe, Wadding
and Keating recalled the greatest
glories
of their country's past. At home
Trinity College had been established (1593) to wean the
Irish from "Popery and other ill qualities"' but the
Catholics held
aloof, and either went abroad or frequented the few
Catholic
schools left.
The children of the
poor, avoiding the
Protestant
schools, met in
the open air, with only some friendly hedge to protect them from the
blast; but they met in
fear
and trembling, for the hedge-school and its master were proscribed. Thus
was the
lamp
of learning kept burning during the long night of the penal times.
In the
Irish Parliament meanwhile a spirit of independence
appeared. As the Parliament of the Pale it had been so often used for
factious purposes that in 1496 Poyning's
Law was passed, providing that henceforth no
Irish Parliament could meet, and no
law
could be proposed, without the previous
consent
of both the
Irish and
English Privy Councils. Further, the
English Parliament claimed the
right to
legislate for
Ireland; and in the
laws
prohibiting the importation of
Irish cattle (1665), and
Irish woollen manufactures (1698), and that dealing with
the
Irish forfeited estates (1700), it asserted its supposed
right.
The
Irish Parliament, dominated by bigotry and self-interest,
had not the courage
to protest, and when one member, Molyneux, did, the
English Parliament condemned him, and ordered his book to
be burned by the common hangman. Moreover, it passed an Act in 1719
expressly declaring that it had power to legislate for
Ireland, taking away also the appellate
jurisdiction of
the
Irish House of Lords. The fight made by Swift against
Wood's halfpence showed that, though Molyneux was dead, his
spirit lived; Lucas continued the fight, and Grattan in
1782 obtained legislative independence.
England was
then beaten by the
American colonies; an
Irish volunteer force had been raised to defend
Ireland against a possible invasion, and it seems
certain that legislative independence was won less by
Grattan's eloquence than by the swords of the Volunteers. These events
favoured the growth of
toleration. The
Catholics, in sympathizing with Grattan and in subscribing money to
equip the Protestant Volunteers, earned the goodwill of the Protestant
Nationalists; in consequence the
penal laws were
less rigorously enforced, and from the middle of the century penal
legislation ceased. In 1771 came the turn of the tide, when
Catholics were
allowed to hold reclaimed bog under lease. The grudging concession was
followed in 1774 by an Act substituting an
oath of
allegiance for the
oath of supremacy; in 1778 by an Act enabling
Catholics to
hold all lands under lease; and in 1782 by a further Act allowing them
to erect Catholic
schools, with
the permission of the
Protestant
bishop of the
diocese, to own
a horse worth more than £5, and to assist at Mass without being
compelled to accuse the officiating
priest. Nor
were Catholic
bishops any
longer compelled to quit the kingdom, nor
Catholic
children specially rewarded if they turned
Protestant. Not
for ten years was there any further concession, and then an Act was
passed allowing
Catholics to erect
schools without
seeking Protestant
permission, admitting
Catholics to
the Bar, and legalizing
marriages between
Protestants and
Catholics. Much
more important was the Act of 1793 giving the
Catholics the
Parliamentary and municipal franchise, admitting them to the
universities
and to military and civil offices, and removing all restrictions in
regard to the tenure of land. They were still excluded from Parliament,
from the inner Bar, and from a few of the higher civil and military
offices.
Always in favour of
religious liberty, Grattan would have swept away every
vestige of the Penal code. But, in 1782, he mistakenly thought that his
work was done when legislative independence was conceded. He forgot that
the executive was still left independent of Parliament, answerable only
to the
English ministry; and that, with rotten boroughs
controlled by a few great
families, with
an extremely limited franchise in the counties, and with pensioners and
placement filling so many seats, the
Irish Parliament was but a mockery of representation.
Like Grattan, Flood and Charlemont favoured Parliamentary reform, but,
unlike him, they were opposed to
Catholic
concessions. As for Foster and Fitzgibbon, who led the forces of
corruption and bigotry, they opposed every attempt at reform, and
consented to the Act of 1793 only under strong pressure from Pitt
and Dundas. These
English
ministers,
alarmed at the progress of
French
revolutionary principles in
Ireland, fearing a foreign invasion, wished to have the
Catholics
contented. In 1795 further concessions seemed imminent. In that year an
illiberal viceroy, Lord Westmoreland, was replaced by the liberal-minded
Lord Fitzwilliam, who came understanding it to be the wish of Pitt that
the Catholic
claims were to be conceded. He at once dismissed from office a rapacious
office-holder named Beresford, so powerful that he was called the "King
of
Ireland"; he refused to consult Lord Chancellor
Fitzgibbon or Foster, the Speaker; he took Grattan and Ponsonby into his
confidence, and declared his
intention to support Grattan's bill admitting
Catholics to
Parliament. The high hopes raised by these events were dashed to the
earth when Fitzwilliam was suddenly recalled, after having been allowed
to go so far without any protest from
Portland,
the home secretary, or from the premier, Pitt. The latter, disliking the
Irish Parliament because it had rejected his commercial
propositions in 1785, and disagreed with him on the regency in 1789,
already mediated a legislative union, and felt that the admission of
Catholics to
Parliament would thwart his plans. He was probably also influenced by
Beresford, who had powerful friends in
England, and by
the king, whom Fitzgibbon had mischievously convinced that to admit
Catholics to
Parliament would be to violate his
coronation
oath. Possibly,
other
causes concurred with these to bring about the sudden and
disastrous change which filled
Catholic
Ireland with grief, and the whole nation with dismay.
The new viceroy, Lord Camden, was instructed to conciliate the
Catholic
bishops by
setting up a
Catholic
college
for the training of
Irish
priests;
this was done by the establishment of
Maynooth College.
But he was to set his face against all Parliamentary reform and all
Catholic
concessions. These things he did with a
will. He at once restored Beresford to office and Foster
and Fitzgibbon to favour, the latter being made Earl of Clare. And he
stirred up but too successfully the dying embers of sectarian
hate,
with the result that the Ulster factions, the
Protestant
"Peep-of-Day Boys" and the
Catholic
"Defenders", became embittered with a change of names. The latter,
turning to republican and revolutionary ways, joined the United
Irish
Society;
the former became merged in the recently formed Orange
Society,
taking its name from William of Orange and having
Protestant
ascendancy and
hatred of
Catholicism as its battle cries. Extending from Ulster, these rival
societies
brought into the other provinces the
curse
of sectarian strife. Instead of putting down both, the Government took
sides with the Orangemen; and, while their lawless acts were condoned,
the Catholics
were
hunted
down. An Arms' Act, an Insurrection Act, an Indemnity Act, a
suspension of the Habeas Corpus Act placed them outside the pale of
law.
An undisciplined soldiery, recruited from the Orange lodges, were than
let loose among them.
Martial
law,
free quarters, flogging, picketing, half-hanging, destruction of
Catholic
property and
life, outrages on
women followed,
until at last
Catholic blood was turned into flame. Then Wexford rose. Looking
back, it now seems
certain that, had Hoche landed at Bantry in 1796, had
even a small force landed at Wexford in 1798, or a few other counties
displayed the heroism of Wexford,
English power in
Ireland would, temporarily at least, have been destroyed.
But one county could not fight the British Empire, and the rebellion was
soon quenched in blood.
Camden's place was then given to Lord Cornwallis, who came to
Ireland for the express purpose of carrying a Legislative
Union. Foster refused to support him and joined the opposition.
Fitzgibbon, however, aided Cornwallis, and so did Castlereagh, who for
some time had discharged the
duties of chief
secretary in the absence of Mr. Pelham, and who was now formally
appointed to the office. And then began one of the most shameful
chapters in
Irish history. Even the corrupt
Irish Parliament was reluctant to vote away its
existence, and in 1799 the opposition was too strong for Castlereagh.
But Pitt directed him to persevere, and the great struggle went on. On
one side were eloquence and debating power,
patriotism, and public
virtue,
Grattan, Plunket, and Bushe, Foster, Fitzgerald, Ponsonby, and
Moore, a truly formidable combination. On the other side
were the baser elements of in Parliament, the needy, the spendthrift,
the meanly
ambitious, operated upon by Castlereagh, with the whole resources of
the British Empire at his command. The pensioners and placemen who voted
against him at once lost their places and pensions, the military officer
was refused promotion, the magistrate was turned off the bench. And
while anti-Unionists were unsparingly punished, the Unionists got lavish
rewards. The impecunious got well-paid sinecures; the briefless
barrister was made a judge or a commissioner; the rich
man,
ambitious of social distinction, got a peerage, and places and
pensions for his friends; and the owners of rotten boroughs to large
sums for their interests. The
Catholics were
promised emancipation in a united Parliament, and in consequence many
bishops, some
clergy, and a
few of the laity
supported the Union, not grudging to end an assembly so bigoted and
corrupt as the
Irish Parliament. By these means Castlereagh triumphed,
and in 1801 the United Parliament of Great Britain and
Ireland opened its doors.
SINCE THE UNION
The next quarter of a century was a period of baffled
hopes.
Anxious to stand well with the Government, Dr. Troy, the
Archbishop of
Dublin, had
been a strong advocate of the Union, and had induced nine of his brother
bishops to
concede to the king a veto on episcopal appointments. In return, he
wanted emancipation linked with the Union, and Castlereagh was not
averse; but Pitt was non-committal and vague, though the
Catholic
Unionists had no
doubt that he favoured immediate concession. Disappointment came
when nothing was done in the first session of the United Parliament, and
it was increased when Pitt resigned office and was succeeded by
Addington, a narrow-minded bigot. Cornwallis, however, assured Dr. Troy
that Pitt had resigned, unable to overcome the prejudices of the king,
and that he would never again take office if emancipation were not
conceded. Yet, in spite of this, he became premier in 1804, no longer an
advocate of emancipation but an opponent, pledged never again to raise
the question in Parliament, during the lifetime of the king. To this
pledge he was as faithful as he had been
false to his
former assurances; and when Fox presented the
Catholic
petition in 1805, Pitt opposed it. After 1806, when both Pitt and Fox
died, the Catholic
champion was Grattan, who had entered the British Parliament in 1805. In
the vain
hope
of conciliating opponents he was willing, in 1808, to concede the veto.
Dr. Troy and the higher
Catholics
acquiesced; but the other
bishops were
unwilling, and neither they nor the
clergy, still
less the people, wanted a state-paid
clergy or
state-appointed
bishops. The agitation of the question, however, did not cease, and
for many years it
distracted
Catholic plans and weakened
Catholic
effort. Further complications arose when, in 1814, the prefect of the
Propaganda,
Quarantotti, issued a
rescript
favouring the veto. He acted, however, beyond his powers in the absence
of Pius VII,
who was in France,
and when the pope
returned to Rome,
after the fall of
Napoleon, the
rescript was disavowed.
In these years the
Catholics badly
needed a leader. John Keogh, the able leader of 1793, was then old, and
Lords Fingall and Gormanstone, Mr. Scully and Dr. Dromgoole, were not
the men to grapple with great difficulties and powerful opponents. An
abler and more vigorous leader was required, one with less
faith in
petitions and protestations of loyalty. Such a leader was found in
Daniel
O'Connell, a
Catholic barrister whose first public appearance in 1800 was on an
anti-Unionist platform. A great lawyer and orator, a great debater, of
boundless courage
and resources, he took a prominent part on
Catholic
committees, and from 1810 he held the first place in
Catholic
esteem. Yet the
Catholic
cause advanced slowly, and, when Grattan died in 1820,
emancipation had not come. Nor would the House of Lords accept Plunket's
Bill of 1821, even though it passed the House of Commons and conceded
the veto. At last O'Connell determined to rouse the masses, and in 1823,
with the help of
Richard Lalor Sheil, he founded the
Catholic
Association. Its progress at first was slow, but gradually it gathered
strength. Dr.
Murray, the new
Catholic
Archbishop of
Dublin, joined it, and
Dr. Doyle, the
great Bishop of
Kildare;
other bishops
followed; the
clergy and people also came in; and thus rose a great national
organization, supervising from its central office in
Dublin
subsidiary associations in every
parish;
maintained by a
Catholic rent; watching over local and national affairs,
discharging, as Mr. Canning described it, "all the functions of a
regular government, and having obtained a complete mastery and control
over the masses of the
Irish people". The Association was suppressed in 1825 by
Act of Parliament; but O'Connell merely changed the name; and the New
Catholic
Association with its New
Catholic rent
continued the work of agitation as of old. Nor was this all. By the
Catholic Relief
Act of 1793 the forty-shilling freeholders obtained the franchise. These
freeholders, being so
poor,
were necessarily in the power of the landlords and were wont to be
driven to the pools like so many sheep. But now, protected by a powerful
association, and encouraged by the
priests and by
O'Connell, the freeholders broke their chains, and in Waterford, Louth,
Meath, and
elsewhere they voted for the nominees of the
Catholic
Association at elections, and in placing them at the head of the pool
humbled the landlords. When they returned O'Connell himself for Clare in
1828, the crisis had come. The Tory
ministers,
Welllington and Peel, would have still resisted; but the people were not
to be restrained: it must be concession or civil
war, and rather
than have the latter the
ministers
hauled down the flag of no surrender, and passed the
Catholic Relief
Bill of 1829. The forty-shilling freeholders were disfranchised, and
there were some vexations provisions excluding
Catholics from
a few of the higher civil and military offices, prohibiting
priests from
wearing
vestments outside their
churches,
bishops from
assuming the titles of their sees, regulars
form obtaining charitable
bequests.
In other respects
Catholics were placed on a level with other
denominations,
and at last were admitted within the pale of the constitution.
From that hour O'Connell was the uncrowned king of
Ireland. Where he led the people followed. They cheered
him when he praised Lord Anglesey and when he attacked him; when he
supported the Whigs and when he described them as "base, brutal and
bloody"; when he advocated the Repeal of the Union and when he abandoned
the Repeal agitation; and when, after long years of waiting for
concessions that never came, he again unfurled the flag of Repeal, they
flocked to hear him, and laughed or wept with him, responsive to his
every mood. Finally, to leave him free to devote his whole
time
to public affairs they subscribed yearly to the O'Connell tribute, given
him thus an income which never fell below £16,000 and often went far
beyond that figure. And yet the legislative results of nearly twenty
years of such devotion and
sacrifice were
poor.
The National
Education system, established in 1831, required much amendment
before it worked smoothly, and even now is far from being an ideal
system. The Commutation of Tithes Act only transferred the odium of
collection from the parson to the landlord, but gave
little relief to the people. The
Poor Law
system, though it often relieved
destitution, too often encouraged idleness and
immorality. And the
Corporation Act, while reforming a few of the
corporations, abolished many. Nor could anything be more complete
than the failure of the Repeal agitation. The explanation is not far to
seek. O'Connell had a wretched party, men without capacity or
patriotism. His
acceptance of offices for his friends and his alliances with the
Whigs was surely not a sound policy. And when he took up Repeal in
earnest he was already old, with the shadow of death upon him. Lastly,
as he neared the end, he lost the support of the Young Irelanders, the
most vigorous and capable section of his followers. These things
embittered his last days and hastened his death in 1847.
Meantime the shadow of famine had fallen upon the land. The potato
blight first appeared in Wexford, in 1845, whence it marched with
stealthy tread all over the country, poisoning the potato fields as it
passed. The stalks withered and died, the potatoes beneath the soil
became putrid, and when they were dug and the sound ones separated from
the unsound ones and put into pits, it was soon discovered that disease
had entered the pits. The reckless
creation
of forty-shilling freeholders by the landlords for political purposes,
the reckless subdivision of holdings by the tenants, had so augmented
the population that in 1845 the inhabitants of
Ireland were well beyond 8,000,000, most of them living
in abject
poverty with the potato as their only food. And now, with
half the crop of 1845 gone and with the loss of the whole crop in the
two succeeding years, millions were face to face with hunger. To
cope
with such a calamity required heroic measures, and O'Connell urged that
distilleries should be closed, the export of provisions prohibited,
public granaries set up, and reproductive works set on foot. But the
premier, Peer, minimized the extent of the famine, and Lord John
Russell, who succeeded him in 1846 was equally sceptical. He would
neither stop distilling nor the export of provisions, nor build
railways; and when he set up public works they were not reproductive,
and the money expended on them, largely levied on the rates, was
squandered by corrupt officials. Ultimately indeed he set up government
stores, and in many cases food was distributed free. Charity
supplemented the efforts of Government, and with no niggard hand. There
were Quaker,
Evangelical, and
Baptist relief committees, and subscriptions from Great Britain and
from Continental
Europe, from
Australia and from the West Indies. But
America was generous most of all. In every city from
Boston to
New Orleans
meetings were held and subscriptions given.
Philadelphia sent eight vessels loaded with provisions;
Mississippi and
Alabama
large consignments of Indian corn; railroads and shipping companies
carried relief parcels free; and the Government turned some of the
war vessels
into transports to carry food to the starving millions beyond the
Atlantic. Yet were the sufferings of the people great, and the number of
deaths from famine and famine-fever appalling. Thousands lived for weeks
on cabbage and a little meal, on cabbage and seaweed, on turnips, on
diseased horse and ass flesh; and one case is recorded where a
woman ate her
dead child. Men died from cold as well as from hunger. They died on the
roads and in the fields, at the relief works and on their way to them,
at the workhouses and at the workhouse doors. They died in their cabins
unattended, often surrounded by the dying and frequently by the dead.
Flying from the country they died in the
hospitals of
Liverpool or
Glasgow,
or on board the sailing vessels to
America. And thousands who crossed the ocean reached
America only to die. In 1848 and in 1849 the famine was
only partial, but in the latter year cholera appeared. In 1851 the
famine was over, and such was the havoc wrought that a population, which
at the previous rate of increase should have been 9,000,000, was reduced
to 6,500,000.
The conduct of the landlords during this terrible
time
was selfish and cruel. With few exceptions they gave no employment and
no subscriptions to the relief funds. Unable to get rents from tenants
unable to pay, they used their
right
to evict, and in thousands of cases the horrors of eviction were added
to the horrors of famine. Retribution soon followed. The evictors,
without rents and crushed by poor-rates, became hopelessly insolvent.
The British Parliament considered them a nuisance and a
curse,
and in 1849 passed the Encumbered Estates Act, under which a creditor
might petition to have the estate sold and his
debt paid.
Insolvent landlords were thus sent adrift, and solvent men took their
places, and to such an extent that in a few years land to the value of
£20,000,000 changed hands. But the new landlords were no better than the
old. They raised rents, confiscated the tenant's improvements, worried
him with vexatious estate rules, evicted him cruelly; and from 1850 to
1870 was the period of the great clearances. The
necessary
result was a constant and ever-increasing stream of emigration from
Ireland, chiefly to
America. Nor would British statesmen do anything to stem
the tide, Lord John Russell would not interfere with the
rights of
property by
passing a Land Act. Lord Derby was a landlord with a landlord's strong
prejudices. Lord Palmerston declared that tenant
right
was landlord wrong. Nothing could be expected from the
Irish members. Sadleir and Keogh broke up the Tenant
Right
party; Lucas was dead;
Duffy in
despair
went to
Australia;
Moore was out of Parliament; and from 1855 to 1870 the
Irish members were but placehunters and
traitors.
In these circumstances the
Irish peasant joined the Ribbon
Society,
which was secret and oath-bound, and specially charged to defend the
tenants'
interests.
Agrarian
outrages naturally followed. The landlord evicted, the Ribbonman shot
him down, and the evictor fell unpitied by the people, who refused to
condemn the assassin. After 1860 the Robbonmen were gradually merged in
the Fenian
Society,
which extended to
America and
England, and
had national rather than
agrarian
objects in view. The
Irish are not
good conspirators, and the attempted Fenian insurrection
in 1867 came to nothing. But the mediated assault on
Chester
Castle, the Clerkenwell explosion, and the Fenian raids into
Canada showed
the extent and intrepidity of
Irish disaffection. An increasing number of Englishmen
began to think that the non possumus attitude of Lord Palmerston
was no longer wise; and with the advent to power of Mr. Gladstone in
1868, at the head of a large
Liberal
majority,
the case of
Ireland was taken up.
The Catholic
masses had a threefold grievance calling urgently for redress: the state
Church,
landlordism, and
educational inequality. Mr. Gladstone called them the three branches
of the
Irish ascendancy upas tree. Commencing with the
Church, he
introduced a Bill disendowing and disestablishing it. Commissioners were
appointed to wind it up, taking charge of its enormous
property,
computed at more than £15,000,000 ($75,000,000). Of this sum,
£10,000,000, ultimately raised to £11,000,000, was given to the
disestablished
Church,
part to the holders of existing offices, part to enable the
Church to
continue its work. A further sum of nearly £1,000,000 was distributed
between Maynooth
College, deprived of its annual grant, and the
Presbyterian
Church
deprived of the Regium Donum, the latter getting twice as much as
the former. The surplus was to be disposed of by Parliament for such
public objects as it might determine. This was generous treatment for
the state
Church
which had been so conspicuous a failure. Supported with an ample
revenue, and by the whole power of the State, its business was to make
Ireland
Protestant and
English. It succeeded only in intensifying their
attachment to
Catholicity and their
hatred of
Protestantism
and England. In
1861, after the havoc wrought by the famine, the
Catholics were
seven times as numerous as the members of the state
Church.
There were many
parishes without a single
Protestant; and
in a
poor
country a
Church
numbering but 600,000
persons had an
income of nearly £700,000, mostly drawn from people of a different
creed,
who at the same
time
had their own
Church
to support. Yet there were members of Parliament who described Mr.
Gladstone's Bill as
robbery and
sacrilege. The House of Lords,
afraid
to reject it altogether, emasculated it in committee. And Ulster
Protestants
declared that if it became
law
they would kick the Queen's crown into the Boyne. Ignoring these
threats, Mr. Gladstone rejected the Lords' amendments, though on some
minor points he gave way, and in spite of all opposition the Bill became
law.
And thus one branch of the upas tree came crashing to the earth. The
Land Act of 1870 was well-meant, but in reality gave the tenants no
protection against rackrenting or eviction. Two years later the Ballot
Act freed the
Irish tenant from the terrors of open voting.
In 1873 the
education question was reached. And first as to the primary
schools. What
the Catholic
primary schools
were in the early years of the nineteenth century we learn from
Carleton. The teacher, the product of a local hedge-school and of a
Munster classical
school, or
perhaps an ex-student of
Maynooth, had first been employed as a tutor in some
farmer's family.
Then he became a hedge-schoolmaster, and the manner in which he attained
to this position was peculiar. Challenging the schoolmaster already in
possession to a public disputation, they met at the
church gates on
Sunday
in presence of the congregation. The
intellectual
swordplay between the combatants was keenly relished, and, if the
younger
man
won the applause of the audience by his depth of learning and readiness
of reply, his opponent left the district and the victor was installed in
his place. His
school, built by the roadside by the people's
voluntary
efforts, was of earthen sods, with an earthen floor, a hole in the roof
for a chimney, and stones for the pupils' seats. In many districts the
teacher received little fees, but the people supplied him liberally with
potatoes, meal, bacon, and turf, and entertained him at their houses. A
century before Carleton's
time
the Charter schools
were established, and endowed to
educate the
children of the destitute
poor.
They were to give industrial as well as literary training, and took
religion and learning as their motto. But they became
dens of infamy,
with incompetent and immoral teachers, who taught the pupils nothing
except to
hate
Catholicism. As
such the schools
were shunned by the
Catholics, and were manifest failures, and yet till 1832 they
received government grants. Such
societies as
the
Society
for Discountenancing
Vice,
the London
Hibernian Association, and the Baptist
Society
were proselytizing institutions. The
Kildare
Street
Society
founded in 1811, though
Protestant in
its origin, was on different lines. The design was to have
Catholics and
Protestants
educated
together in secular subjects, leaving their
religious training to the
ministers of
their
religion outside of
school hours.
O'Connell favoured the scheme and joined the governing board, grants
were obtained from Parliament, and for some years all went well. But
again the bread of
knowledge given to
Catholics was
steeped in the poison of proselytism. The bigots insisted on having the
Bible read in the
schools
"without note or comment"; the
Society
was then vigorously assailed by
John MacHale,
at the
time
a young professor at
Maynooth, and O'Connell retired from the board.
Recognizing the failure of such a system, Lord Stanley; the
Irish chief secretary, passed through Parliament in 1831
a bill empowering the lord lieutenant to constitute a National Board of
Education with an annual grant for building
schools, and
for payment of teachers and inspectors. Religious instruction was to be
given on one day of the week by
ministers of
the different
religions to children of their own
Faith.
The schools
were open to all
denominations, and even "the suspicion of proselytism" was to be
excluded. But the
Catholics were treated unfairly. In spite of their numbers they were
given but two of the seven members of the Board. Mr.
Carlisle,
a Presbyterian,
was made resident commissioner, and as chief executive officer appointed
non-Catholics to the principal offices; and he and his
fellow-commissioner, Dr. Whately, the
Protestant
Archbishop of
Dublin,
compiled lesson-books, in which the history of
Ireland and the
Catholic
religion were treated with
injustice. In a
few years the original rules of the Board were so changed that
Catholic
priests were
entirely excluded from all Ulster
schools under
Presbyterian
management. Outside of Ulster, a bigoted
Protestant
clergyman,
named Stopford, was able in 1847 to abrogate the rule compelling
Catholic child
in Protestant
schools to
leave when the hour for
religious instruction arrived. This left it optional with
the children to remain, and brought much suffering on
poor
Catholics at
the hands of tyrannical and bigoted landlords.
Among the
Catholic
bishops there was
toleration rather than approval of the National system. But
Dr. MacHale,
who had become
Archbishop of
Tuam in 1834, opposed the system from the first,
believing that
education not
founded on
religion was a
curse.
He preferred to have in his
diocese the
Christian Brothers'
schools in
which
religious instruction was given the premier place.
Dr. Murray of
Dublin
and Dr. Crolly
of
Armagh were not so hostile, and, when the
matter was referred to
Rome in 1841,
the reply was that the National system might be given a further trial.
The "Stopford Rule" strengthened
MacHale's
hands, as did a board rule in 1845 providing that all
schools even
partially erected by a board grant should be vested in the Board itself,
and not as hitherto in the local manager, who in
Catholic
schools was
usually the priest.
MacHale also
objected to the disproportionately small representation of
Catholics on
the Board, to the
character of the lesson-books, to the large number of non-Catholics
in the higher positions. These attacks told. In 1850 the
Synod
of Thurles condemned the National
schools as then
conducted. In 1852
Dr. Murray of
Dublin
died, and was succeeded by
Dr. Cullen, who
shared MacHale's
views. The following year Whately's lesson-books were withdrawn from the
Board's lists, and Whately in consequence resigned his seat. In 1860 the
board was enlarged from seven to twenty, and thenceforth half of these
were to be
Catholics. The "Stopford Rule" and the rule regarding the vesting of
schools were
abrogated, and, with the resident commissioner a
Catholic, the
system became more acceptable to
Catholics. For
the training of teachers however there was only one Training
College
under non-Catholic control, but the
Catholics
established the Training
College
at Drumcondra, and in 1883 that at Baggot Street,
Dublin, and
since then they have established others at Belfast,
Limerick, and
Waterford. But even as the National system stood in 1873, Mr. Gladstone
thought that the
Catholics had no
substantial grievance, and did nothing.
Nor did he interfere with the state of things in intermediate
education,
though the inequality which existed was glaring. The
diocesan free
schools of
Elizabeth, maintained by county contributions, and the free
schools of
James I and those of
Erasmus Smith,
maintained by confiscated
Catholic lands,
were under
Protestant management and as such generally shunned by
Catholics.
Further, the
Protestants were the richer classes, and, though their
Church
had been disestablished, it had been but partially disendowed. The
Dissenters also had
wealth
and had well-equipped
schools. But
the Catholics,
long prohibited from having any
schools, got no
help from the state even when the pressure of penal legislation had been
removed. They had, however, set manfully to work, and, partly by private
donations, principally by
collections, had established
colleges
all over the land. Carlow
College
was founded in 1793, Navan
College
in 1802, St.
Jarlath's
College,
Tuam, in 1817,
Clongowes by the
Jesuits in 1814, and others in the years that followed. but they
could get no state assistance till 1879, when the Intermediate
Education Act was passed. The yearly
interest on £1,000,000 was then appropriated for prizes
and exhibitions to pupils, and for result fees to
colleges,
and without distinction of
creed,
following competitive examinations to be annually held. The system,
depending so much on
examination and encouraging cramming, is certainly not ideal, but is
has been of enormous assistance to struggling
Catholic
schools.
It was in the field of higher
education that
Catholics
suffered most. In 1795
Maynooth College
had been founded for the
education of
the clergy. Its
annual Parliamentary grant had been lost in 1869, but it nevertheless
continued to flourish, and flourishes still as one of the first
ecclesiastical
colleges
in the world. There were other
ecclesiastical
colleges
at Carlow, Thurles, Waterford, and Drumcondra. But the
laity had only
Trinity College or the Queen's Colleges. The former had
first opened its doors to
Catholics in
1793, but would give them no share in its emoluments, nor did it abolish
religious tests till 1873. The Queen's Colleges, three in
number, one at
Galway, one at
Cork, and one at Belfast, were constituent
colleges
of the Queen's University, and were meant by Peel to do for higher
education what
Stanley had done for the primary
schools. But
the Catholic
bishops' demand
to have some adequate provision made for
religious teaching, some voice in the appointment and
dismissal of professors, and separate chairs in history and
philosophy, not been acceded to, the Queen's Colleges were
denounced by
Dr. MacHale as godless
colleges,
and condemned by
Rome as intrinsically dangerous to
faith and
morals; and at
the
Synod
of Thurles, in 1850, it was resolved on the advice of
Rome to set up
a
Catholic University. The model given was the
University of
Louvain. A committee was then appointed, subscriptions received both
from
Ireland and from abroad, a site was purchased in
Stephen's Green,
Dublin, Dr.
Newman was made first
rector,
professors and lecturers were appointed, and in 1854 work was begun.
But there were difficulties from the first. The nation still felt the
effects of the famine, the secondary
schools were
but imperfectly organized and unable to furnish sufficient students, and
Dr. MacHale and
Dr. Cullen did
not agree. Dr.
MacHale complained that the administration was too centralized, that
he could get no details of the expenditure, that there were too many
Englishmen among the professors. He objected also to
Dr. Newman.
Though the great
Oratorian
loved
Ireland, he was an Englishman with
English
ideas, and
wanted
Oxford and
Cambridge men as his colleagues.
MacHale, on the
contrary, would have the whole atmosphere of the University
Irish, and thus, trained by
Irish teachers,
Irish students would go forth to exhibit the highest
capabilities of the
Irish
character. Dr.
Cullen did not fully share these views, and generally agreed with
Newman. Not
always, however, for he objected to have
Newman
appointed an
Irish
bishop, and he
disliked Newman's
excessive partiality for professors trained in the
English
universities.
This want of
harmony
was not conducive to enthusiasm or efficiency, and the pecuniary
contributions obtained left the various
faculties woefully undermanned. Nor could nay provision
be made for students' residence or for tutorial superintendence. Most
fatal of all, the Government refused to give a charter, and students
could not be expected to frequent a
university
where they could get no degree. Unable to succeed where the elements of
failure were so many,
Newman resigned
in 1857. In 1866 the Government of Earl Russell granted a supplemental
charter making the
Catholic University a constituent
college
of the queen's University, a sort of fourth Queen's College, but the
charter was found to be illegal. Nor did Lord
Mayo's
attempt to settle the
university
question in 1868 succeed, and thus the
Catholic University struggled painfully on.
Nor was Mr. Gladstone's Bill of 1873 satisfying. He proposed to
abolish the Queen's University and the Queen's College,
Galway, and to
have
Dublin
University separated from
Trinity College, but with
Trinity College, the Queen's Colleges at Belfast and
Cork, Magee
College
and the
Catholic University as constituent
colleges.
From
Trinity College £12,000 a year would be taken and given
to the
Dublin
University, which would have in all an income of £50,000, for the
payment of examiners and professors and the founding of fellowships,
scholarships, and prizes to be competed for by students of all the
constituent
colleges.
There was to be a senate, at first wholly
nominated by the Crown and subsequently half and half by the Crown
and Senate. The
endowment of the Queen's Colleges would remain, though the
Catholic University would get nothing; nor would there be
in any of the
colleges
any
endowment for chairs of history,
theology, or
philosophy. This was perpetuating the inferior position of the
Catholic University, as it was perpetuating the
endowment of the godless
colleges,
and it would be almost impossible for the
Catholics ever
to have their proper share of representation in the Senate. Finally, men
asked what sort of
university that was which had no chairs of history or
philosophy. The Bill in fact satisfied nobody, and Mr. Gladstone
being defeated resigned office.
It will be convenient here to anticipate. In 1879 the Queen's
University was abolished and the Royal University took its place,
empowered to give degrees to all comers who passed its examinations. The
Queen's Colleges were left. In 1882 the
Catholic University passed under
Jesuit control,
and of the twenty-eight fellowships of £400 a year founded by the Royal
University fourteen were given to the
Catholic University staff. With this slender indirect
endowment it entered the lists with the Queen's Colleges and beat
them all. Subsequently there were two University commissions, one
dealing with the Royal University, the other with
Trinity College, but nothing was done. Finally, in 1908,
Mr. Birrell passed his
Irish Universities Act leaving
Trinity College untouched. Abolishing the Royal
University, the Act sets up two new
universities,
the Queen's University with the Queen's College at Belfast, and the
National University at
Dublin, with
the Queen's Colleges at
Cork and
Galway and a
new
college
at
Dublin
as constituent
colleges.
In these
colleges
there are new governing bodies, largely
Catholic and
National, but
religious services of any kind are prohibited within the
precincts, and there are no
religious tests. This change has resulted in the
Jesuits
severing their connection with the
Catholic University, the buildings of which have been
taken over by the new
Dublin
college.
To go back, when Mr. Gladstone was replaced by the Tories, in 1874, a
new
Irish party had been already formed demanding an
Irish Parliament, with full power to deal with purely
domestic matters. It was called the Home Rule party, Mr. Butt, a
Protestant
lawyer of great ability, being its chief. At the general
election in 1874, sixty Home Rulers were returned. But
Mr. Butt accomplished nothing. His own methods of conciliation and
argument were not the most effective. His party, nominal Home Rulers,
were mostly place-hunters, and except the Intermediate
Education Act of 1878 there were no legislative results. Mr. Butts
died in 1879, and for a brief period the Home Rule leader was Mr. Shaw;
but after the general
election of 1880 Mr. Shaw was
deposed,
and a younger and more vigorous leader was appointed in the
person of
Charles Stewart Parnell. There had been a serious failure of the potato
crop in 1877 and 1878, but in 1879 there was only half the average
yield. The landlords unable to get their rents began to evict, and it
seemed as if the horrors of 1847 were to be renewed. Large relief funds
were collected and disbursed by the Duchess of Marlborough, the
viceroy's wife, and by the Lord Mayor of
Dublin;
and Mr. Parnell went to
America in the last days of 1879 and
appealed
in person to the friends of
Ireland. He was accompanied by Mr. John Dillon, son of
Mr. Dillon, the rebel of 1848. Within two months they addressed meetings
in sixty-two cities, bringing back with them to
Ireland £40,000 ($200,000). Nor would Mr. Parnell have
come back in March but that the Tory premier, Lord Beaconsfield, had
dissolved Parliament. Appealing to the county on an anti-Irish cry, his
answer came in a crushing defeat, and in the return of Mr. Gladstone to
power with a strong
Liberal
majority.
Of the Home Rulers returned many were mere Whigs, but a sufficient
number favoured an active policy to
depose
Mr. Shaw and put Mr. Parnell in his place.
In 1879 the Torries had followed up the Intermediate Act by the Royal
University Act, which left the Queen's Colleges and
Trinity College untouched, but set up the Royal
University, a mere examining board. But they would do nothing to
restrain the landlords and nothing effective to relieve
Irish distress. Better was expected from the new
Liberal
Government which included, besides Mr. Gladstone, such men as Bright,
Chamberlain, and
Forster,
the latter appointed chief secretary for
Ireland. Yet the
Liberals were
slow to move, and not until evictions had swelled to thousands did they
introduce the
Compensation for Disturbance Bill. It was thrown out in the Lords
and not reintroduced. But the
Irish peasants were in no humour to acquiesce in their
own destruction and already a great land agitation was shaking
Ireland from sea to sea. Begun in Mayor by Mr. Michael
Davitt, the son of a
Mayo
peasant, and favoured by the prevailing distress and by the
heartlessness of the landlords, it rapidly spread. Mr. Parnell soon
joined it, and in October, 1979, the Land League was formed, its
declared object being to protect tenants from eviction and to substitute
peasant proprietary for the existing system of landlorism. Extending to
America, many branches were formed there and large
subscriptions sent home. In November, 1879, an abortive prosecution of
Mr. Davitt and others only strengthened the League. In the new year a
Mayo
land agent, Captain
Boycott,
roused the ire of his tenants by issuing processes and threatening
evictions; in consequence no servant would remain with him, no labourer
would work for him, no shopkeeper would deal with him, no neighbour
would speak to him. This system of ostracism became known as
boycotting, and
was freely used by the League against landlords, agents, and grabbers,
with the result that they were compelled to make terms with the people.
Government was unable to aid the
boycotted, and
before the end of 1880 the
law of the
League had supplanted the
law of the
land.
These events changed Mr.
Forster
in a coercionist. He prosecuted Mr. Parnell and thirteen others in
November, 1880, but failed to convict them. Then he asked for the
suspension of the Habeas Corpus Act. Mr. Gladstone reluctantly
acquiesced, and early in 1881, after a fierce struggle with the
Irish members, the measure passed. In a short
time
nearly two hundred
persons were in jail without trial. Mr. Gladstone next passed a
comprehensive Land Act, setting up courts to fix rents, and giving
increased facilities to tenants to purchase their holdings. But the
Irish members, angered because of the Coercion Act,
received the Land Act without gratitude; and Mr. Parnell advised the
tenants not to rush to the land courts, but rather go there with a
limited number of test cases. Mr. Gladstone retorted by imprisoning Mr.
Parnell and his principal lieutenants. For the next few months terror
reigned supreme. Mr.
Forster
filled the jails, broke up meetings, suppressed newspapers, and yet
succeeded so ill in pacifying the country that he felt compelled to ask
for more drastic coercion. Mr. Gladstone, however, had had enough of
coercion, and in May, 1882, Lord Cowper, the viceroy, and Mr.
Forster
were relieved of office, and Mr. Parnell and his colleagues were set
free; and by an arrangement often called the Kilmainham Treaty an
Arrears' Bill was to be introduced, while Parnell on his side, was to
curb the agitation and gradually re-establish the reign of
law.
On the evening of 6 May these
happy changes
were fatally marred by the
murder in the
Phoenix Park,
Dublin, of the under-secretary, Mr. Burke, and of the new chief
secretary, Lord Frederick Cavendish. The assassins, entirely unconnected
with the Land League, belonged to a
secret society
called the Invincibles. Mr. Parnell was stunned, the
Irish
cause grievously injured, and in
England there
was a cry of rage. A new Coercion Act was passed and vigorously
enforced, and during the remainder of Gladstone's parliament between the
Irish and the
Liberals there
was bitter enmity. But meanwhile Parnell's power increased. In place of
the suppressed land League the National League was established, and
spread over the United Kingdom and
America. Mr. Parnell, while opposing Mr. Dillon's project
of a renewed land agitation and Mr. Davitt's scheme of land
nationalization, was aided by the Fenians; and though
English intrigue succeeded in obtaining a
papal rescript
condemning a testimonial that was being raised for him, its only effect
was to increase the subscriptions. Being friendly with the Tories, he
joined with them to defeat Mr. Gladstone in 1885, and for a brief period
Lord
Salisbury was premier. He governed without coercion, and passed the
Ashbourne Act, which advanced £5,000,000 to
Irish tenants for the purchase of their holdings. In
return, Mr. Parnell advised the
Irish electors in Great Britain to vote for the Tories at
the general
election in October, 1885. But the
Liberals were
given a
majority
over the Tories, though not sufficient to form a government without the
Irish. On the understanding that Home Rule was to be
conceded, Liberals
and
Irish coalesced, the Tories were turned out, and
Gladstone because premier and brought in his Home Rule Bill of 1886,
setting up an
Irish Parliament with an executive dependent on it.
Deserted
by a large section of his followers under Bright, Chamberlain, and
Hartington, he was defeated, and going to the country was seriously
defeated at the polls. In August Lord
Salisbury was again in office at the head of the Tories and
Liberal
Unionists, and in overwhelming strength.
The rejection of Mr. Parnell's Bill of 1886 providing for the
admission of leasholders to the benefits of the Land Act of 1881, and
for a revision of judicial rents to meet the recent heavy fall in
prices, led to the starting of the Plan of Campaign by Messers. Dillon
and O'Brien. The tenant was to offer his landlord a fair rent; and if it
was refused he banked the money and fought the landlord, and was
assisted by his fellow tenants throughout the land. The Plan was not
approved or by Mr. Parnell, and it had the unfortunate effect of placing
the perpetual Coercion Act of 1887 on the Statute Book. But it
caused
the Government to pass the very measure they had so lately rejected, and
it compelled many of the poorer landlords to make terms with the
tenants. While on the one hand the Plan was thus put in operation in
Ireland, and on the other hand the Coercion Act, the
Liberals and
Irish worked well together in Parliament and on British
platforms, the
London "Times", always the bitter enemy of
Ireland, became enraged, and in its anxiety to do harm
published a series of articles on Parnellism and Crime. It relied, as it
pretended, on
authentic documents which connected Parnell and his colleagues with
crime, and showed that Parnell himself condoned the Phoenix Park
murders. A
Special Commission appointed by Parliament discovered that the chief
letters were forgeries and that the "Times" had been fooled by a
disreputable Irishman named Richard Pigott. The
forger
confessed his crime and then committed
suicide, and
Parnell became the hero of the hour. When the Special Commission issued
its report, early in 1890, the tide had turned with a vengeance against
the Tories. Their
majority
was then seriously diminished, and when the general
election came it was
certain that nothing could prevent the triumph of Home
Rule. In the midst of these bright
hopes
for
Ireland there came the mournful wail of the banshee, and,
even before the Special Commission report was issued, Captain O'Shea had
filed a petition for
divorce on the
ground of his wife's
adultery with
Mr. Parnell. There was no defence, and could be none, and the
decree was
issued, Mr. Gladstone evidently expected that Mr. Parnell would have
retired from the leadership, and, finding that he did not, intimated
that his continuance in that position would wreck Home Rule. The
Irish party which had re-elected Mr. Parnell were not
prepared to go so far, and, as he would not retire even for a day, they
deposed
him. A minority still supported him, and at the head of these he
appealed
to the
Irish people. Week after week he attended meetings and
made speeches. But his health, already bad, could not stand the strain;
the stubborn and reckless fight ended in his collapse, and at Brighton,
on the 6th of October, 1891, the greatest
Irish leader since O'Connell breathed his last.
In the years that followed faction was lord of all. At the general
election in 1892 the Parnellite members were reduced to
nine, while the anti-Parnellites were seventy-two, and at the
election in 1895 there was no material change. To
argument and entreaty the minority refused to listen, and though the
anti-Parnellite leaders, Mr. MacCarthy and Mr. Dillon, were ready to
make any
sacrifice for unity and peace, their opponents rejected
all overtures; and under the shelter of Parnell's name they continued to
shout Parnell's battle-cries. At last
patriotism triumphed over faction, and in 1900 Mr. John Redmond, the
Parnellite leader, was
elected chairman of the reunited
Irish party. Much had been lost during these years of
discord in unity and strength, in national dignity and self-reliance. To
faction it was due that the
Liberal
victory of 1892 was not more sweeping; that, in consequence, the Home
Rule Bill of 1893 was rejected by the Lords; and that, in 1894, Mr.
Gladstone retired, baffled and beaten, from the struggle. At the
elections of 1895 and 1900 the Tories were victorious, and during their
long term of power the Coercion Act was frequently enforced. But there
were concessions also. In 1890, Mr. Balfour's Land Act provided
£33,000,000 for
Irish land purchase, and in 1891 the Congested Districts
Board was established. In 1896, there was an amending Land Act; and in
1898, the Local Government Act transferred the government of counties
and rural districts from the non-representative Grand Juries to
popularly
elected bodies. A further important Act was that of Mr.
Wyndham, in 1903, providing more than £100,000,000 for the buying out of
the whole landlord class. Mr. Wyndham also favoured a policy of
devolution, that is a
delegation to local bodies of larger powers. But nothing was done
till the Liberals
came into office in 1906, and they had nothing more generous to offer
than Mr. Birrell's National Councils Bill, a measure so halting and
meagre, that an
Irish National Convention rejected it with scorn. Mr.
Birrell has been more fortunate in his University Bill, which, though
not establishing a purely
Catholic University, provides one in which
Catholic
influences
will predominate. In recent years also the programmes
both in the national and secondary
schools have
been made more practical, facilities have been given for agricultural
and technical
education, and the great
ecclesiastical
college
of
Maynooth continues to maintain its
reputation as the first
ecclesiastical
college
in the world.
RELATIONS BETWEEN CHURCH AND STATE
By the Catholic
Relief Act of 1829 legal proscription ceased for the
Catholic
Church, as did
legal ascendancy for the
Protestant Church
by Mr. Gladstone's Act of 1869. In practice, however,
Protestant
ascendancy largely remains still. Only within
living
memory
was the first
Catholic lord chancellor appointed in the
person of
Lord O'Hagan;
Catholics are
still excluded, except in rare instances, from the higher civil and
military offices; and from the lord-lieutenancy they continue to be
excluded by law.
ECCLESIASTICAL ORGANIZATION
The Catholic
Church, divided
into four provinces, not, however, corresponding with the civil
divisions, is ruled by four
archbishops and
twenty-three
bishops. But the number of
dioceses is
more than twenty-seven, for there have been amalgamations and
absorptions.
Cashel,
for instance, has been joined with Emly, Waterford with
Lismore,
Kildare
with Leighlin, Down with Connor,
Ardagh
with
Clonmacnoise,
Kilmacduagh with Galway, the
bishop of
Galway being
also
Apostolic
Administrator of Kilfenora. In many
dioceses there
are chapters, in others none. The number of
parishes is
1087. A few are governed by
administrators, the remainder by
parish
priests, while
the total number of the
secular clergy
— parish
priests,
administrators,
curates,
chaplains, and professors in
colleges
&151; amounts to 2967. There are also many houses of the
regular
clergy:
Augustinians,
Capuchins,
Carmelites,
Fathers of the Holy
Ghost,
Dominicans,
Franciscans,
Jesuits,
Marists, Order of Charity, Oblates,
Passionists,
Redemptorists,
and Vincentians.
The total number of the
regular
clergy is 666.
They are engaged either in teaching or in giving missions, but not
charged with the government of
parishes. There
is, however, one exception—that of the
Passionists of
Belfast, who have charge of the
parish of
Holy Cross in the city. There are the two
Cistercian
abbeys of Mount
Melleray
and Roscrea, each ruled by a mitred
abbot, and
having forty-three professed
priests.
STATISTIC
The population of
Ireland has been steadily diminishing. In 1861, it was
5,798,564; in 1871, 5,412,377; in 1881, 5,174,836; in 1891, 4,704,751;
in 1901, 4,458,775. The decrease is due to emigration, and as the great
majority of the emigrants are
Catholics, the
Catholic
population has suffered most. In 1861, it numbered 4,505,265; in 1871,
4,150,867; in 1881, 3,960,891; in 1891, 3,547,307; in 1901, 3,310,028.
In the period from 1851 to 1901 the total number of emigrants, being
natives of
Ireland, who left
Irish ports was 3,846,393. No less than 89 per cent went
to the United
States, the remainder going to Great Britain,
Australia,
Canada, and
New
Zealand. The saddest feature of this exodus is that 82 per cent of
the emigrants were between 15 and 35 years of age. The healthy and
enterprising have gone, leaving the weaker in
mind
and body at home, one result being that the number of lunatics increased
from 16,505 in 1871 to 21,188 in 1891. In the latter year the total
number of primary
schools was 9157, of which 8569 were under the National Board, 97
under the Christian
Brothers and other communities, and 471 other primary
schools. In
1908 the total number of National Board
schools was
8538 under 3057 managers, of whom 2455 were
clerical and
602 laymen. Of
the clerical
managers 1307 were
Catholics, 713 were
Protestant
Episcopalians, 379
Presbyterians,
52 Methodists,
and 4 unclassed. In 1901 the number of pupils in all the primary
schools was
636,777, of whom 471,910 were
Catholics.
There has been a steady improvement in the
matter of illiteracy. In 1841 the percentage of those
above five years who could neither read not write was 53; in 1901 it had
fallen to 14. Of the whole population 14 per cent could speak
Irish. In 1901 there were 35,373 pupils in the
Intermediate
schools, the number of
Catholics being
78 per cent of the total
Catholic
population. The
Catholic girls in these
schools were
for the most part
educated in the various
convents. The
boys were educated
in the diocesan
colleges,
or in the
colleges
of the religious
orders, and a proportion also in the
Christian Brothers'
schools. "In
Colleges
of Universities and other
Colleges",
in 1901, there were 3192 students, of whom 91 were
females. The
highest
form of
ecclesiastical
education is
obtained at
Maynooth, other such
colleges
being
All Hallows and Clonliffe in
Dublin, Thurles,
Waterford, and Carlow
colleges.
CHURCH PROPERTY, CHURCHES, SCHOOLS, CEMETERIES
Church property
is usually held in
trust
by the parish
priest for the
parish, the
bishop for the
diocese, the
religious superior for his order, and often associated
with other trustees. In many cases the title-deeds have been lost, but
undisputed possession is considered sufficient, and the
parish-priest
or other superior for the time being is recognized as the legal owner of
the
church,
church grounds, and
cemetery,
if there be such. New
churches are built on land purchase out, or acquired free
of rent or under very long lease, and
church and ground are exempt from taxation. New
cemeteries belong to the District Council, and many of the older
cemeteries have been taken over by the same authority. Schools under
the National Board are either vested or non-vested. If vested, they are
held by trustees—usually the
priest, who is
manager, and two others—and in this case only two-thirds of the cost of
building is granted by Government. In the case of non-vested
schools, which
are the property
of the National Board itself, the full amount for building is granted by
Government, and the
school is also kept in repair, while in vested
schools repairs
have to be made by the manager. Both in vested and non-vested
schools the
National Board regulates the programme, selects the
school books,
and provides for the cost of
examination and inspection. The appointment and dismissal of
teachers rests with the manager, from whom in the
Catholic
schools there
is an
appeal to the
bishop. All
these are exempted from taxation.
Clergymen of
all denominations
get loans from Government on easy terms to build residences. These
houses, however, are not exempt from taxation, and belong to the
clergyman and
his successors, not to himself personally.
PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS
Prisons are under government management, and always have a
Catholic
chaplain, when
there are Catholic
inmates. So also have workhouses, asylums, and county
hospital, which
are under the local authority. Reformatories and industrial
schools in the
great
majority
of cases are under
Catholic management, but they must be certified as suitable by a
government official and are subject to government inspection from time
to time. In 1900 there were in
Ireland six reformatories and seventy industrial
schools; the
number of both sexes in the former being 624 and in the latter 8221.
Both reformatories and industrial
schools are
maintained partly by a government grant and partly by the local rates.
LEGAL STATUS OF THE CLERGY
The clergy
have, with some few exceptions, the usual
rights of
citizens. They can receive and dispose of
property by
will as all others, and they can vote at elections. But
they are excluded by
law
from the House of Commons, though not from the House of Lords; and they
are excluded from the County and District Councils, though not from the
various committees appointed by these bodies. They are exempt from
military service and from serving on juries. Public worship is free; but
priests may not
celebrate the Mass outside the
churches or private houses, nor appear publicly in their
vestments, nor have
religious
processions through the streets; nor many the
regular
clergy go
abroad in the distinctive dress of their order. These
laws however,
are not enforced and not infrequently
processions do take place through the streets, and the
regular
clergy do go
abroad in their distinctive dress. Similarly, it is illegal for
religious
orders of men to admit new members; but this provision of the
Catholic Relief
Act of 1829 has never been enforced.
LAWS RELATING TO CHARITABLE BEQUESTS, MARRIAGE,
DIVORCE
Generally speaking, all
bequests
for the advancement of public worship are valid; but
bequests
for superstitious
uses are void. A
bequest,
for instance, to maintain a light before an image for the
good of one's
soul is void;
but the
bequests
for Masses are
good, unless left to a member of a
religious order
as such, the
reason
being that
religious orders are still technically illegal. For the validity of
a
will nothing is required but that the testor be of sound
mind
at the
time,
and free from undue influence, and that the document be signed by two
witnesses. As to
marriage, it is
necessary that
the contracting parties should be free, and that the mutual
consent
be given in the presence of two
witnesses and a
clergyman, or registrar duly appointed for the purpose. In the
Irish courts no
marriage can be dissolved; only a judicial separation can
be obtained. When such a separation is obtained there is no difficulty
in having a Bill passed through Parliament dissolving the
marriage.
THE PRESS
There is no purely
Catholic
newspaper acting as the mouthpiece either of an
individual
diocese
or of the
Irish
Church.
There are, however, in most of the provincial towns weekly newspapers,
often owned by
Catholics, and always ready to voice
Catholic
opinion. In Cork
and Belfast there are daily papers animated with the same
spirit, and in
Dublin
the "Freeman's Journal" and the "Daily Independent". In
Dublin
also is the "Irish
Catholic",
which is a powerful champion of
Catholicity;
and there is the "Leader", not professedly
Catholic, but
with a vigorous and manly
Catholic tone.
These two are weeklies. Published monthly are the "Irish Monthly" under
the Jesuits,
the "Irish Rosary" under the
Dominicans, the
"Irish Educational Review", dealing with
Catholic
educational
matters, and the "Irish Ecclesiastical Record", edited by Dr. Hogan of
Maynooth, under episcopal supervision. There is also the
"Irish Theological Quarterly", which, as its name implies, is published
quarterly, and conducted by the professors of
Maynooth College
with an ability, an extent of
knowledge, a
grasp of the subjects treated, and a vigour and freshness of style
worthy of Maynooth
College in its palmiest days.