Religion, Law, and Power: The Making of Protestant Ireland, 1660-1760This is a study of religion, politics, and society in a period of great significance in modern Irish history. The late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries saw the consolidation of the power of the Protestant landed class, the enactment of penal laws against Catholics, and constitutional conflicts that forced Irish Protestants to redefine their ideas of national identity. S. J. Connolly's scholarly and wide-ranging study examines these developments and sets them in their historical context. The Ireland that emerges from his lucid and penetrating analysis was essentially a part of ancien regime Europe: a pre-industrialized society, in which social order depended less on the ramshackle apparatus of coercion than on complex structures of deference and mutual accommodation, along with the absence of credible challengers to the dominance of a landed elite; in which the ties of patronage and clientship were often more important than horizontal bonds of shared economic or social position; and in which religion remained a central part of personal and political motivation. |
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Page 66
... classes : their amusements , their sexual behaviour and family relationships , their distinctive institutions and assumptions . Little of this new interest has as yet reached Ireland . The comparable work , in fact , can be listed in ...
... classes : their amusements , their sexual behaviour and family relationships , their distinctive institutions and assumptions . Little of this new interest has as yet reached Ireland . The comparable work , in fact , can be listed in ...
Page 122
... classes . At the Restoration it had still been possible to see Gaelic Ireland as an alien and threatening entity . But such a perception was already anachronistic . By the middle decades of the seven- teenth century the last vestiges of ...
... classes . At the Restoration it had still been possible to see Gaelic Ireland as an alien and threatening entity . But such a perception was already anachronistic . By the middle decades of the seven- teenth century the last vestiges of ...
Page 308
... classes con- verted . ' Protestant ascendancy , as applied to a small privileged group , must disappear if the whole population were to become Protestant.'144 It is against the background of these extravagant claims that it becomes ...
... classes con- verted . ' Protestant ascendancy , as applied to a small privileged group , must disappear if the whole population were to become Protestant.'144 It is against the background of these extravagant claims that it becomes ...
Contents
A New Ireland | 5 |
An Élite and its World | 41 |
The Structure of Politics | 74 |
Copyright | |
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Religion, Law, and Power: The Making of Protestant Ireland, 1660-1760 Sean J. Connolly No preview available - 1995 |
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appear Archbishop army attempt authorities bill bishops Brodrick Catholic Church Church of Ireland claims classes clear clergy common concern continued Cork County course court Dissenters Dublin earlier early economic eighteenth century élite England English established estates evidence example executive fact force French further Galway hand History important interest Ireland Irish issue Jacobite James John July June justices Kilkenny King kingdom land late later least less Letters live London lord majority Manuscripts means measure Midleton observers Ormond Papists parliament party penal period persons political popular population practice Presbyterians present priests PRONI Protestant reason recent records relating religion religious remained reported Restoration rule seems social society Southwell suggested taken Tory Ulster Wake Whig whole