The Protestant Ascendancy refers to the political, economic, and social domination of Ireland by Anglican landowners, Church of Ireland clergy, and professionals during the 17th, 18th, and 19th century.
The parliament repealed some of the Penal Laws but did not abolish them, and, following the forced recall of the liberal Lord Fitzwilliam in 1795 by conservatives, it was effectively abandoned as a vehicle for change by liberal elements who began to plan for armed rebellion. The resulting rebellion was crushed with vicious brutality, and the Act of Union of 1801 was passed partly in response to a perception that the bloodshed was provoked by the misrule of the Ascendancy.
The economic position of many landowners became untenable as rents became uncollectable due to the emergence of secret and open societies such as the Land League challenging the power of the landlords. Such agitation peaked during the Land War of the 1880s, which saw a mass mobilisation of tenant farmers against the landlord class. At around the same time, the political power of the Ascendancy passed to a largely Catholic and middle class Irish nationalist movement. As a consequence, the remnants of the Ascendancy were gradually displaced during the 19th and early 20th centuries through impoverishment, bankruptcy, the disestablishment of the Church of Ireland in 1869, and the Irish Land Acts, which allowed tenants to take ownership of the land.
During the Anglo-Irish War, many of the Loyalist landlords had their country homes burned down by the Irish Republican Army in retaliation for the government forces' destruction of property. The burning of stately homes of the old landed class was stepped up by a vengeful Anti-Treaty IRA during the subsequent Irish Civil War (1922-23), who identified them with what they saw as the continuing domination of Britain over Ireland.
After the independence of most of Ireland in 1922, the Ascendancy lost real political influence and became a small, isolated minority in their own land. The Trade War with England between 1932-38 and resulting government intervention into the agricultural market wiped out any remaining economic clout held by the Ascendancy class.
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"Protestant Ascendancy".
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