The Tudor re-conquest of Ireland took place under the English Tudor dynasty during the 16th century. It was begun under Henry VIII of England, who reacted to a rebellion by the Geraldine dynasty by trying to recover English control over Ireland, which had been lost in the previous two hundred years. This process was continued by a mixture of conciliation and repression until Ireland was fully under the control of English authority in Dublin by 1603.
The conquest was complicated by the imposition of English law, language and culture, as well as by the extension of the English Protestant Reformation. The Irish found themselves caught between their widespread acceptance of the Pope's authority and the requirements of allegiance to the monarch of England and Ireland.
Beyond the Pale, the authority of the Dublin government was tenuous. The Hiberno-Norman barons had been able to carve out fiefdoms for themselves but not to settle them with English tenants. As a result, in the 14th and 15th centuries, in the wake of Irish rebellion, Scottish invasion, the Black Death and a lack of interest on the part of the London government, many of the outlying English territories returned to the control of Irish lords; in others, such as those controlled by the great dynasties of Butler, Fitzgerald and Burke, the rulers achieved effective independence, raising their own armed forces, enforcing their own law and adopting Gaelic Irish language and culture.
Having been displaced in the early decades of the conquest the native Irish enjoyed something of a renaissance in the 14th and 15th centuries. Considerable areas of land previously held by the English were either abandoned to or overrun by the Gaelic Irish, particularly in the north and midlands. In the myriad of Irish dynasties, the most important included the O’Neills (Ui Niall) in central Ulster (Tir Eoin) — flanked to their west by the O’Donnells — the O’Byrnes and O’Tooles in Wicklow, the Kavanaghs in Wexford, the MacCarthys and O’Sullivans in Cork and Kerry and the O’Brians in Clare.
The Gaelic Irish were, for the most part, outside English jurisdiction, maintaining their own language, social system, customs and laws. The English referred to them as "His Majesty’s Irish enemies". In legal terms, they had never been admitted as subjects of the Crown, although Ireland was not formally a realm, but rather a lordship, the title to which was assumed by the English monarch upon coronation. The rise of Gaelic influence resulted in the passing in 1366 of the Statutes of Kilkenny, which, in vain, outlawed many social practices that had been developing apace (eg. intermarriage, use of the Irish language and of Irish dress). In the 15th century the Dublin government remained weak, owing principally to the Wars of the Roses.
The head of the Kildare Fitzgeralds held the position of lord deputy until 1531. The problem was that the House of Kildare had become an unreliable servant, scheming with Yorkist pretenders to the English throne, signing private treaties with foreign powers, and finally rebelling after the head of its hereditary rivals, the Butlers of Ormonde, was awarded the position of Lord Deputy. Henry put down the rebellion by executing the leader ("Silken Thomas" Fitzgerald), along with several of his uncles, and imprisoned Gearoid Og, the head of the family. But now the king had to find a replacement for the Fitzgeralds to keep Ireland quiet. What was needed was a cost-effective new policy that protected the Pale and guaranteed the safety of England’s vulnerable west flank from foreign invasion.
With the assistance of Thomas Cromwell, the king implemented the policy of surrender and regrant. This extended Royal protection to all of Ireland’s elite without regard to ethnicity; in return the whole country was expected to obey the law of the central government; and all Irish lords were to officially surrender to the Crown, and to receive in return by Royal Charter, the title to their lands. The keystone to the reform was in a statute passed by the Irish parliament in 1541, whereby the lordship was converted to a kingdom. Overall, the intention was to assimilate the Gaelic and Gaelicised upper classes and develop a loyalty on their part to the new crown; to this end, they were granted English titles and for the first time admitted to the Irish parliament. In a felicitous phrase, the king summed up his efforts at reform as, "politic drifts and amiable persuasions".
In practice, lords around Ireland accepted their new privileges but carried on as they had before. Henry’s religious Reformation — although not as thorough as in England — caused disquiet; his Lord Deputy, Anthony St Leger was largely able to buy off opposition by granting lands confiscated from the monasteries to Irish nobles.
There were two main reasons for the chronic violence that dogged the English government in Ireland. The first was the aggressiveness of the English administrators and soldiers. In many instances, garrisons or "senschalls" disregarded the law and killed local chiefs and lords. In other cases, it was the continuing seizure of native owned land that provoked rebellions.
The second cause of violence was the incompatibility of Gaelic Irish society with English government. In Irish custom, the chief of a "sept" or clan was elected from a noble lineage called a fine. This often caused violence between rival candidates. However, under Henry VIII's settlement, succession was, as was the English custom, by inheritance of the first born son, or primogeniture. Imposing this law forced the English to take sides in violent disputes within Irish lordships. Finally, important sections of Irish society had a vested interest in opposing the English presence. These included the mercenary class or gallowglass and Irish poets or file - both of whom faced having their source of income and status abolished in an English ruled Ireland.
The failure of this policy prompted the English to come up with more long term solutions to pacify and Anglicise Ireland. One was composition – where private armed forces were abolished, and provinces were occupied by English troops under the command of governors, titled Lords President. In return, the pre-eminent septs and lords were exempted from taxation and had their entitlements to rents from subordinate families and their tenants put on a statutory basis. The imposition of this settlement was marked by bitter violence, particularly in Connacht, where the MacWilliam Burkes fought a local war against the English Provincial President, Sir Richard Bingham, and his subordinate, Nicholas Malby. The interference of the Lord President of Munster was one of the major causes of the Desmond Rebellions. Nonetheless, "composition" was successful in some areas, notably in Thomond, where it was supported by the ruling O'Brien dynasty.
The second long term solution was Plantations, in which areas of the country were to be settled with colonists from England, who would bring in English language and culture while remaining loyal to the crown. Plantation had been tried in the 1550s in Laois and Offaly, and again in the 1570s in Antrim, both times with limited success. But in the wake of the Desmond Rebellions, large swathes of land in Munster were colonised in the Munster Plantation; the largest grant of lands was made to Sir Walter Raleigh, but he never really made a go of it and sold out to Sir Richard Boyle, who later became Earl of Cork and the wealthiest subject of the early Stuart monarchs.
Naturally, the prospect of land confiscation alienated the Irish further. But the alienation wasn't confined to the Gaelic Irish: those who claimed descent from the original conquerors under Henry II were increasingly referred to as the Old English, to distinguish them from the many administrators, captains and planters (the New English) who were arriving in Ireland. And it was mostly amongst this Old English community that radical commitment to Catholicism was gaining ground.
As the 16th century wore on, the religious question had grown in significance. Rebels such as James Fitzmaurice Fitzgerald and Hugh O'Neill sought and received help from Catholic powers in Europe, justifying their actions on religious grounds. However, the Pale community and many Irish lords did not consider them to be genuinely religiously motivated. In the new century, the country would become polarised between Catholics and Protestants, especially after the planting of a large colony of English settlers into Ireland and Scots Presbyterians in Ulster (See Plantation of Ulster).
Under James I, Catholics were barred from all public office after the gunpowder plot was discovered in 1605; the Gaelic Irish and Old English increasingly defined themselves as Catholic in opposition to the Protestant New English settlers. However the native Irish (both Gaelic and Old English) remained the majority landowners in the country until after the Irish Rebellion of 1641. By the end of the resulting Cromwellian conquest of Ireland in the 1650s, the "New English" Protestants dominated the country, and after the Glorious Revolution of 1688 their descendants went on to form the Protestant Ascendancy.
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"Tudor re-conquest of Ireland".
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