The Cromwellian conquest of
Ireland (1649-53) refers to the re-conquest of Ireland
by the
forces of the English Parliament,
led by Oliver Cromwell during the
Wars of the Three
Kingdoms. Cromwell landed in Ireland with his
New Model Army on behalf of the
English Parliament in 1649.
Since the Irish Rebellion of 1641, Ireland had
been mainly under the control of the Irish Confederate
Catholics
, who in 1649, signed an alliance with the English
Royalist party, which had been defeated in
the English Civil War.
Cromwell's forces defeated the Confederate and Royalist coalition
in Ireland and occupied the country - bringing to an end the
Irish Confederate Wars. He
passed a series of
Penal laws against
Roman Catholics (the vast majority
of the population) and confiscated large amounts of their land. The
Parliamentarian reconquest of
Ireland was brutal, and Cromwell is still a hated figure in
Ireland. The extent to which Cromwell, who was in direct command
for the first year of the campaign, is responsible for the
atrocities is debated fiercely to this day. It has recently been
argued by a number of historians that many of the actions taken by
Cromwell were within the then-accepted rules of war, or were
exaggerated or distorted by later propagandists. These claims are
challenged by other historians. The Parliamentarian campaign is
generally estimated to have resulted in the death or exile of about
15-25% of the Irish population, though a few historians have
suggested that the population dropped by as much as 50%.
Background
The English Parliament, victorious in the
English Civil War, had several reasons for
sending an army to Ireland in 1649.
- An
alliance was signed in 1649 between the Irish
Confederate Catholics
and Charles II
(the exiled son of the executed Charles I) and the English
Royalists. This allowed for Royalist troops to be sent to
Ireland and put the Irish Confederate Catholic troops under the
command of Royalist officers led by James Butler, Earl of
Ormonde. Their aim was to invade England and restore the
monarchy there. This was a threat which the new English Commonwealth could not afford
to ignore.
- Even if the Confederates had not allied themselves with the
Royalists, it is likely that the English Parliament would have
eventually tried to reconquer Ireland. They had sent Parliamentary
forces to Ireland throughout the Wars of the Three Kingdoms (most
of them under Michael Jones
in 1647). They viewed Ireland as part of the territory governed by
right by the Kingdom of England
and only temporarily out of its control since the Irish Rebellion of 1641.
- In addition many Parliamentarians wished to punish the Irish
for atrocities against English Protestant settlers (who had settled
on land that had been seized from native Catholic owners by the
British crown to make way for them) during the 1641 Uprising.
- Some
Irish towns (notably Wexford
and Waterford
) had acted as bases from which Privateers had attacked English shipping during
the 1640s.
- Parliament had raised loans of £10 million under the Adventurers Act to fight the civil war since
1642, on the basis that its creditors would be repaid with land
confiscated from Irish Catholic rebels. To repay these creditors,
it would be necessary to conquer Ireland and confiscate such
land.
- Cromwell and many of his army were Puritans who considered all Roman Catholics to be
heretics, and so for them the conquest was
partly a crusade.
The battle of Rathmines and Cromwell’s landing in Ireland
By the end
of the period, known as Confederate Ireland
, in 1649 the only remaining Parliamentarian outpost
in Ireland was in Dublin
, under the
command of Colonel Michael
Jones. A combined Royalist
and Confederate
force under the Marquess of Ormonde
gathered at Rathmines
, south of Dublin
, in order to
take the city and deprive the Parliamentarians of a port in which
they could land. Jones however
launched a surprise attack on the
Royalists while they were deploying on August 2, putting them to
flight. Jones claimed to have killed around 4000 Royalist or
Confederate soldiers and taken 2517 prisoners.
Oliver Cromwell called the battle, "an
astonishing mercy, so great and seasonable that we are like them
that dreamed", as it meant that he had a secure port at which he
could land his army in Ireland, and that he retained the capital
city.
With
Admiral Robert Blake
blockading the remaining Royalist fleet under Prince Rupert of the Rhine in
Kinsale
, Cromwell landed on August 15 with thirty five
ships filled with troops and equipment. Henry Ireton landed
two days later with a further seventy seven ships.
Ormonde's troops retreated from around Dublin in disarray. They
were badly demoralised by their unexpected defeat at Rathmines and
were incapable of fighting another pitched battle in the short
term. As a result, Ormonde hoped to hold the walled towns on
Ireland's east coast to hold up the Cromwellian advance until the
winter, when he hoped that "Colonel Hunger and Major Sickness"
(i.e. hunger and disease) would deplete their ranks.
The Siege of Drogheda
Upon
landing, Oliver Cromwell proceeded
to take the other port cities on Ireland
’s east
coast, in order to secure an efficient supply of reinforcements and
logistics from England
.
The first
town to fall was Drogheda
, about
50 km north of Dublin. Drogheda was garrisoned by a
regiment of 3000 English
Royalist and Irish
Confederate soldiers, commanded by
Arthur Aston. When Cromwell’s
men took the town by storm, the majority of the garrison and
Catholic priests were massacred on Cromwell’s orders. Many
civilians also died in the sack. Arthur Aston was beaten to death
by the
Roundheads with his own wooden leg.
The
slaughter of the garrison and civilians in Drogheda
, including 1,000 taking shelter in the town church
was received with horror in Ireland, and is remembered even today
as an example of Cromwell’s extreme cruelty. However, it has
recently been argued (for example by Tom Reilly in
Cromwell, an
Honourable Enemy, Dingle 1999) that what happened at Drogheda
was not unusually severe by the standards of seventeenth century
siege warfare. Having taken Drogheda,
Cromwell sent 5000 men north under
Robert Venables to take eastern
Ulster from the remnants of a Scottish
Covenanter army that had landed there in 1642.
They
defeated the Scots at the battle
of Lisnagarvey and linked up with a Parliamentarian army
composed of English settlers based around Derry
in western
Ulster, which was commanded by Charles
Coote.
Wexford, Waterford and Duncannon

Kilkenny Castle.
The Irish Confederate capital of Kilkenny fell to Cromwell in
1650
Main articles: Sack of Wexford,
Siege of Waterford
The
New Model Army then marched south to
secure the ports of Wexford
, Waterford
and Duncannon
. Wexford was the scene of another
infamous atrocity, when Parliamentarian
troops broke into the town while negotiations for its surrender
were ongoing, and sacked it, killing about 2000 soldiers and 1500
townspeople and burning much of the town. Cromwell's responsibility
for the sack of Wexford is disputed. He did not order the attack on
the town, and had been in the process of negotiating its surrender
when his troops broke into the town. On the other hand, his critics
point out that he made little effort to restrain his troops or to
punish them afterwards for their conduct.
Arguably, the sack of Wexford was somewhat counter-productive for
the Parliamentarians. The destruction of the town meant that the
Parliamentarians could not use its port as a base for supplying
their forces in Ireland. Secondly, the effects of the severe
measures adopted at Drogheda and at Wexford were mixed. To some
degree they may have been effective in discouraging future
resistance. The Royalist commander Ormonde thought that the terror
of Cromwell's army had a paralysing effect on his forces.
Towns
like New
Ross
, Carlow
and Kilkenny
subsequently surrendered on terms when besieged by
Cromwell's forces. On the other hand, the massacres of the
defenders of Drogheda and Wexford prolonged resistance elsewhere,
as they convinced many Irish Catholics that they would be killed
even if they surrendered.
Such towns as Waterford
, Duncannon
, Clonmel
, Limerick
and Galway
only
surrendered after determined resistance. Cromwell was unable
to take Waterford
or Duncannon
and the New Model Army had to retire to winter
quarters, where many of its men died of disease – especially
typhoid and dysentery. (The port towns of Waterford and
Duncannon eventually surrendered after prolonged sieges in
1650).
Clonmel and the conquest of Munster
Cromwell passed the command of Parliamentarian forces in
Ireland to Ireton in 1650.
He died of disease at the siege of Limerick in 1651
The
following spring, Cromwell mopped up the remaining walled towns in
Ireland’s south east – notably the Confederate
Capital of Kilkenny
, which surrendered on terms. The
New Model Army met its only serious reverse
in Ireland at the
siege of Clonmel,
where its attacks on the towns walls were repulsed at a cost of up
to 2,000 men. The town nevertheless surrendered the following day.
Cromwell's behaviour at Kilkenny and Clonmel may be contrasted with
his conduct at Drogheda and Wexford. Despite the fact that his
troops had suffered heavy casualties attacking the former two
towns, Cromwell respected surrender terms which guaranteed the
lives and property of the townspeople and the evacuation of armed
Irish troops who were defending them. The change in attitude on the
part of the Parliamentarian commander may have been a recognition
that excessive cruelty was prolonging Irish resistance. However, in
the case of Drogheda and Wexford no surrender agreement had been
negotiated, and by the rules of continental siege warfare prevalent
in the mid-1600s, this meant no quarter would be given; thus it can
be argued that Cromwell's attitude had not changed.
Ormonde’s
Royalists still held most of Munster, but
were outflanked by a mutiny of their own garrison in Cork
. The British
Protestant troops there
had been fighting for the Parliament up to 1648 and resented
fighting with the Irish Confederates
. Their mutiny handed Cork and most of
Munster to
Cromwell and they defeated the local Irish
garrison at the
battle of Macroom.
The Irish
and Royalist forces retreated behind the Shannon river into Connaught or (in the case of the remaining Munster
forces) into the fastness of Kerry
.
The collapse of the Royalist alliance
In May 1650,
Charles II
repudiated his father’s (
Charles
I)
alliance
with the Irish Confederates in preference for an alliance with the
Scottish
Covenanters (see
Treaty of Breda ). This totally
undermined Ormonde’s position as head of a Royalist coalition in
Ireland. Cromwell published generous surrender terms for Protestant
Royalists in Ireland and many of them either capitulated or went
over to the Parliamentarian side. This left in the field only the
remaining Irish Catholic armies and a few diehard English
Royalists. From this point onwards, many Irish Catholics, including
their Bishops and clergy, questioned why they should accept
Ormonde's leadership when his master, the King had repudiated his
alliance with them. Cromwell left Ireland in May 1650 to fight the
Third English Civil War
against the new Scottish-Royalist alliance. He passed his command
onto
Henry Ireton.
Scarrifholis and the destruction of the Ulster Army
The most formidable force left to the Irish and Royalists was the
6000 strong army of
Ulster, formerly
commanded by
Owen Roe O'Neill, who
died in 1649. However the army was now commanded by an
inexperienced Catholic Bishop named
Heber
MacMahon.
The Ulster army met a Parliamentarian army
composed mainly of British settlers and commanded by Charles Coote
at the battle of Scarrifholis
in Donegal
in June 1650. The Ulster army was routed and
as many as 2000 of its men were killed. In addition, MacMahon and
most of the Ulster Army's officers were either killed at the battle
or captured and executed after it. This eliminated the last strong
field army opposing the Parliamentarians in Ireland and secured for
them the northern province of Ulster. Coote's army, despite
suffering heavy losses at the
Siege
of Charlemont, the last Catholic stronghold in the north, was
now free to march south and invade the west coast of Ireland.
The Sieges of Limerick and Galway
The Parliamentarians crossed the
Shannon into the western province of
Connaught in October 1650. An Irish army under
Clanricarde
had attempted to stop them but this was surprised and routed at the
battle of Meelick Island.
Ormonde was discredited by
the constant stream of defeats for the Irish and Royalist forces
and no longer had the confidence of the men he commanded,
particularly the Irish Confederates
. He fled for France
in December
1650 and was replaced by an Irish nobleman Ulick Burke of
Clanricarde as commander. The Irish and Royalist forces were penned
into the area west of the river Shannon and placed their last hope
on defending the strongly walled cities of Limerick
and Galway
on Ireland's
west coast. These cities had built extensive modern defences
and could not be taken by a straightforward assault like Drogheda
or Wexford.
Ireton besieged Limerick while
Charles Coote surrounded Galway, but they were unable to take the
strongly fortified cities and instead blockaded them until a
combination of hunger and disease forced them to surrender. An
Irish force from Kerry attempted to relieve Limerick from the south
but this was intercepted and routed at the
battle of Knocknaclashy. Limerick
fell in 1651 and Galway the following year. Disease however killed
indiscriminately and Ireton along with thousands of Parliamentarian
troops, died of
plague outside Limerick in
1651 .
Guerrilla warfare, famine and plague

Right
The fall
of Galway
saw the end
of organised resistance to the Cromwellian conquest, but fighting
continued as small units of Irish troops launched guerrilla attacks on the
Parliamentarians.
The guerrilla phase of the war had been going since late 1650 and
at the end of 1651, despite the defeat of the main Irish or
Royalist forces, there were still estimated to be 30,000 men in
arms against the Parliamentarians.
Tories (from
the Irish word tóraidhe meaning, "pursued man") operated
from difficult terrain such as the Bog of
Allen, the Wicklow
Mountains
and the drumlin country in
the north midlands, and within months, made the countryside
extremely dangerous for all except large parties of Parliamentarian
troops. Henry Ireton mounted a
punitive expedition to the
Wicklow mountains in 1650 to try and put down the tories there, but
without success.
By early 1651, it was reported that no English supply convoys were
safe if they travelled more than two miles outside a military base.
In response, the Parliamentarians destroyed food supplies and
forcibly evicted civilians who were thought to be helping the
tories.
John
Hewson systematically destroyed food stocks in counties
Wicklow
and Kildare
, Hardress Waller did
likewise in the Burren in County Clare
, as did Colonel Cook in County Wexford
. The result was
famine
throughout much of Ireland, aggravated by an outbreak of
Bubonic plague.
As the guerrilla war
ground on, the Parliamentarians, as of April 1651, designated areas
such as County
Wicklow
and much of the south of the country as what would
now be called free-fire zone, where
anyone found would be, "taken slain and destroyed as enemies and
their cattle and good shall be taken or spoiled as the goods of
enemies". This tactic had succeeded in the
Nine Years' War that had ended in
1603.
In
addition they began selling prisoners of war as indentured servants to the West Indies
(especially Barbados
, where their descendants are known as Redlegs). A total of 12,000 Irish people were
sold as slaves under the English Commonwealth regime.
This phase of the war was by far the most costly in terms of
civilian loss of life. The combination of warfare, famine and
plague caused a huge mortality among the Irish population.
William Petty estimated (in the
Down Survey) that the death toll of the wars in
Ireland since 1641 was over 618,000 people, or about 40% of the
country’s pre-war population. Of these, he estimated that over
400,000 were Catholics, 167,000 killed directly by war or famine
and the remainder by war-related disease.
Eventually, the guerrilla war was ended when the Parliamentarians
published surrender terms in 1652 allowing Irish troops to go
abroad to serve in foreign armies not at war with the
Commonwealth of England. Most went
to France or Spain.
The largest Irish guerilla forces under John
Fitzpatrick (in Leinster), Edmund O'Dwyer
(in Munster) and Edmund Daly (in Connacht) surrendered in 1652, under terms signed
at Kilkenny
in May of that year. However, up to 11,000
men, mostly in
Ulster, were still thought to
be in the field at the end of the year.
The last Irish and
Royalist forces (the remnants of the Confederate's Ulster Army, led
by Philip O'Reilly) formally surrendered at Cloughoughter in County Cavan
on April 27 1653. However, low-level guerrilla warfare
continued for the remainder of the decade and was accompanied by
widespread lawlessness and banditry. Undoubtedly some of the tories
were simple
bandits, whereas others were
politically motivated. The Cromwellians distinguished in their
rewards for information or capture of outlaws between "private
tories" and "public tories".
The Cromwellian Settlement
Cromwell imposed an extremely harsh settlement on the Irish
Catholic population. This was because of his deep religious
antipathy to the
Catholic religion and to
punish Irish Catholics for the
rebellion of 1641, in particular the
massacres of Protestant settlers in Ulster. Also he needed to raise
money to pay off his army and to repay the London merchants who had
subsidized the war under the
Adventurers
Act back in 1642.
Anyone implicated in the
rebellion of 1641 was executed.
Those who
participated in Confederate Ireland
had all their land confiscated and thousands were
transported to the West
Indies
as slaves. Those
Catholic landowners who had not taken part in the wars still had
their land confiscated, although they were entitled to claim land
in
Connaught as compensation. In addition,
no Catholics were allowed to live in towns.
Irish soldiers who
had fought in the Confederate and Royalist
armies left the country in large numbers to find service in the
armies of France
and Spain
- William Petty estimated their number at 54,000
men. The practice of Catholicism was banned and bounties
were offered for the capture of priests, who were executed when
found.
The
Long Parliament had signed the
Adventurers Act in 1642, which said
that the Parliament's creditors could reclaim their debts by
receiving confiscated land in Ireland. In addition, Parliamentarian
soldiers who served in Ireland were entitled to an allotment of
confiscated land there, in lieu of their wages, which the
Parliament was unable to pay in full. As a result, many thousands
of
New Model Army veterans were
settled in Ireland. Moreover, the pre-war Protestant settlers
greatly increased their ownership of land (see also:
The
Cromwellian Plantation). Before the wars, Irish Catholics had
owned 60% of the land in Ireland, whereas by the time of the
English Restoration, when
compensations had been made to Catholic Royalists, they owned only
20% of it. During the Commonwealth period, Catholic landownership
had fallen to 8%. Even after the Restoration of 1660, Catholics
were barred from all public office, but not from the
Irish Parliament.
Historical debate
The Parliamentarian campaign in Ireland was the most ruthless of
the
Civil War period. In
particular, Cromwell's actions at Drogheda and Wexford earned him a
reputation for cruelty.
However, pro-Cromwell accounts argue that Cromwell's actions in
Ireland were not excessively cruel by the standards of the day.
Cromwell himself argued that his severity when he was in Ireland
applied only to "men in arms" who opposed him. Accounts of his
massacres of civilians are still disputed, although there is
evidence from contemporary sources that Drogheda was regarded as a
massacre even then and this is the view most often taken by
historians.
Formally, Cromwell's command issued in Dublin shortly after his
arrival states the following:
- "I do hereby warn....all Officers, Soldiers and others
under my command not to do any wrong or violence toward Country
People or any persons whotsoever, unless they be actually in arms
or office with the enemy.....as they shall answer to the contrary
at their utmost peril".
The purpose of this order was, at least in part, to ensure that the
local population would sell food and other supplies to his troops.
It is worth noting that the Parliamentarian Colonel
Daniel Axtell was court-martialled by Ireton
in 1650 as a result of atrocities committed by his soldiers during
the
Battle of Meelick
Island.
Cromwell's critics point to his response to a plea by Catholic
Bishops to the Irish Catholic people to resist him in which he
states that although his intention was not to
- massacre, banish and destroy the Catholic inhabitants,
if they did resist I hope to be free from the misery and
desolation, blood and ruin that shall befall them, and shall
rejoice to exercise the utmost severity against them.
It has also recently been argued, by Tom Reilly in
Cromwell, an
Honourable Enemy, that what happened at Drogheda and Wexford
was not unusually severe by the standards of seventeenth century
siege warfare, in which the garrisons
of towns taken by storm were routinely killed to discourage
resistance in the future. The Journal
History Ireland
dismisses this view: "His [Reilly's] general thesis that Cromwell
may well have had no moral right to take the lives at Drogheda or
Wexford 'but he certainly had the law firmly on his side' does not
stand up to examination." Similarly,
John Morrill commented, "A major
attempt at rehabilitation was attempted by Tom Reilly, Cromwell: An
Honourable Enemy (London, 1999) but this has been largely rejected
by other scholars." Moreover, historians critical of Cromwell point
out that even at the time the killings at Drogheda and Wexford were
considered atrocities. They cite such sources as
Edmund Ludlow, the Parliamentarian commander
in Ireland after Ireton's death, who wrote that the tactics used by
Cromwell at Drogheda showed "extraordinary severity".
Cromwell's actions in Ireland occurred in the context of a mutually
cruel war. In 1641-42 Irish insurgents in Ulster killed between
4,000 and 12,000 Protestant settlers (who had settled on land where
the former Catholic owners had been evicted to make way for them)
before they fled. These events were magnified in Protestant
propaganda as an attempt by Irish Catholics to exterminate the
English Protestant settlers in Ireland. In turn, this was used as
justification by English Parliamentary and Scottish Covenant forces
to take vengeance on the Irish Catholic population. A Parliamentary
tract of 1655 argued that, "the whole Irish nation, consisting of
gentry, clergy and commonality are engaged as one nation in this
quarrel, to root out and extirpate all English Protestants from
amongst them". One historian has gone so far as to say that, "It
[the 1641 massacres] was to be the justification for Cromwell's
genocidal campaign and settlement."
The war, as it developed, saw atrocities on all sides. The Scottish
Covenanter soldiers under the command of
General Monroe, sent to Ireland by the Scottish Parliament, in 1642
massacred up to 3,000 Catholics at Island Magee on 9 January 1642.
When
Murrough
O'Brien, the Earl of Inchiquin and Parliamentarian commander in
Cork
, at the
Sack of Cashel in 1647, he
slaughtered the garrison and Catholic clergy there (including
Theobald Stapleton), earning the
nickname "Murrough of the Burnings". (Inchiquin switched
allegiances in 1648, becoming a commander of the Royalist forces).
After such battles as
Dungans
Hill and
Scarrifholis,
English Parliamentarian forces executed their Irish Catholic
prisoners.
Similarly, when the Confederate Catholic
general Thomas
Preston took Maynooth
in 1647, he hanged its Catholic defenders as
apostates.
Seen in this light, some have argued that the severe conduct of the
Parliamentarian campaign of 1649-53 appears unexceptional, given
that Cromwell could not afford to fight a long campaign. Again,
this is strongly disputed as was just shown above.
Nevertheless, the 1649-53 campaign remains notorious in Irish
popular memory as it was responsible for a huge death toll among
the Irish population. The reason for this was the counter-guerrilla
tactics used by such commanders as
Henry
Ireton,
John Hewson and
Edmund Ludlow against the Catholic
population from 1650, when large areas of the country still
resisted the Parliamentary Army. These tactics included the
wholesale burning of crops, forced population movement and killing
of civilians. The policy caused famine throughout the country that
was "responsible for the majority of an estimated 600,000 deaths
out of a total Irish population of 1,400,000."
In addition, the whole post-war Cromwellian settlement of Ireland
has been characterised by historians such as Mark Levene and
Alan Axelrod as
ethnic cleansing, in that it sought to
remove Irish Catholics from the eastern part of the country, others
such as the historical writer
Tim Pat
Coogan have described the actions of Cromwell and his
subordinates as genocide.
- Albert Breton (Editor, 1995). Nationalism and
Rationality. Cambridge University Press 1995. Page 248.
"Oliver Cromwell offered Irish Catholics a choice between genocide
and forced mass population transfer"
- Ukrainian Quarterly. Ukrainian Society of America
1944. "Therefore, we are entitled to accuse the England of Oliver
Cromwell of the genocide of the Irish civilian population.."
- David Norbrook (2000).Writing the English Republic: Poetry,
Rhetoric and Politics, 1627-1660. Cambridge University Press.
2000. In interpreting Andrew Marvell's contemporarily expressed
views on Cromwell Norbrook says; "He (Cromwell) laid the foundation
for a ruthless programme of resettling the Irish Catholics which
amounted to large scale ethnic cleansing.."
- Frances Stewart (2000). War and Underdevelopment:
Economic and Social Consequences of Conflict v. 1
(Queen Elizabeth House Series in Development Studies), Oxford
University Press. 2000. p. 51 "Faced with the prospect of an Irish
alliance with Charles II, Cromwell carried out a series of
massacres to subdue the Irish. Then, once Cromwell had returned to
England, the English Commissary, General Henry Ireton, adopted a
deliberate policy of crop burning and starvation, which was
responsible for the majority of an estimated 600,000 deaths out of
a total Irish population of 1,400,000."
- Alan Axelrod (2002). Profiles in
Leadership, Prentice-Hall. 2002. Page 122. "As a leader
Cromwell was entirely unyielding. He was willing to act on his
beliefs, even if this meant killing the king and perpetrating,
against the Irish, something very nearly approaching genocide"
- Tim Pat Coogan (2002). The
Troubles: Ireland's Ordeal and the Search for Peace. ISBN
9780312294182. p 6. "The massacres by Catholics of Protestants,
which occurred in the religious wars of the 1640s, were magnified
for propagandist purposes to justify Cromwell's subsequent
genocide."
- Peter Berresford Ellis (2002). Eyewitness to Irish
History, John Wiley & Sons Inc. ISBN 9780471266334. p. 108
"It was to be the justification for Cromwell's genocidal campaign
and settlement."
- John Morrill (2003).
Rewriting Cromwell - A Case of Deafening Silences,
Canadian Journal of History. Dec 2003. "Of course, this has never
been the Irish view of Cromwell.
Most Irish remember him as the man responsible for the mass
slaughter of civilians at Drogheda and Wexford and as the agent of
the greatest episode of ethnic cleansing ever attempted in Western
Europe as, within a decade, the percentage of land possessed by
Catholics born in Ireland dropped from sixty to twenty.
In a decade, the ownership of two-fifths of the land mass was
transferred from several thousand Irish Catholic landowners to
British Protestants.
The gap between Irish and the English views of the
seventeenth-century conquest remains unbridgeable and is governed
by G.K.
Chesterton's mirthless epigram of 1917, that "it was a tragic
necessity that the Irish should remember it; but it was far more
tragic that the English forgot it."
- James M Lutz, Brenda J Lutz, (2004). Global
Terrorism, Routledge:London, p.193: "The draconian laws
applied by Oliver Cromwell in Ireland were an early version of
ethnic cleansing. The Catholic Irish were to be expelled to the
northwestern areas of the island. Relocation rather than
extermination was the goal."
- Mark Levene (2005). Genocide in the Age of
the Nation State: Volume 2. ISBN 978-1845110574 Page 55, 56
& 57. A sample quote describes the Cromwellian campaign and
settlement as "a conscious attempt to reduce a distinct ethnic
population".
- Mark Levene (2005). Genocide in the Age of the
Nation-State, I.B.Tauris: London:
[The Act of Settlement of Ireland], and the
parliamentary legislation which succeeded it the following year, is
the nearest thing on paper in the English, and more broadly
British, domestic record, to a programme of state-sanctioned and
systematic ethnic cleansing of another people.
The fact that it did not include 'total' genocide in
its remit, or that it failed to put into practice the vast majority
of its proposed expulsions, ultimately, however, says less about
the lethal determination of its makers and more about the
political, structural and financial weakness of the early modern
English state.
The aftermath of the Cromwellian campaign and settlement saw
extensive dispossession of landowners who were Catholic, and a huge
drop in population. In the event, the much larger number of
surviving poorer Catholics were not moved westwards; most of them
had to fend for themselves by working for the new landowners.
Long term results
The
Cromwellian conquest completed the British
colonisation
of Ireland. It destroyed the native Irish Catholic
land-owning classes and replaced them with colonists with a British
identity. The bitterness caused by the Cromwellian settlement was a
powerful source of
Irish
nationalism from the seventeenth century onwards. After the
Stuart Restoration in 1660,
Charles II of England restored
about a third of the confiscated land to the former landlords, but
not all, as he needed political support from former
parliamentarians in England. A generation later, during the
Glorious Revolution, many of the
Irish Catholic landed class tried to reverse the remaining
Cromwellian settlement in the
Williamite war in Ireland
(1689-91), where they fought en masse for the
Jacobites. They were defeated once again, and
many lost land that had been regranted after 1660. As a result,
Irish and English Catholics did not become full political citizens
of the British state again until
1829 and were legally barred from
buying valuable interests in land until 1778-93.
See also
Notes
- "Of all these doings in Cromwell's Irish Chapter, each of us
may say what he will. Yet to everyone it will at least be
intelligible how his name came to be hated in the tenacious heart
of Ireland". John Morley, Biography of Oliver Cromwell. Page 298.
1900 and 2001. ISBN 978-1421267074.; "Cromwell is still a hate
figure in Ireland today because of the brutal effectiveness of his
campaigns in Ireland. Of course, his victories in Ireland made him
a hero in Protestant England." [1] British National Archives web site. Accessed March
2007; [2] From a history site dedicated to the
English Civil War. "... making Cromwell's name into one of the
most hated in Irish history". Accessed March 2007. Site currently
offline. WayBack Machine holds archive here [3]
- For example Philip McKeiver in his, 2007, A New History of
Cromwell's Irish Campaign ISBN 978-0-9554663-0-4 and Tom
Reilly, 1999, Cromwell: An Honourable Enemy ISBN
0-86322-250-1
- History
Ireland, review of "Cromwell: An Honourable Enemy" History Ireland
- Padraig Lenihan, Confederate Catholics at War, p112
- The History and Social Influence of the Potato, Redcliffe N.
Salaman, Edited by JG Hawkes, 9780521316231, Cambridge University
Press
- O'Siochru, God's Executioner, p.69 &96
- McKeiver, A New History of Cromwell's Irish Campaign,
page.59
- Antonia Fraser, Cromwell, our Chief of Men (1973), p. 324
- Fraser, Cromwell our Chief of Men, p.326
- Padraig Lenihan, Confederate Catholics at War, p.113
- Fraser, pp.336-339. Kenyon, Ohlmeyer, The Civil Wars, p.
98
- O Siochru, God's Executioner, pp. 82-91. Faber &
Faber (2008)
- Kenyon, Ohlmeyer, The Civil Wars, p100
- McKeiver,A New History of Cromwell's Irish Campaign p.167
- Micheal O Siochru, God's Executioner, Oliver Cromwell and
Conquest of Ireland, p.187
- Lenihan, p.122
- James Scott Wheeler, Cromwell in Ireland
- Kenyon, Ohlmeyer, The Civil Wars, p134
- Kenyon & Ohlmeyer The Civil Wars, p.278. Scott Wheeler,
Cromwell in Ireland
- Lenihan, p. 111
- Reilly, Dingle 1999
- John Morrill. "Rewriting Cromwell: A Case of Deafening
Silences." Canadian Journal of History. Dec 2003: 19.
- Richard Lawrence, the Interest of England in Irish
transplantation (1655), quoted in Lenihan, Confederate Catholics at
War, p111
- Peter Berresford Ellis (2002). Eyewitness to Irish
History. John Wiley & Sons Inc 2002. ISBN 978-0471266334.
p. 108
- John Morrill. "Rewriting Cromwell: A Case of Deafening
Silences." Canadian Journal of History. Dec 2003: 19
- Frances Stewart (2000). War and Underdevelopment:
Economic and Social Consequences of Conflict v. 1 (Queen
Elizabeth House Series in Development Studies), Oxford University
Press. 2000. p. 51
References
- Coyle Eugene, A review on web.archive.org, of Cromwell: An Honourable
Enemy, by Tom Reilly, Brandon Press, 1999, ISBN
0863222501
- Fraser, Antonia. Cromwell Our Chief of Men, Panther,
St Albans 1975, ISBN 0586042067
- Ó Siochrú, Mícheál. RTÉ ONE, Cromwell in Ireland Part 2.
Broadcast 16/9/2008.
- Kenyon, John & Ohlmeyer, Jane (editors). The Civil
Wars, Oxford 1998. ISBN 019866222X
- Lenihan, Padraig, Confederate Catholics at War, Cork
2001. ISBN 1859182445
- Morrill, John. Rewriting Cromwell - A Case of Deafening
Silences. Canadian Journal of History. Dec 2003.
- Reilly, Tom. Cromwell, an Honourable Enemy, Dingle
1999, ISBN 0863222501
- Scott-Wheeler, James, Cromwell in Ireland, Dublin
1999, ISBN 9780717128846
Further reading
- Canny, Nicholas P. Making Ireland British 1580-1650,
Oxford 2001, ISBN 0198200919
- Gentles, Ian. The New Model Army, Cambridge 1994, ISBN
0631193472
- O'Siochru, Micheal, God's Executioner- Oliver Cromwell and
the Conquest of Ireland, Faber & Faber, London, 2008.
- Plant, David. Cromwell in Ireland: 1649-52, British Civil
Wars, Retrieved 22-09-2008
- Prendergast J.P., The Cromwellian Settlement of Ireland , Dublin
1868
- Stradling, R.A. The Spanish monarchy and Irish
mercenaries, Irish Academic Press, Dublin 1994.