Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Ulster opposition to Catholic emancipation, 1828–9
View through CrossRef
The centre stage of early nineteenth-century Irish politics has long been held by Daniel O’Connell and the Catholic Association. This may be justifiable, as O’Connell created a mass constitutional movement for liberal reform out of a Catholic, peasant population on the fringe of Europe. Less justifiable is the single perspective that sees the struggle for Catholic emancipation as Catholic Ireland’s battle with the British establishment. In 1828 and 1829 there was also a massive Protestant political campaign in Ireland. This centred on the new Brunswick Clubs and Ulster. Yet anti-Catholic and Ulster politics merit few sentences in narratives of these years. Indeed, there is a general neglect of Ulster politics in the first half of the nineteenth century. Presbyterianism, the evangelical revival, Catholicism, sectarian conflict, the Orange Order, the Irish Yeomanry, the economy and the growth of Belfast as a city have all received detailed treatment, but the nuances of politics remain vague. The Catholic Association appears to have reduced Ulster’s importance in shaping political developments in the island as a whole from its high-water mark of the 1790s. This does not, however, justify simply leaving Ulster out of the story. This article aims to look at the Ulster anti-emancipation campaign and to correct the skewed picture of Ireland in these years.
Title: Ulster opposition to Catholic emancipation, 1828–9
Description:
The centre stage of early nineteenth-century Irish politics has long been held by Daniel O’Connell and the Catholic Association.
This may be justifiable, as O’Connell created a mass constitutional movement for liberal reform out of a Catholic, peasant population on the fringe of Europe.
Less justifiable is the single perspective that sees the struggle for Catholic emancipation as Catholic Ireland’s battle with the British establishment.
In 1828 and 1829 there was also a massive Protestant political campaign in Ireland.
This centred on the new Brunswick Clubs and Ulster.
Yet anti-Catholic and Ulster politics merit few sentences in narratives of these years.
Indeed, there is a general neglect of Ulster politics in the first half of the nineteenth century.
Presbyterianism, the evangelical revival, Catholicism, sectarian conflict, the Orange Order, the Irish Yeomanry, the economy and the growth of Belfast as a city have all received detailed treatment, but the nuances of politics remain vague.
The Catholic Association appears to have reduced Ulster’s importance in shaping political developments in the island as a whole from its high-water mark of the 1790s.
This does not, however, justify simply leaving Ulster out of the story.
This article aims to look at the Ulster anti-emancipation campaign and to correct the skewed picture of Ireland in these years.
Related Results
Emancipation
Emancipation
Since the early nineteenth century, “emancipation” has been the catch phrase used to designate the release of Jews from an inferior political status through the acquisition of equa...
Emancipation
Emancipation
The process of emancipation in the Atlantic world spanned most of the 19th century and took a variety of forms. Some, such as Haiti’s 1804 declaration of immediate emancipation and...
Catholicism, Apostasy and Politics in Late Eighteenth-Century England: The Case of Sir Thomas Gascoigne and Charles Howard, Earl of Surrey
Catholicism, Apostasy and Politics in Late Eighteenth-Century England: The Case of Sir Thomas Gascoigne and Charles Howard, Earl of Surrey
Apostasy among the English Catholic gentry in the late eighteenth century was not uncommon. In this period contemporary Catholic observers were concerned by what they perceived to ...
Canboulay and the Negre Jardin
Canboulay and the Negre Jardin
Coming to terms with Trinidadian Carnival means dealing not only with its current manifestations but also with its often fraught history linked to imperialism and enslavement. A Ca...
“Up against a Stone Wall”: Women, Power and the National Catholic Community Houses
“Up against a Stone Wall”: Women, Power and the National Catholic Community Houses
This article is about the rise and fall of the National Catholic Community Houses, institutions created by the National Catholic War Council (NCWC) and run by Catholic laywomen. It...
The Oxford Handbook of Catholic Theology
The Oxford Handbook of Catholic Theology
This book provides a one-volume introduction to Catholic theology. Part I includes chapters on the major themes of Catholic theology. Topics covered include the nature of theologic...
Emerson and Caribbean Emancipation
Emerson and Caribbean Emancipation
Abstract
This essay reassesses Emerson’s “Address on the Anniversary of the Emancipation of the Negroes in the British West Indies,” with an emphasis on the staggere...
Laywomen Enacting the Mystical Body
Laywomen Enacting the Mystical Body
This essay focuses on the generative impact of the twentieth-century ecclesial image, the Mystical Body of Christ, coupled with the papally sanctioned Catholic Action on Catholic l...

