HISTORY
OF ATHENRY The Cromwellian Plantation In October 1641 rebellion broke out in Ulster. The Irish rebels killed
over ten thousand settlers and many more fled to the walled towns for safety.
For the next eight years, however, England was the scene of a fiercely fought civil war between King Charles I (1625-49) and the extreme Protestants or Puritans led by Oliver Cromwell. The fighting also spread to Ireland where armies supporting both sides fought each other. After the execution of King Charles I in 1649, the new ruler of England, Oliver Cromwell, decided go to Ireland, to gain control of the country using the excuse of seeking revenge for the massacre of the Protestants in 1641. On 13 August 1649, Cromwell and his army of 12,000 experienced soldiers landed at Ringsend near Dublin and set out for Drogheda the 'gateway' to Ulster. Cromwell's capture of Drogheda and the massacre, which followed, set the scene for his conquest of the rest of the country. This he achieved within a short period of time and when he returned to England in May 1650, most of his work was done. By 1652, Ireland was a country worn out by ten years of warfare.
Famine and plague were widespread. Wolves roamed the countryside and even
came into the neighbourhood of the towns in search of food. Because so
many men had died in the war, and with many Irish soldiers going overseas,
large numbers of women and children were unprovided for. The English
government had these rounded up and sold as slaves to work in the sugar
plantations in the West Indies including approximately two thousand of
Galway's population. Inishbofin, off the Galway coast, was used as a prison
for many Catholic priests who were either executed or also transported
to the West Indies. The reward for the handing over of a priest to the
authorities was five pounds. This was in the hope that the Catholic religion
would die out in Ireland from lack of priests. However, many priests remained
in Ireland to continue their ministry in disguise. Galway was one of the
last cities to surrender in 1652 and it was then that the last major plantation
in Ireland took place.
To enforce the Cromwellian Plantation detailed maps of the countryside were needed. Sir William Petty, a doctor in Cromwell's army, led a team of soldiers in surveying the entire country. This was called the 'Down Survey' because Petty and his men wrote 'down' all the details of the landscape and the end result was 'The Book of Survey and Distribution'. Armed soldiers guarded Petty's surveyors against attack from Tories
or Irish outlaws. Petty was richly rewarded for his work and as well as
his fee of over eighteen thousand pounds, he also gained a vast estate
near Kenmare in Co. Kerry. The survey was completed within a year and the
maps produced were very accurate, interesting and informative. They were
the best maps available until the Ordnance Survey maps appeared in the
1840s.
Although not the largest of the plantations, the Cromwellian plantation had the greatest long-term effect on land ownership. As a result of the changes which it brought about Ireland became a land deeply divided between Protestant landlords and Catholic tenants. Because of this and former plantations the amount of land owned by Catholics was greatly reduced. Whereas Catholics owned 90% of the land in 1600, a hundred years later only 15% of the land remained in their hands and for the next two centuries a small number of rich Protestant landlords ruled Ireland. This group became known as the Protestant Ascendancy and they believed in keeping as much land as possible in Protestant hands. They rented out the land to Irish tenants who never lost hope of recovering these lands whether by violent or peaceful means. Although the control of land by English landlords often led to violent action on the part of tenants, it was largely by peaceful means that the plantation settlements were eventually overturned and from 1880 onwards the native Irish became owners of the land once more. Finbarr O’Regan for the “Lamberts of Athenry”
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