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Encyclopedia > Act for the Settlement of Ireland 1652

The Act for the Settlement of Ireland 1662 was passed by the Long Parliament, who had taken power in England after the English Civil War, after the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland, itself in response to the Irish Rebellion of 1641. The Long Parliament is the name of the English Parliament called by Charles I, in 1640, following the Bishops Wars. ... The term English Civil War (or Wars) refers to the series of armed conflicts and political machinations which took place between Parliamentarians and Royalists from 1642 until 1651. ... Oliver Cromwell landed in Ireland with his New Model Army on behalf of the English Parliament in 1649. ... The Irish Rebellion of 1641 began as an attempted coup détat by Irish Catholic gentry, but rapidly degenerated into bloody inter communal violence between native Irish Catholics and English and Scottish Protestant settlers. ...

Ten1 named leaders of the Royalist forces in Ireland, together with anyone2 who had participated in the Irish Rebellion's early stages and who had killed an Englishman other than in battle, lost their lives and estates. The Act made a distinction between the rebels of 1641 – who were deemed unlawful combatants – as against those who had fought in the regular armies of Confederate Ireland, who were treated as legitimate combatants provided that they had surrendered before the end of 1652. The 1641 rebels and the above mentioned Royalist leaders were not included in the pardon given to soldiers who had surrendered: they were to be executed when captured. Roman Catholic clergy were also excluded from the pardon, as the Cromwellians held them responable by fomenting the 1641 Rebellion. Their lives were also forfeit if captured. Unlawful combatant (also illegal combatant or unprivileged combatant) describes a person who engages in combat without fulfilling the conditions that confer lawful combatant status according to the laws of war. ... Kilkenny Castle, where the Confederate General Assembly met. ... The Roman Catholic Church, most often spoken of simply as the Catholic Church, is the largest Christian church, with over one billion members. ... The Irish Rebellion of 1641 began as an attempted coup détat by Irish Catholic gentry, but rapidly degenerated into bloody inter communal violence between native Irish Catholics and English and Scottish Protestant settlers. ...

The remaining leaders of the Irish army lost two-thirds of their estates. To have been merely a bystander was itself a crime and anyone who who had resided in Ireland any time from October 1, 1649, to March 1, 1650 and had not "manifested their constant good affection to the interest of the Commonwealth of England" lost one-third of their land. The Commissioners in Ireland had power to give them, in lieu thereof, other (poorer) lands in Connacht or Clare in proportion of value and were authorised "to transplant such persons from the respective places of their usual habitation or residence, into such other places within that nation, as shall be judged most consistent with public safety". This they interpreted liberally and ordered all Irish land owners to leave for those lands before 1 May, 1654 or be executed. (Hence the expression, "To Hell or to Connaught"). Protestant Royalists, on the other hand, could avoid land confiscations if they had surrendered by May 1650 and had paid fines to the Parliamentarian government. Connaught redirects here. ... County Clare (Contae an Chláir in Irish) is in the Irish province of Munster. ... May 1 is the 121st day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (122nd in leap years). ...

Main article: The Cromwellian Plantation Plantations in 16th and 17th century Ireland were the seizure of land owned by the native Irish and granting of it to colonists (planters) from Britain. ...

In the next of the Plantations of Ireland, the confiscated land was granted to the "Adventurers" who had joined the conquering army. (The "settlement" refers to settling of scores, not to settlers. The new owners were known as "planters".) The Adventurers were financiers who had loaned the Parliament money during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. Many of Ireland's pre-war Protestant inhabitants also took advantage of the confiscation of Catholic-owned land to increase their own holdings. In addition, smaller grants of land were given to 12,000 veterans of the New Model Army who had served in Ireland. Plantations in 16th and 17th century Ireland were the seizure of land owned by the native Irish and granting of it to colonists (planters) from Britain. ... The Wars of the Three Kingdoms were an intertwined series of conflicts that took place in Scotland, Ireland, and England between 1639 and 1651 at a time when these countries had come under the personal rule of the same monarch, also called English Civil War. ... The New Model Army became the best known of the various Parliamentarian armies in the English Civil War. ...

Confirmation

In June 1657, the Act of Settlement 1657 "for the Assuring, Confirming and Settling of lands and estates in Ireland" ratified previous decrees, judgments, grants and instructions made or given by the various officers and councils in applying the 1652 Act. Events January 8 - Miles Sindercombe, would-be-assassin of Oliver Cromwell, and his group are captured in London February - Admiral Robert Blake defeats the Spanish West Indian Fleet in a battle over the seizure of Jamaica. ... The Act of Settlement 1657 was an Act of the Cromwellian Parliament for the Assuring, Confirming and Settling of lands and estates in Ireland. ...

Mitigation

In 1662, a further Act of Settlement 1662 (after the English Restoration) aimed to reduce its effect on Protestant and "innocent Catholics". This Act returned some lands to prominent Irish Royalists, but left most of the land confiscateed from Irish Catholics in Protestant hands. Events March 18 – Short-timed experiment of the first public buses holding 8 passengers begins in Paris May 3/May 2 - Catherine of Braganza marries Charles II of England – as part of the dowry, Portugal cedes Bombay and Tangier to England May 9 - Samuel Pepys witnessed a Punch and Judy... The Act of Settlement 1662 was An act for the better execution of His Majestys gracious declaration for the Settlement of his Kingdom of Ireland, and the satisfaction of the several interests of adventurers1, soldiers, and other his subjects there. ... The English Restoration or simply Restoration was an episode in the history of Great Britain beginning in 1660 when the monarchy was restored under King Charles II after the English Civil War. ...


Note 1: James Butler Earl of Ormond, James Touchet Earl of Castlehaven, Ulick Bourke Earl of Clanricarde, Christopher Plunket Earl of Fingal, James Dillon Earl of Roscommon, Richard Nugent Earl of Westmeath, Morrogh O'Brien Baron of Inchiquin, Donogh MacCarthy Viscount Muskerry, Theobald Taaffe Viscount Taaffe of Corren, Richard Butler Viscount Mountgarret.

Note 2: "all and every person and persons, who at any time before the tenth day of November, 1642 (being the time of the sitting of the first General Assembly at Kilkenny in Ireland), have contrived, advised, counselled, promoted, or acted, the rebellion, murders, or massacres done or committed in Ireland, which began in the year 1641; or have at any time before the said tenth day of November, 1642, by bearing arms, or contributing men, arms, horse, plate, money, victual, or other furniture or hablements of war (other than such which they shall make to appear to have been taken from them by mere force and violence), aided, assisted, promoted, acted, prosecuted, or abetted the said rebellion, murders, or massacres";

"all and every Jesuit, priest, and other person or persons who have received orders from the Pope or See of Rome, or any authority derived from the same, that have any ways contrived, advised, counselled, promoted, continued, countenanced, aided, assisted, or abetted; or at any time hereafter shall any ways contrive, advise, counsel, promote, continue, countenance, aid, assist, or abet the rebellion or war in Ireland, or any the murders or massacres, robberies, or violences committed against the Protestants, English, or others there". The Society of Jesus (Latin: Societas Iesu), commonly known as the Jesuits, is a Roman Catholic religious order. ...

"and every person and persons (both principals and accessories) who since the first of October, 1641, have or shall kill, slay, or otherwise destroy any person or persons in Ireland, which at the time of their being so killed, slain, or destroyed, were not publicly entertained and maintained in arms as officers or private soldiers, for and on behalf of the English against the Irish; and all and every person and persons (both principals and accessories) who since the said first day of October, 1641, have killed, slain, or otherwise destroyed any person or persons entertained and maintained as officers or private soldiers, for and on the behalf of the English against the Irish (the said persons so killing, slaying, or otherwise destroying, not being then publicly entertained and maintained in arms as officer or private soldier under the command and pay of the Irish nation against the English)."

External links

The full text of the Act can be found at [1]


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Down Survey (952 words)
It will be remembered that under an Ordinance of 1652, all persons of the Catholic Religion who had not manifested their constant good affection to the Commonwealth were forfeit one-third of their estates, and to be assigned lands to the value of the other two-thirds where the Commonwealth should appoint.
Acting under the Ordinance of 1653 already referred to, Commissioners held Courts at Athlone to determine the qualifications of the Catholics, and made their Decrees accordingly.
These Acts, together with the "resolution of the doubts by the Lord Lieutenant and Council upon the Act of Settlement and Explanation" formed the code under which the restoration settlement was carried to a conclusion.
Ireland from Cromwell to William (1067 words)
By 1652 he controlled the whole country and passed "The Settling of Ireland Act".
Under the ensuing Act of Settlement in 1662, and Act of Explanation in 16665, only very few got their land back, even if they were judged innocent.
Petty calculated that the population of Ireland was 1,448,000 in 1641.
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