The English Conquest of Ireland, c.1530-c.1650

  • Nicholas Canny

Research output: Chapter in Book or Conference Publication/ProceedingChapterpeer-review

Abstract

This chapter demonstrates that when King Henry VIII and Queen Elizabeth and latterly Oliver Cromwell ruled in England the word conquest involved the deliberate slaying of many inhabitants in the area being subjected to conquest, and the taking of measures to ensure that the survivors would abandon their identity to become English and Protestant. This means that when the English government undertook to conquer Ireland during the 1580s and 1590s and again in the 1650s, it was launching campaigns that, by modern definitions, were genocidal in intent. The author shows that this reality was acknowledged by historians of Ireland, regardless of their religious and political allegiances to the close of the nineteenth century even if the terms they used a different vocabulary. The chapter then proceeds to explain why academic authors in Ireland during the first half of the twentieth century chose to discount these gory aspects of Ireland’s early modern past, and how the older verities have been rehabilitated to recent decades. The author throughout draws a distinction between the many massacres that occurred in Ireland during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries and the attempted conquests, with associated intended genocides, of which there were but two.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationThe Cambridge World History of Genocide
Subtitle of host publicationVolume II: Genocide in the Indigenous, Early Modern and Imperial Worlds, from c.1535 to World War One
PublisherCambridge University Press
Pages139-162
Number of pages24
ISBN (Electronic)9781108765480
ISBN (Print)9781108759731
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • atrocity
  • barbarism
  • civility
  • colonization
  • conquest
  • famine as a weapon of war
  • Massacre
  • rebellion
  • religious conversion
  • war of extermination

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