Lordship of Ireland
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- This article is about the prior realm. For the modern state, see Republic of Ireland; for other uses of Ireland, see Ireland (disambiguation).
|
||||
Capital | Dublin | |||
Language(s) | Norman French, Irish, Welsh, English | |||
Government | Monarchy | |||
Lord of Ireland | ||||
- 1171-1189 | Henry II | |||
- 1509-1541 | Henry VIII | |||
Lord Lieutenant | ||||
- 1528-1529 | Piers Butler | |||
- 1540–1548 | Anthony St Leger | |||
Legislature | Parliament of Ireland | |||
- Upper house | Irish House of Lords | |||
- Lower house | Irish House of Commons | |||
History | ||||
- Established | 1171 | |||
- Act of the Irish Parliament | 1541 | |||
1 The Lordship of Ireland did not have an official flag. A commission of Edward IV into the arms of Ireland found these to be the arms of the Lordship. The heraldic description is Azure, three crowns Or, bordure Argent. Typically bordered arms represent the younger branch of a family or maternal descent. |
The Lordship of Ireland (1171-1541) was the nominally all-island Irish state created in the wake of the Norman invasions of Ireland in 1169-71.
Contents |
[edit] Background
The authority of the Lordship of Ireland's government was seldom extended throughout the island of Ireland at any time during its existence but was restricted to the Pale around Dublin, and some provincial towns, including Cork, Limerick, Waterford, Wexford and their hinterlands. It owed its origins to the decision of a Leinster dynast, Diarmait Mac Murchada (Diarmuid MacMorrough), to bring in a Norman knight based in Wales, Richard de Clare (alias 'Strongbow'), to aid him in his battle to regain his throne, after being overthrown by a confederation led by the new Irish High King (the previous incumbent had protected MacMurrough). Henry II of England, who reigned over England and ruled over parts of France, invaded Ireland to control Strongbow, whom he feared was becoming a threat to the stability of his own kingdom on its western fringes (there had been earlier fears that Saxon refugees might use either Ireland or Flanders as a base for a counter-offensive after 1066); ironically, much of the later Plantagenet consolidation of South Wales was in furtherance of holding open routes to Ireland.
[edit] Laudabiliter 1155
Another reason King Henry invaded Ireland was because Pope Adrian IV had issued a papal bull Laudabiliter (1155) authorizing the English monarch to take possession of Ireland. Religious practices in Ireland and organisation had evolved divergently from those of areas of Europe influenced more directly by the Holy See, although many of these differences had been eliminated or greatly lessened by the time the bull was issued in 1155. Further, the former Irish church had never sent its dues ('tithes') to Rome. Despite this, many historians argue that Henry's primary motivation for invading Ireland was to control Strongbow and other Norman lords. Civility and inclusion had a cost.
The pope asserted the right to grant sovereignty over islands to different monarchs on the basis of a document, later found to be a forgery, called the Donation of Constantine. If forged, its effect was anyway confirmed by Pope Alexander III in 1172 and then by the Irish bishops at the Synod of Cashel. The papal bull gave the Norman-English kings the title "Lord of Ireland".
[edit] John, Lord in 1185-1199
Having captured a small part of Ireland on the east coast, Henry used the land to solve a dispute dividing his family. For while he had divided his territories between his sons, one son, nicknamed "John Lackland", was left without lands to rule, hence the nickname. Henry granted John his Irish lands, becoming Lord of Ireland (Dominus Hiberniae) in 1185, with the territory becoming the Lordship of Ireland.
Fate, however, intervened in the form of the deaths of John/Jean's older brothers. As a result, he became King John of England, and the Lordship of Ireland, instead of being a separate country governed separately by a junior Norman prince, became a territorial possession of the Norman-English Crown.
[edit] Progress and decline
The Lordship thrived in the 1200s, a time of warm climate and better harvests. Some new elements of Irish life were introduced. Some counties were created by shiring and townlands with ancient boundaries adopted the prefix 'bally-' from the Norman 'ville'. Walled towns and castles became a feature of the landscape. But little of this engagement with mainstream European life was of benefit to those the Normans called the 'mere Irish'. 'Mere' derived from the Latin merus, meaning pure.
The Lordship suffered invasion by Edward Bruce in 1315-18 which destroyed much of the economy. The earldom of Ulster ended in 1333 and the Black Death of 1348-50 impacted more on the town-dwelling Normans than on the remaining Gaelic clans. Historians refer to a Gaelic revival between 1350 and 1500, by which time the area ruled for the Crown - the 'Pale' - had shrunk to a small area around Dublin.
Between 1500 and 1541 a mixed situation arose. Most clans remained loyal most of the time, using a Gaelic-style system of alliances centred around the Lord Deputy who was usually the earl of Kildare. However a rebellion by Kildare's heir Silken Thomas in 1535 led on to a less sympathetic system of rule by mainly English-born administrators. The rebellion and Henry VIII's seizure of the Irish monasteries around 1540 led on to his plan to create a new kingdom based on the existing parliament.
[edit] Lordship to Kingdom, 1541
English monarchs continued to use the title "Lord of Ireland" to refer to their position of conquered lands on the island of Ireland. The title was changed by an Act of the Irish Parliament in 1541, when on Henry VIII's demand, he was granted a new title, King of Ireland, with the state renamed the Kingdom of Ireland. Henry VIII changed his title because the Lordship of Ireland had been granted to the Norman monarchy by the Papacy and Henry was unpopular with the Catholic Church, which meant that the title could be seen as dubious or be withdrawn by the Holy See. So because of the King of England's split with Rome he had to change his Irish title. Henry VIII also wanted Ireland to be become a full kingdom to encourage a greater sense of loyalty amongst his Irish subjects, some of whom took part in his policy of Surrender and regrant.
[edit] Parliaments and great Councils 1318 - 1361
- 1310, Kilkenny
- 1320, Dublin
- 1324, Dublin
- 1327, Dublin
- 1328, Kilkenny
- 1329, Dublin
- 1330, Kilkenny
- 1331, Kilkenny
- 1331, Dublin
- 1341, Dublin
- 1346, Kilkenny
- 1350, Kilkenny
- 1351, Kilkenny
- 1351, Dublin
- 1353, Dublin
- 1357, Kilkenny
- 1359, Kilkenny
- 1359, Waterford
- 1360, Kilkenny
- 1366, Kilkenny
- 1369, Dublin
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- Norman Davies, The Isles: A History (Palgrave-Macmillan, 1999) (ISBN 0-333-76370-X)
- Robin Frame; English Lordship in Ireland 1318 - 1361 (Clarendon Press, 1982) ISBN 0-19-822673-X
Preceded by High Kings of Ireland |
Lordship of Ireland | Succeeded by Kingdom of Ireland |
Irish states in order of creation (1171–present) |
|
Lordship of Ireland | Kingdom of Ireland | United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland | Irish Republic | Southern Ireland | Northern Ireland | Irish Free State | Ireland |
|
|
|
See also: |