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Land War

The Land War (Irish: Cogadh na Talún)[1] was a period of agrarian agitation in rural Ireland (then wholly part of the United Kingdom) that began in 1879. It may refer specifically to the first and most intense period of agitation between 1879 and 1882,[2] or include later outbreaks of agitation that periodically reignited until 1923, especially the 1886–1891 Plan of Campaign and the 1906–1909 Ranch War.[3] The agitation was led by the Irish National Land League and its successors, the Irish National League and the United Irish League, and aimed to secure fair rent, free sale, and fixity of tenure for tenant farmers and ultimately peasant proprietorship of the land they worked.

Land War
Part of Irish Home Rule movement
An Irish family in Moyasta, County Clare being evicted c. 1879
Date
  • Main phase: 20 April 1879 – 6 May 1882 (1879-04-20 – 1882-05-06)
  • Plan of Campaign: 1886–1891
  • Ranch War: 1906–1911
  • Further agitation: until 1923
Caused by
Goals
MethodsRent strikes, boycotts, political demonstrations
Resulted in
Parties
Lead figures

From 1870, various governments introduced a series of Land Acts that granted many of the activists' demands. William O'Brien played a leading role in the 1902 Land Conference to pave the way for the most advanced social legislation in Ireland since the Union, the Land Purchase (Ireland) Act 1903. This Act set the conditions for the break-up of large estates by government-sponsored purchase.

Alongside the political and legal changes, the "Long Depression" affected rent yields and landlord-tenant relations across all of Europe from the 1870s to the 1890s.

Background edit

 
During the second half of the nineteenth century, Ireland suffered population loss due to emigration and the Great Famine.

The population of Ireland was overwhelmingly rural; in 1841, four-fifths of the population lived in hamlets smaller than 20 houses. This ratio declined over the century, but only due to emigration from rural areas and not from growth of the towns and cities.[4] Land in Ireland was concentrated into relatively few hands, many of them absentee landlords. In 1870, 50% of the island was owned by 750 families.[5] Between 1850 and 1870, landlords extracted £340 million in rent—far exceeding tax receipts for the same period—of which only 4–5% was reinvested.[6] This led landlords to take on a role of non-productive managers within the island's overall economy.[7] Conflict between landlords and tenants arose from opposing viewpoints on such issues as land consolidation, security of tenure, transition from tillage to grazing, and the role of the market.[8] The Irish nationalist politician Isaac Butt pointed out the fact that Catholic Irish were tenants was worse than "the heaviest yoke of feudal servitude".[9]

The Devon Commission of 1843–44 found that various forms of tenant right were practiced throughout Ireland, not just in Ulster.[10] There was a tension between English law, which protected the absolute property rights of the landlord, and Irish custom on the other hand in which the tenant enjoyed an "interest" in the property, which he could buy or sell.[11] This "interest" could be as much as 4–6 years rent, which incoming tenants had to pay with capital that they might otherwise have spent on their own improvements. In the decades following the Great Famine, rises in agricultural prices were not matched by rent increases, leading to an increase in the tenant's stake in the farm, which may have risen to as much as 10–20 years of rent. The existence of tenant right was accepted by creditors who would extend loans with the tenant right as collateral.[12]

During the Great Famine (1845–1849), the poorest cottiers and agricultural labourers died or were forced to emigrate, freeing up land that was purchased by larger farmers.[13] In 1850, the Tenant Right League briefly dominated Irish politics with the demand for free sale, fixity of tenure, and fair rent.[14] Although it never caught on with the poor smallholders in Connacht which it was intended to help,[15] the League spurred the creation of the Independent Irish Party.[14] In 1870, the Liberal Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone pushed through the Landlord and Tenant (Ireland) Act 1870. The act actually increased agrarian tensions, as landlords attempted to evade provisions intended to protect departing tenants, while the tenants retaliated by setting up local Tenants' Defence Associations.[15] One such the Route Tenants' Defence Association, was however hostile towards the League.[citation needed]

Agrarian crimes were rising during the late 1870s, from 135 in 1875 to 236 two years later. At the same time emigration (which acted as a pressure valve for political tension) decreased by more than half.[16] Nevertheless, as late as 1877 the areas which would be heavily affected by Land League agitation were completely calm, without any hint of what was to come.[17] In 1878, the Irish-American Clan na Gael leader John Devoy offered Charles Stewart Parnell, then a rising star in the Irish Parliamentary Party (IPP), a deal which became known as the New Departure. As a result of this agreement, the physical-force and parliamentary wings of Irish nationalism agreed to work together on the land issue.[18][19] This collaboration was cemented by a meeting on 1 June 1879 in Dublin between Devoy, Parnell, and Michael Davitt. It is disputed what was actually agreed to. Davitt maintained that there was no formal agreement, while Devoy claimed that the IPP had promised not to act against the Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB) and made other concessions in exchange for Irish-American support.[20]

The west of Ireland was hit by the 1879 famine, a combination of heavy rains, poor yields and low prices that brought widespread hunger and deprivation.[21] Compounded by the reduction in opportunities for outside income, especially seasonal agricultural income in Great Britain, many smallholders were faced with hunger and unable to pay their rent.[22][23] Some landlords offered rent abatement, while others refused on the grounds that their tenants were participating in anti-landlord agitation.[24] Irish historian Paul Bew notes that five of the largest landlords in Connacht also refused to contribute any money to relief funds, despite collecting more than £80,000 annually in rent.[7] According to historians such as William Vaughan and Phillip Bull, the serious agricultural recession combined with a unified nationalist leadership set the stage to produce a powerful and lasting popular movement.[25]

Chronology edit

Land League (1879–1881) edit

 
Irish landlord reduced to begging for rent, 1880 caricature

The Land War began on 20 April 1879 at a mass meeting in Irishtown, County Mayo organised by local and Dublin-based activists, led by Davitt and James Daly.[26][27] The activists tried to mobilize an alliance of tenant farmers, shopkeepers and clergy in favour of land reform. Although the clergy refused to participate, some 7,000 to 13,000 people attended the meeting, having come from all parts of Mayo and counties Roscommon and Galway. The main issue was rent, which was typically paid in the spring; due to the poor harvest tenants could not afford to pay and many had been threatened with eviction.[28] The crowd was guided and led into position by local Fenians—recruited by Davitt in an earlier trip with help from local IRB leader Pat Nally—even though the IRB council refused to sanction agrarian activism. Speakers included John O'Connor Power MP, Fenian Thomas Brennan, Glasgow-based activist John Ferguson, and Daly.[29]

Local Fenians organised meetings, at Claremorris on 25 May with 200 attendees and Knock on 1 June with a reported 20,000–30,000 turnout, in protest of the Church's position.[30] Another meeting was held in Westport, County Mayo on 8 June, in protest against the Marquess of Sligo, the largest landowner in Mayo; Davitt persuaded Parnell to speak[31] and 8,000 people turned out.[32] Parnell went on with the engagement even after John MacHale, Archbishop of Tuam, denounced the meeting in a 7 June letter to The Freeman's Journal.[33] Parnell also wanted to prevent the new movement's capture by Fenian radicals, as the latter were unacceptable to the Catholic clergy and to larger tenants, on whose support Parnell depended.[34] This meeting, especially Parnell's speech in which he promoted peasant proprietorship, was widely commented in the press as far afield as London.[35]

Initially, the movement was non-sectarian in character and Protestant tenants also took part in meetings.[36] The focus of the leadership shifted from agitation to organization to harness the new energy for the nationalist cause.[37] On 16 August 1879, the Land League of Mayo was founded in Castlebar,[38] at which point the first overtures were made to the Catholic hierarchy.[39] From September, priests quickly assumed leadership roles in the movement and presided over more than two thirds of the meetings in the rest of 1879. The movement continued to gain strength as the economic situation deteriorated.[40] Involvement of the clergy made it much more difficult for the British government to take action against the movement, which instilled "almost perfect unity" among Irish tenant farmers.[41] In several constituencies, Land League-backed candidates failed in the 1880 general election due to clerical opposition.[42]

On 21 October 1879, the land League of Mayo was superseded by the Irish National Land League based in Dublin, with Parnell made its president.[38] As the land agitation progressed, it was taken over by larger farmers and the centre of gravity shifted away from the distressed western districts.[43] In Mayo, the autumn potato harvest was only 1.4 tons per acre, less than half of the previous year.[44] At the Land League conference in April 1880, Parnell's program of conciliation with landlords was rejected in favour a demand for the abolition of "landlordism", promoted by Davitt and other radicals.[45] On 17 May, Parnell was elected to the presidency of the IPP.[46] Local chapters of the Land League frequently were formed from previous associations such as Tenants' Defence Associations or Farmers' Clubs, which decided to join the Land League because of the greater financial resources offered; this brought larger farmers and graziers into the movement.[47]

The league adopted the slogan "the land for the people", which was vague enough to be acceptable to Irish nationalists across the political spectrum.[38] For most of the tenant farmers, the slogan meant owning their own land. For smallholders on uneconomic holdings, especially in the congested western areas, it meant being granted larger holdings that their families had held previous to the Great Famine evictions. For radicals such as Michael Davitt, it meant land nationalization.[48] The fusion between land agitation and nationalist politics was based on the idea that the land of Ireland rightfully belonged to the Irish people but had been stolen by English invaders who had foisted a foreign system of land tenure upon it.[49][50] Nominally, the Land League condemned large-scale grazing as improper use of land that rightfully belonged to tillage farmers. As investment in grazing land was the main vehicle of upward mobility for rural Catholics, the new Catholic grazier class was torn between its natural allegiance to Irish nationalism and its economic dependence on landlords to rent land for grazing. Many sided with the Land League, creating a mixed-class body whose actual economic interests conflicted. This further consolidated the nationalist nature of the Land League.[51]

The government set up the Land Commission in 1881 with quasi-judicial powers that eventually enabled most tenant farmers to buy freehold interests in their land.

Suppression (1881–1882) edit

 
Land League poster from the No Rent Manifesto period

After the general election of April 1880 with the Land War still raging, Parnell believed then that supporting land agitation was a means to achieving his objective of self-government. Prime Minister Gladstone attempted to resolve the land question with the Land Law (Ireland) Act 1881. The Act gave greater rights to tenant farmers, so-called dual ownership, but failed to eliminate tenant evictions. Parnell and his party lieutenants, William O'Brien, John Dillon and Willie Redmond went into a bitter verbal offensive against the Act and were imprisoned in October 1881 in Kilmainham Jail, together with other prominent members of the League, under the Irish Coercion Act. While in jail, they issued the No Rent Manifesto, calling for a national tenant farmer rent strike until their release. Finally, on 20 October the Government moved to suppress the Land League.[52]

A genuine No Rent campaign was virtually impossible to organise, and many tenants were more interested in "putting the Land Act to the test". It further seemed that the Coercion Act, instead of banishing agrarian crime, had only intensified it. Although the League discouraged violence, agrarian crimes increased widely. For the ten months before the Land Act was passed (March–December 1880), the number of "outrages" were 2,379, but in the corresponding period of 1881 with the Act in full operation the numbers were 3,821. The figures to March 1882, with Parnell in jail, showed a continued increase.[53]

In April 1882 Parnell moved to make a deal with the government. The settlement, known as the Kilmainham Treaty, involved withdrawing the manifesto and undertaking to move against agrarian crime. By 2 May all internees were released from jail, Davitt on 6 May, the day of the Phoenix Park Murders. With the Land League still suppressed, Parnell resurrected it with much ceremony together with Davitt on 17 October, proclaimed as a new organisation called the Irish National League.[54]

Plan of Campaign (1886–1891) edit

 
Eviction in Woodford, County Galway, in 1888, during the Plan of Campaign

Preceded by economic difficulties due to droughts in 1884 and 1887 as well as industrial depression in England causing shrinking markets,[55] the 1886–1891 Plan of Campaign was a more focused version of agitation and rent strikes.[citation needed] Tenants on an estate would meet and decide on what was a fair rent to pay their landlord, even though rents had already been judicially fixed by the 1885 act. They would offer to pay the lower rent, and if it was refused, would instead pay it to the Plan of Campaign fund. These rent strikes targeted the most heavily indebted and financially insecure landlords, who faced a choice between immediate bankruptcy and accepting a lower income.[56] Lord Clanricarde had evicted many tenants and became the main target. Given the extended franchise allowed in 1884, the IPP had to gain credibility with the larger number of new voters, choosing the most numerous Irish group: the low-to-middle-income rural electorate. Most IPP members were Catholic, and appealed to Rome for moral support. So did the government, and the Vatican issued a Papal Rescript followed by an encyclical "Saepe Nos" in 1888, condemning the activities of the Land League, particularly boycotting.[57] Saepe Nos also claimed to extend and clarify an earlier similar ruling by the Sacred Congregation for Propaganda.

In 1887 the Criminal Law and Procedure (Ireland) Act 1887 was passed to deal with the offenses surrounding the Campaign.

After the 1881 and 1885 Land Reform Acts (see below), many Tory press commentators described the Plan of Campaign as an opportunistic and cynical method of revenge following the division of the Liberal Party and the rejection of the first Irish Home Rule Bill in June 1886. It was also described as cruel, as new rent strikes would inevitably result in more evictions and boycotting as before, with all the associated intimidation and violence. Other reporters saw it as a matter of justice and of continuing concern to genuine liberals.

The Campaign led on to events such as the Mitchelstown massacre in 1887 and the imprisonment of IPP MPs such as William O'Brien for their involvement. The violent aspects of the campaign were abandoned on the run-up to the debates on the Second Irish Home Rule Bill in 1893. The IPP was by then divided into the Irish National Federation and the Irish National League over Parnell's divorce crisis.

 
Royal Irish Constabulary evict a man from his house in Moyasta on the Vandeleur Estate in County Clare, July 1888 during the Plan of Campaign.

Later agitation edit

Between 1906 and 1909, smallholders seeking more land launched the Ranch War, demanding the sale of untenanted land owned by landlords and the breakup of large grazing farms.[58] Opponents of ranching highlighted the fact that many ranches had been created after the famine from land formerly tilled by evicted smallholders.[59][60] Organised by the United Irish League and Laurence Ginnell,[61] the Ranch War involved cattle drives, public rallies, boycotting, and intimidation.[62][63] Between August and December 1907 alone, 292 cattle drives were reported to the authorities.[64] It was most intense in areas of Connacht, North and East Leinster and North Munster where large grazing farms and uneconomic smallholdings existed side by side.[65][66] The campaign resulted in a defeat for the small farmers; besides "a legacy of bitterness and cynicism in Connaught",[67] the main effect of their campaign was to show how Irish nationalism had become a bourgeois movement, including many large graziers.[68]

By the Irish War of Independence (1918–1922) about half a million people were occupying uneconomic smallholdings, mostly in the west of Ireland. In addition, veterans of the Irish Volunteers and first Irish Republican Army had been promised land in exchange for their service.[69] In 1919–1920, a wave of land seizures took place in western Ireland, and in 1920 agrarian crimes were recorded at their highest level since 1882.[70] When their hopes for acquiring more land were dashed by the fact that the Anglo-Irish Treaty made no mention of the land issue, many joined the Anti-Treaty side in the following Irish Civil War.[69][71] In the Irish Free State, their grievances fueled the Fianna Fáil party and led to the Land Acts of 1923 and 1933, which caused the "dramatic redistribution" of large farms and estates to smallholders and the landless.[72]

Tactics edit

 
Evicted (1890) by Lady Butler depicts a woman standing by her destroyed cottage shortly after an eviction near Glendalough, County Wicklow

Land courts edit

Some of the Land League's local branches established arbitration courts in 1880 and 1881,[73] which were explicitly modelled on British courts.[74] Typically, the cases were heard by the executive committee, which would summon both parties, call witnesses, examine evidence presented by the parties, make the judgment and assign a penalty if the code had been broken. Sometimes, juries would be called from the local communities and the plaintiff occasionally acted as prosecutor. Despite the trappings of common-law procedure, American historian Donald Jordan emphasizes that the tribunals essentially were an extension of the local branch judging if its own rules had been violated.[75][76] These courts were described as a "shadow legal system" by British academic Frank Ledwidge.[77] According to historian Charles Townshend, the formation of courts was the "most unacceptable of all acts of defiance" committed by the Land League.[78] In 1881, Chief Secretary for Ireland William Edward Forster grumbled that Land League law was ascendant:

... all law rests on the power to punish its infraction. There being no such power in Ireland at the present time, I am forced to acknowledge that to a great extent, the ordinary law of the country is powerless; but the unwritten law is powerful, because punishment is sure to follow its infraction.[79]

From 1882, the Irish National League organised courts to replace those of the earlier organisation. The key provisions forbade paying rent without abatements, taking over land from which a tenant had been evicted, and purchasing their holding under the 1885 Ashbourne Act.[80] Other forbidden actions included "participating in evictions, fraternizing with, or entering into, commerce with anyone who did; or working for, hiring, letting land from, or socializing with, boycotted person".[81] Tribunals were typically led by the leaders of local chapters, holding open proceedings with a common law procedure. This was intended to uphold the League's image of being in favour of the rule of law, just Irish law instead of English law.[82]

Boycott edit

When a man takes a farm from which another has been evicted, you must shun him on the roadside when you meet him, you must shun him in the streets of the town, you must shun him at the shop-counter, you must shun him in the fair and at the marketplace, and even in the house of worship... you must shun him your detestation of the crime he has committed... if the population of a county in Ireland carry out this doctrine, that there will be no man ... [who would dare] to transgress your unwritten code of laws.

Charles Stewart Parnell, at Ennis meeting, 19 September 1880[83][84]

One of the Land League's main tactics was the famous boycott,[85][86] whose target at first was "land grabbers".[87] Land League speakers including Michael Davitt began to advocate a new non-violent moral tactic against those taking over the land of evicted tenants.[88] Parnell gave a speech in Ennis in 1889, proposing that when dealing with such tenants, rather than resorting to violence, everyone in the locality should instead shun them. This tactic was then widened to landowners. The term "boycott" was coined later that year following the successful campaign against County Mayo land agent Charles Boycott. The concerted action taken against him meant that Boycott was unable to hire anyone to harvest the crops in his charge. Boycott was forced to leave the country;[89] and the tactic spread throughout the country. The use of "intimidation" to enforce a boycott had to be criminalized in the Prevention of Crime (Ireland) Act 1882.[90][91]

According to the Inspector General, boycotting "constituted a form of imprisonment for the victim who was isolated and separated from the rest of the community."[92] Larger farmers and landlords were better able to cope with a boycott, by weathering temporary loss of income, hiring scabs, or ordering supplies by mail.[92] While the effectiveness of boycotting has been disputed the phrase and tactic has passed into the language of non-violent action.[93]

Rent strike edit

Rent strikes were used as a means of pressuring landlords to reduce the rent. Withheld rents often went to a "defence fund" for legal representation in eviction cases and support for evicted families.[94] Rent strikes could also be effected in a Slowdown way, with paying a fraction now and promising more next week while making oneself unavailable, it could include obstacles for rent collectors, re-occupation of farms rented by evicted defaulters, etc. The Meaghers of Kilbury are credited as the inventors of this kind of tactics when they practiced it in January 1880. [95]

Violence edit

 
Evictions (grey) and agrarian crime (orange) during the Land War

Contemporary opponents argued that the Land War amounted to an "organised campaign of terrorism". In his biography of Michael Davitt, T. W. Moody acknowledged that the crime resulted from the Land League's militancy, but argued that statistics disprove the idea that the Land League maintained a "reign of terror".[96] The most common type of agrarian offence was the sending of threatening letters.[97] Davitt and other Land League leaders denounced agrarian crime in strong language,[98] and local chapters of the National League passed many resolutions against it.[99] However, the organisations were not in control of their rank-and-file. Between 1879 and in 1881, crimes related to the Land War rose from 25% to 58% of all crime in Ireland, without the leaders calling for an end to the agitation.[100] Only 16 percent of agrarian crimes led to arrests, much less than the 50% rate for non-agrarian offences.[101] Gladstone believed that escalating crimes were proof of the failure both of his government's policy of coercion and the Land League's No Rent strategy.[102]

Agrarian outrages decreased significantly after the founding of the Irish National League in 1882, due to the latter's system of dispute resolution for agrarian issues which imposed boycotting as its most severe punishment.[103] British officials often claimed that the National League's effectiveness was due to the fear of violence from lawless elements if the litigant did not comply.[104] Sociologist Samuel Clark argued that the threat of violence helped the Land League enforce its rulings and silence its enemies.[105] In 1889, the Special Commission on Parnellism and Crime found no links between the IPP and agrarian crime.[99][106] One British official explained that, while he was certain that the League did not plan or commit crimes, "without outrage and intimidation the League could not possibly exist".[103]

Land Acts edit

The land question in Ireland was ultimately defused by a series of Irish Land Acts, beginning in 1870 with rent reform,[107] establishing the Land Commission in 1881, and providing for judicial reviews to certify fair rents. The Ashbourne Act of 1885 started a limited process of allowing tenant farmers to buy their freeholds, which was greatly extended following the 1902 Land Conference, by the Land Purchase (Ireland) Act 1903. Augustine Birrel's Act of 1909 allowed for compulsory purchase, and also allowed the purchase and division of untenanted land that was being directly farmed by the owners. These Acts allowed tenants first to attain extensive property rights on their leaseholdings and then to purchase their land off their landlords via UK government loans and the Land Commission. The 1903 Act gave Irish tenant farmers a government-sponsored right to buy, which is still not available in Great Britain today.

The success of the Land Acts in reducing the concentration of land ownership is indicated by the fact that in 1870, only 3% of Irish farmers owned their own land while 97% were tenants. By 1929, this ratio had been reversed with 97.4% of farmers holding their farms in freehold.[108] However, the Land Acts were not the only factor causing this redistribution; the Great War and conflict during the Irish revolutionary period also facilitated the selling of land.[109] Land agitators came to see the reforms they sought as a panacea for rural Ireland's ills. In fact, emigration and economic disadvantage continued apace,[110][111] while the greatest beneficiaries of land reform were the middle class of medium farmers.[108]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ University of Delaware 2016.
  2. ^ Clark 2014, p. 3.
  3. ^ McLaughlin 2015, p. 89.
  4. ^ Winstanley 2003, p. 5.
  5. ^ Winstanley 2003, p. 11.
  6. ^ Vaughan 1994, p. 218.
  7. ^ a b Bew 1979, p. 90.
  8. ^ Bew 1979, pp. 15, 74.
  9. ^ Bew 2007, p. 274.
  10. ^ Bull 1996, p. 35.
  11. ^ Bull 1996, pp. 51–52.
  12. ^ Guinnane & Miller 1997, p. 601.
  13. ^ Dooley 2014, p. 8.
  14. ^ a b Jackson 2010, p. 87.
  15. ^ a b Dooley 2014, p. 9.
  16. ^ Bew 2007, p. 296.
  17. ^ Vaughan 1994, p. 209.
  18. ^ Bew 2007, pp. 309–310.
  19. ^ Janis 2015, p. 24.
  20. ^ Janis 2015, pp. 26–27.
  21. ^ Janis 2015, pp. 10–11.
  22. ^ Jordan 1994, pp. 203–204.
  23. ^ McLaughlin 2015, p. 88.
  24. ^ Jordan 1994, pp. 207–209.
  25. ^ Bull 1996, p. 86.
  26. ^ Jordan 1994, pp. 199, 217.
  27. ^ Kane 2011, p. 67.
  28. ^ Jordan 1994, p. 217.
  29. ^ Jordan 1994, pp. 219–220.
  30. ^ Jordan 1994, p. 224.
  31. ^ Jordan 1994, p. 222.
  32. ^ Jordan 1994, p. 226.
  33. ^ Jordan 1994, p. 223.
  34. ^ Jordan 1994, p. 225.
  35. ^ Jordan 1994, pp. 228–229.
  36. ^ Jordan 1994, pp. 231, 239–240.
  37. ^ Bull 1988, p. 28.
  38. ^ a b c Janis 2015, p. 11.
  39. ^ Jordan 1994, p. 241.
  40. ^ Jordan 1994, p. 245.
  41. ^ Bull 1996, pp. 83–84.
  42. ^ Bew 1979, pp. 98–99.
  43. ^ Biagini 2007, p. 302.
  44. ^ Jordan 1994, p. 203.
  45. ^ Bew 1979, pp. 99–100.
  46. ^ Bew 1979, p. 107.
  47. ^ Bew 1979, pp. 101, 126.
  48. ^ Bew 1979, p. 87.
  49. ^ Bull 1988, p. 27.
  50. ^ Jordan 1998, pp. 149–150.
  51. ^ Bull 1996, p. 85.
  52. ^ Lyons, F. S. L..: John Dillon, Ch. 2, pp. 55–60 Routledge & Kegan Paul, London (1968), SBN 7100 2887 3.
  53. ^ Lyons, F. S. L.: p. 64
  54. ^ Lyons, F. S. L.: pp. 66–68
  55. ^ The Land War 1879–1903 The National Library of Ireland (1976) ISBN 0-907328-06-7
  56. ^ Bull 1996, pp. 101–102.
  57. ^ "CATHOLIC LIBRARY: Saepe Nos (1888)". Retrieved 25 June 2016.
  58. ^ Casey 2018, p. 220.
  59. ^ Laird 2005, pp. 115–116.
  60. ^ Bew 1987, p. 169.
  61. ^ Bew 1987, pp. 138–139, 143.
  62. ^ Campbell 2005, p. 2.
  63. ^ Casey 2018, p. 237.
  64. ^ Bew 1987, p. 144.
  65. ^ Laird 2005, p. 115.
  66. ^ Bew 1987, p. 142.
  67. ^ Bew 1988, p. 234.
  68. ^ Bew 2007, p. 367.
  69. ^ a b Dooley 2014, pp. 14–15.
  70. ^ Laird 2005, p. 120.
  71. ^ Jackson 2010, p. 266.
  72. ^ Dooley 2014, pp. 15–16.
  73. ^ Jordan 1998, p. 161.
  74. ^ Campbell 2005, p. 7.
  75. ^ Jordan 1998, pp. 161–162.
  76. ^ Laird 2005, p. 27.
  77. ^ Ledwidge 2017, p. 40.
  78. ^ Townshend 1984, p. 130.
  79. ^ Laird 2005, p. 35.
  80. ^ Jordan 1998, p. 152.
  81. ^ Jordan 1998, p. 159.
  82. ^ Jordan 1998, pp. 159, 161.
  83. ^ Jordan 1994, p. 286.
  84. ^ Laird 2005, pp. 29–30.
  85. ^ Townshend 1984, pp. 116, 130.
  86. ^ Laird 2005, p. 28.
  87. ^ Laird 2013, p. 185.
  88. ^ Jordan 1994, pp. 285–286.
  89. ^ Jordan 1994, pp. 286, 289.
  90. ^ Laird 2005, p. 34.
  91. ^ Townshend 1984, p. 173.
  92. ^ a b Campbell 2005, p. 15.
  93. ^ Townshend 1984, p. 116.
  94. ^ Clark 2014, p. 345.
  95. ^ Bew 1979, p. 116.
  96. ^ Gantt 2010, p. 70.
  97. ^ Vaughan 1994, pp. 142, 150.
  98. ^ Biagini 2007, pp. 136–137.
  99. ^ a b Jordan 1998, p. 168.
  100. ^ Janis 2015, p. 163.
  101. ^ Jackson 1997, p. 273.
  102. ^ Bew 2007, p. 332.
  103. ^ a b Jordan 1998, p. 169.
  104. ^ Jordan 1998, p. 164.
  105. ^ Clark 2014, pp. 320–326, cited in Jordan 1994, p. 236.
  106. ^ Jackson 2010, p. 133.
  107. ^ Guinnane & Miller 1997, p. 594.
  108. ^ a b Bew 2007, p. 568.
  109. ^ Vaughan 1994, pp. 226, 228.
  110. ^ King 2009, p. 81.
  111. ^ Vaughan 1994, p. 225.

Print sources edit

  • Bew, Paul (1979). Land and the National Question in Ireland: 1858-82. Amherst: Humanities Press. ISBN 9780391009608.
  • Bew, Paul (1987). Conflict and Conciliation in Ireland, 1890–1910: Parnellites and Radical Agrarians. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 9780198227588.
  • Bew, Paul (1988). "Sinn Fein, Agrarian Radicalism and the War of Independence, 1919–1921". In Boyce, David George (ed.). The Revolution in Ireland, 1879–1923. Dublin: Gill and Macmillan. pp. 217–234. ISBN 9780717115563.
  • Bew, Paul (2007). Ireland: The Politics of Enmity 1789–2006. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198205555.
  • Bull, Philip (1988). "Land and Politics, 1879–1903". In Boyce, David George (ed.). The Revolution in Ireland, 1879–1923. Dublin: Gill and Macmillan. pp. 24–46. ISBN 9780717115563.
  • Bull, Philip (1996). Land, Politics and Nationalism: a Study of the Irish Land Question. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan. ISBN 9780717121908.
  • Biagini, Eugenio F. (2007). British Democracy and Irish Nationalism 1876–1906. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781139467568.
  • Campbell, Fergus (2005). "The 'Law of the League': United Irish League Justice, 1898–1910". Land and Revolution: Nationalist Politics in the West of Ireland 1891–1921. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199273249.001.0001. ISBN 9780191706387. From an Oxford Handbooks reprint paginated 1–45,{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  • Casey, Brian (2018). Class and Community in Provincial Ireland, 1851–1914. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 9783319711201.
  • Clark, Samuel (2014) [1979]. Social Origins of the Irish Land War. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 9781400853526.
  • Dooley, Terence (2014). "Land and the People". In Alvin, Jackson (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of Modern Irish History. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199549344.013.006. ISBN 9780199549344. From Oxford Handbooks reprint paginated 1–23,{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  • Gantt, Jonathan (2010). Irish Terrorism in the Atlantic Community, 1865–1922. London: Springer. ISBN 9780230250451.
  • Guinnane, Timothy W.; Miller, Ronald I. (1997). "The Limits to Land Reform: The Land Acts in Ireland, 1870–1909". Economic Development and Cultural Change. 45 (3). University of Chicago Press: 591–612. doi:10.1086/452292. hdl:10419/160647. ISSN 0013-0079. JSTOR 10.1086/452292. S2CID 17477539.
  • Hansson, Heidi; Murphy, James H. (2014). "The Irish Land War and its Fictions". Fictions of the Irish Land War. Peter Lang. ISBN 9783034309998.
  • Jackson, Alvin (2010) [1999]. Ireland: 1798–1998. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9780631195429.
  • Jackson, Patrick (1997). Education Act Forster: A Political Biography of W.E. Forster (1818–1886). Teaneck: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. ISBN 9780838637135.
  • Janis, Ely M. (2015). A Greater Ireland: The Land League and Transatlantic Nationalism in Gilded Age America. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 9780299301248.
  • Jordan, Donald (1994). Land and Popular Politics in Ireland: County Mayo from the Plantation to the Land War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521466837.
  • Jordan, Donald (1998). "The Irish National League and the 'Unwritten Law': Rural Protest and Nation-Building in Ireland 1882-1890". Past & Present. 158 (158). Oxford University Press: 146–171. doi:10.1093/past/158.1.146. ISSN 0031-2746. JSTOR 651224.
  • Kane, Anne (2011). Constructing Irish National Identity: Discourse and Ritual during the Land War, 1879–1882. London: Springer. ISBN 9781137001160.
  • King, Carla (2009). Michael Davitt. Dublin: University College Dublin Press. ISBN 9781910820964.
  • Laird, Heather (2005). Subversive Law in Ireland, 1879–1920: from Unwritten Law to Dáil Courts (PDF). Dublin: Four Courts Press. ISBN 9781851828760.
  • Laird, Heather (2013). "Decentring the Irish Land War: Women, Politics and the Private Sphere". In Campbell, Fergus; Varley, Tony (eds.). Land Questions in Modern Ireland. Manchester: Manchester University Press. pp. 175–193. ISBN 978-0-7190-7880-4.
  • Ledwidge, Frank (2017). Rebel Law: Insurgents, Courts and Justice in Modern Conflict. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9781849049238.
  • McLaughlin, Eoin (2015). "Competing forms of cooperation? Land League, Land War and cooperation in Ireland, 1879 to 1914" (PDF). Agricultural History Review. 3: 81–112.
  • Townshend, Charles (1984). "Land War". Political Violence in Ireland. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 105–180. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198200840.001.0001. ISBN 9780198200840.
  • Vaughan, William Edward (1994). Landlords and Tenants in Mid-Victorian Ireland. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 9780198203568.
  • Winstanley, Michael J. (2003) [1984]. Ireland and the Land Question 1800–1922. Routledge. ISBN 9781135835538.

Web sources edit

  • "Land League". A terrible beauty is born: The Easter Rising at 100. University of Delaware Library Exhibitions. 2016. Retrieved 26 October 2019.

Further reading edit

  • Curtis, Lewis Perry (2015) [1963]. Coercion and Conciliation in Ireland 1880-1892. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 9781400877003.
  • Murphy, James H. (2014). Ireland's Czar: Gladstonian Government and the Lord Lieutenancies of the Red Earl Spencer, 1868-86. Dublin: University College Dublin Press. ISBN 9781906359812.
  • O'Neill, Brian (1933), with introduction by Peadar O'Donnell, The War for the Land in Ireland. London: Martin Lawrence
  • Walsh, Rachael; Fox O’Mahony, Lorna (1 March 2018). "Land law, property ideologies and the British–Irish relationship". Common Law World Review. 47 (1): 7–34. doi:10.1177/1473779518773641. ISSN 1473-7795.

External links edit

land, other, uses, disambiguation, irish, cogadh, talún, period, agrarian, agitation, rural, ireland, then, wholly, part, united, kingdom, that, began, 1879, refer, specifically, first, most, intense, period, agitation, between, 1879, 1882, include, later, out. For other uses see Land War disambiguation The Land War Irish Cogadh na Talun 1 was a period of agrarian agitation in rural Ireland then wholly part of the United Kingdom that began in 1879 It may refer specifically to the first and most intense period of agitation between 1879 and 1882 2 or include later outbreaks of agitation that periodically reignited until 1923 especially the 1886 1891 Plan of Campaign and the 1906 1909 Ranch War 3 The agitation was led by the Irish National Land League and its successors the Irish National League and the United Irish League and aimed to secure fair rent free sale and fixity of tenure for tenant farmers and ultimately peasant proprietorship of the land they worked Land WarPart of Irish Home Rule movementAn Irish family in Moyasta County Clare being evicted c 1879DateMain phase 20 April 1879 6 May 1882 1879 04 20 1882 05 06 Plan of Campaign 1886 1891Ranch War 1906 1911Further agitation until 1923Caused byConcentration of land ownershipAbsentee landlords1879 famineGoalsFree sale fixity of tenure and fair rentLand reformRedistribution of land to tenant farmersMethodsRent strikes boycotts political demonstrationsResulted inKilmainham TreatyLand ConferenceRedistribution of land to tenant farmersIncrease in Irish nationalismPartiesIrish tenant farmers Irish National Land League Irish National League United Irish League LandlordsLead figuresCharles Stewart ParnellMichael DavittWilliam O BrienLaurence Ginnell Lord SalisburyLord ClanricardeCharles Boycott From 1870 various governments introduced a series of Land Acts that granted many of the activists demands William O Brien played a leading role in the 1902 Land Conference to pave the way for the most advanced social legislation in Ireland since the Union the Land Purchase Ireland Act 1903 This Act set the conditions for the break up of large estates by government sponsored purchase Alongside the political and legal changes the Long Depression affected rent yields and landlord tenant relations across all of Europe from the 1870s to the 1890s Contents 1 Background 2 Chronology 2 1 Land League 1879 1881 2 2 Suppression 1881 1882 2 3 Plan of Campaign 1886 1891 2 4 Later agitation 3 Tactics 3 1 Land courts 3 2 Boycott 3 3 Rent strike 3 4 Violence 4 Land Acts 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 Print sources 5 3 Web sources 6 Further reading 7 External linksBackground edit nbsp During the second half of the nineteenth century Ireland suffered population loss due to emigration and the Great Famine The population of Ireland was overwhelmingly rural in 1841 four fifths of the population lived in hamlets smaller than 20 houses This ratio declined over the century but only due to emigration from rural areas and not from growth of the towns and cities 4 Land in Ireland was concentrated into relatively few hands many of them absentee landlords In 1870 50 of the island was owned by 750 families 5 Between 1850 and 1870 landlords extracted 340 million in rent far exceeding tax receipts for the same period of which only 4 5 was reinvested 6 This led landlords to take on a role of non productive managers within the island s overall economy 7 Conflict between landlords and tenants arose from opposing viewpoints on such issues as land consolidation security of tenure transition from tillage to grazing and the role of the market 8 The Irish nationalist politician Isaac Butt pointed out the fact that Catholic Irish were tenants was worse than the heaviest yoke of feudal servitude 9 The Devon Commission of 1843 44 found that various forms of tenant right were practiced throughout Ireland not just in Ulster 10 There was a tension between English law which protected the absolute property rights of the landlord and Irish custom on the other hand in which the tenant enjoyed an interest in the property which he could buy or sell 11 This interest could be as much as 4 6 years rent which incoming tenants had to pay with capital that they might otherwise have spent on their own improvements In the decades following the Great Famine rises in agricultural prices were not matched by rent increases leading to an increase in the tenant s stake in the farm which may have risen to as much as 10 20 years of rent The existence of tenant right was accepted by creditors who would extend loans with the tenant right as collateral 12 During the Great Famine 1845 1849 the poorest cottiers and agricultural labourers died or were forced to emigrate freeing up land that was purchased by larger farmers 13 In 1850 the Tenant Right League briefly dominated Irish politics with the demand for free sale fixity of tenure and fair rent 14 Although it never caught on with the poor smallholders in Connacht which it was intended to help 15 the League spurred the creation of the Independent Irish Party 14 In 1870 the Liberal Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone pushed through the Landlord and Tenant Ireland Act 1870 The act actually increased agrarian tensions as landlords attempted to evade provisions intended to protect departing tenants while the tenants retaliated by setting up local Tenants Defence Associations 15 One such the Route Tenants Defence Association was however hostile towards the League citation needed Agrarian crimes were rising during the late 1870s from 135 in 1875 to 236 two years later At the same time emigration which acted as a pressure valve for political tension decreased by more than half 16 Nevertheless as late as 1877 the areas which would be heavily affected by Land League agitation were completely calm without any hint of what was to come 17 In 1878 the Irish American Clan na Gael leader John Devoy offered Charles Stewart Parnell then a rising star in the Irish Parliamentary Party IPP a deal which became known as the New Departure As a result of this agreement the physical force and parliamentary wings of Irish nationalism agreed to work together on the land issue 18 19 This collaboration was cemented by a meeting on 1 June 1879 in Dublin between Devoy Parnell and Michael Davitt It is disputed what was actually agreed to Davitt maintained that there was no formal agreement while Devoy claimed that the IPP had promised not to act against the Irish Republican Brotherhood IRB and made other concessions in exchange for Irish American support 20 The west of Ireland was hit by the 1879 famine a combination of heavy rains poor yields and low prices that brought widespread hunger and deprivation 21 Compounded by the reduction in opportunities for outside income especially seasonal agricultural income in Great Britain many smallholders were faced with hunger and unable to pay their rent 22 23 Some landlords offered rent abatement while others refused on the grounds that their tenants were participating in anti landlord agitation 24 Irish historian Paul Bew notes that five of the largest landlords in Connacht also refused to contribute any money to relief funds despite collecting more than 80 000 annually in rent 7 According to historians such as William Vaughan and Phillip Bull the serious agricultural recession combined with a unified nationalist leadership set the stage to produce a powerful and lasting popular movement 25 Chronology editLand League 1879 1881 edit nbsp Irish landlord reduced to begging for rent 1880 caricature The Land War began on 20 April 1879 at a mass meeting in Irishtown County Mayo organised by local and Dublin based activists led by Davitt and James Daly 26 27 The activists tried to mobilize an alliance of tenant farmers shopkeepers and clergy in favour of land reform Although the clergy refused to participate some 7 000 to 13 000 people attended the meeting having come from all parts of Mayo and counties Roscommon and Galway The main issue was rent which was typically paid in the spring due to the poor harvest tenants could not afford to pay and many had been threatened with eviction 28 The crowd was guided and led into position by local Fenians recruited by Davitt in an earlier trip with help from local IRB leader Pat Nally even though the IRB council refused to sanction agrarian activism Speakers included John O Connor Power MP Fenian Thomas Brennan Glasgow based activist John Ferguson and Daly 29 Local Fenians organised meetings at Claremorris on 25 May with 200 attendees and Knock on 1 June with a reported 20 000 30 000 turnout in protest of the Church s position 30 Another meeting was held in Westport County Mayo on 8 June in protest against the Marquess of Sligo the largest landowner in Mayo Davitt persuaded Parnell to speak 31 and 8 000 people turned out 32 Parnell went on with the engagement even after John MacHale Archbishop of Tuam denounced the meeting in a 7 June letter to The Freeman s Journal 33 Parnell also wanted to prevent the new movement s capture by Fenian radicals as the latter were unacceptable to the Catholic clergy and to larger tenants on whose support Parnell depended 34 This meeting especially Parnell s speech in which he promoted peasant proprietorship was widely commented in the press as far afield as London 35 Initially the movement was non sectarian in character and Protestant tenants also took part in meetings 36 The focus of the leadership shifted from agitation to organization to harness the new energy for the nationalist cause 37 On 16 August 1879 the Land League of Mayo was founded in Castlebar 38 at which point the first overtures were made to the Catholic hierarchy 39 From September priests quickly assumed leadership roles in the movement and presided over more than two thirds of the meetings in the rest of 1879 The movement continued to gain strength as the economic situation deteriorated 40 Involvement of the clergy made it much more difficult for the British government to take action against the movement which instilled almost perfect unity among Irish tenant farmers 41 In several constituencies Land League backed candidates failed in the 1880 general election due to clerical opposition 42 On 21 October 1879 the land League of Mayo was superseded by the Irish National Land League based in Dublin with Parnell made its president 38 As the land agitation progressed it was taken over by larger farmers and the centre of gravity shifted away from the distressed western districts 43 In Mayo the autumn potato harvest was only 1 4 tons per acre less than half of the previous year 44 At the Land League conference in April 1880 Parnell s program of conciliation with landlords was rejected in favour a demand for the abolition of landlordism promoted by Davitt and other radicals 45 On 17 May Parnell was elected to the presidency of the IPP 46 Local chapters of the Land League frequently were formed from previous associations such as Tenants Defence Associations or Farmers Clubs which decided to join the Land League because of the greater financial resources offered this brought larger farmers and graziers into the movement 47 The league adopted the slogan the land for the people which was vague enough to be acceptable to Irish nationalists across the political spectrum 38 For most of the tenant farmers the slogan meant owning their own land For smallholders on uneconomic holdings especially in the congested western areas it meant being granted larger holdings that their families had held previous to the Great Famine evictions For radicals such as Michael Davitt it meant land nationalization 48 The fusion between land agitation and nationalist politics was based on the idea that the land of Ireland rightfully belonged to the Irish people but had been stolen by English invaders who had foisted a foreign system of land tenure upon it 49 50 Nominally the Land League condemned large scale grazing as improper use of land that rightfully belonged to tillage farmers As investment in grazing land was the main vehicle of upward mobility for rural Catholics the new Catholic grazier class was torn between its natural allegiance to Irish nationalism and its economic dependence on landlords to rent land for grazing Many sided with the Land League creating a mixed class body whose actual economic interests conflicted This further consolidated the nationalist nature of the Land League 51 The government set up the Land Commission in 1881 with quasi judicial powers that eventually enabled most tenant farmers to buy freehold interests in their land Suppression 1881 1882 edit nbsp Land League poster from the No Rent Manifesto period After the general election of April 1880 with the Land War still raging Parnell believed then that supporting land agitation was a means to achieving his objective of self government Prime Minister Gladstone attempted to resolve the land question with the Land Law Ireland Act 1881 The Act gave greater rights to tenant farmers so called dual ownership but failed to eliminate tenant evictions Parnell and his party lieutenants William O Brien John Dillon and Willie Redmond went into a bitter verbal offensive against the Act and were imprisoned in October 1881 in Kilmainham Jail together with other prominent members of the League under the Irish Coercion Act While in jail they issued the No Rent Manifesto calling for a national tenant farmer rent strike until their release Finally on 20 October the Government moved to suppress the Land League 52 A genuine No Rent campaign was virtually impossible to organise and many tenants were more interested in putting the Land Act to the test It further seemed that the Coercion Act instead of banishing agrarian crime had only intensified it Although the League discouraged violence agrarian crimes increased widely For the ten months before the Land Act was passed March December 1880 the number of outrages were 2 379 but in the corresponding period of 1881 with the Act in full operation the numbers were 3 821 The figures to March 1882 with Parnell in jail showed a continued increase 53 In April 1882 Parnell moved to make a deal with the government The settlement known as the Kilmainham Treaty involved withdrawing the manifesto and undertaking to move against agrarian crime By 2 May all internees were released from jail Davitt on 6 May the day of the Phoenix Park Murders With the Land League still suppressed Parnell resurrected it with much ceremony together with Davitt on 17 October proclaimed as a new organisation called the Irish National League 54 Plan of Campaign 1886 1891 edit Main article Plan of Campaign nbsp Eviction in Woodford County Galway in 1888 during the Plan of Campaign Preceded by economic difficulties due to droughts in 1884 and 1887 as well as industrial depression in England causing shrinking markets 55 the 1886 1891 Plan of Campaign was a more focused version of agitation and rent strikes citation needed Tenants on an estate would meet and decide on what was a fair rent to pay their landlord even though rents had already been judicially fixed by the 1885 act They would offer to pay the lower rent and if it was refused would instead pay it to the Plan of Campaign fund These rent strikes targeted the most heavily indebted and financially insecure landlords who faced a choice between immediate bankruptcy and accepting a lower income 56 Lord Clanricarde had evicted many tenants and became the main target Given the extended franchise allowed in 1884 the IPP had to gain credibility with the larger number of new voters choosing the most numerous Irish group the low to middle income rural electorate Most IPP members were Catholic and appealed to Rome for moral support So did the government and the Vatican issued a Papal Rescript followed by an encyclical Saepe Nos in 1888 condemning the activities of the Land League particularly boycotting 57 Saepe Nos also claimed to extend and clarify an earlier similar ruling by the Sacred Congregation for Propaganda In 1887 the Criminal Law and Procedure Ireland Act 1887 was passed to deal with the offenses surrounding the Campaign After the 1881 and 1885 Land Reform Acts see below many Tory press commentators described the Plan of Campaign as an opportunistic and cynical method of revenge following the division of the Liberal Party and the rejection of the first Irish Home Rule Bill in June 1886 It was also described as cruel as new rent strikes would inevitably result in more evictions and boycotting as before with all the associated intimidation and violence Other reporters saw it as a matter of justice and of continuing concern to genuine liberals The Campaign led on to events such as the Mitchelstown massacre in 1887 and the imprisonment of IPP MPs such as William O Brien for their involvement The violent aspects of the campaign were abandoned on the run up to the debates on the Second Irish Home Rule Bill in 1893 The IPP was by then divided into the Irish National Federation and the Irish National League over Parnell s divorce crisis nbsp Royal Irish Constabulary evict a man from his house in Moyasta on the Vandeleur Estate in County Clare July 1888 during the Plan of Campaign Later agitation edit Between 1906 and 1909 smallholders seeking more land launched the Ranch War demanding the sale of untenanted land owned by landlords and the breakup of large grazing farms 58 Opponents of ranching highlighted the fact that many ranches had been created after the famine from land formerly tilled by evicted smallholders 59 60 Organised by the United Irish League and Laurence Ginnell 61 the Ranch War involved cattle drives public rallies boycotting and intimidation 62 63 Between August and December 1907 alone 292 cattle drives were reported to the authorities 64 It was most intense in areas of Connacht North and East Leinster and North Munster where large grazing farms and uneconomic smallholdings existed side by side 65 66 The campaign resulted in a defeat for the small farmers besides a legacy of bitterness and cynicism in Connaught 67 the main effect of their campaign was to show how Irish nationalism had become a bourgeois movement including many large graziers 68 By the Irish War of Independence 1918 1922 about half a million people were occupying uneconomic smallholdings mostly in the west of Ireland In addition veterans of the Irish Volunteers and first Irish Republican Army had been promised land in exchange for their service 69 In 1919 1920 a wave of land seizures took place in western Ireland and in 1920 agrarian crimes were recorded at their highest level since 1882 70 When their hopes for acquiring more land were dashed by the fact that the Anglo Irish Treaty made no mention of the land issue many joined the Anti Treaty side in the following Irish Civil War 69 71 In the Irish Free State their grievances fueled the Fianna Fail party and led to the Land Acts of 1923 and 1933 which caused the dramatic redistribution of large farms and estates to smallholders and the landless 72 Tactics edit nbsp Evicted 1890 by Lady Butler depicts a woman standing by her destroyed cottage shortly after an eviction near Glendalough County Wicklow Land courts edit Main article Unwritten law Ireland Some of the Land League s local branches established arbitration courts in 1880 and 1881 73 which were explicitly modelled on British courts 74 Typically the cases were heard by the executive committee which would summon both parties call witnesses examine evidence presented by the parties make the judgment and assign a penalty if the code had been broken Sometimes juries would be called from the local communities and the plaintiff occasionally acted as prosecutor Despite the trappings of common law procedure American historian Donald Jordan emphasizes that the tribunals essentially were an extension of the local branch judging if its own rules had been violated 75 76 These courts were described as a shadow legal system by British academic Frank Ledwidge 77 According to historian Charles Townshend the formation of courts was the most unacceptable of all acts of defiance committed by the Land League 78 In 1881 Chief Secretary for Ireland William Edward Forster grumbled that Land League law was ascendant all law rests on the power to punish its infraction There being no such power in Ireland at the present time I am forced to acknowledge that to a great extent the ordinary law of the country is powerless but the unwritten law is powerful because punishment is sure to follow its infraction 79 From 1882 the Irish National League organised courts to replace those of the earlier organisation The key provisions forbade paying rent without abatements taking over land from which a tenant had been evicted and purchasing their holding under the 1885 Ashbourne Act 80 Other forbidden actions included participating in evictions fraternizing with or entering into commerce with anyone who did or working for hiring letting land from or socializing with boycotted person 81 Tribunals were typically led by the leaders of local chapters holding open proceedings with a common law procedure This was intended to uphold the League s image of being in favour of the rule of law just Irish law instead of English law 82 Boycott edit When a man takes a farm from which another has been evicted you must shun him on the roadside when you meet him you must shun him in the streets of the town you must shun him at the shop counter you must shun him in the fair and at the marketplace and even in the house of worship you must shun him your detestation of the crime he has committed if the population of a county in Ireland carry out this doctrine that there will be no man who would dare to transgress your unwritten code of laws Charles Stewart Parnell at Ennis meeting 19 September 1880 83 84 One of the Land League s main tactics was the famous boycott 85 86 whose target at first was land grabbers 87 Land League speakers including Michael Davitt began to advocate a new non violent moral tactic against those taking over the land of evicted tenants 88 Parnell gave a speech in Ennis in 1889 proposing that when dealing with such tenants rather than resorting to violence everyone in the locality should instead shun them This tactic was then widened to landowners The term boycott was coined later that year following the successful campaign against County Mayo land agent Charles Boycott The concerted action taken against him meant that Boycott was unable to hire anyone to harvest the crops in his charge Boycott was forced to leave the country 89 and the tactic spread throughout the country The use of intimidation to enforce a boycott had to be criminalized in the Prevention of Crime Ireland Act 1882 90 91 According to the Inspector General boycotting constituted a form of imprisonment for the victim who was isolated and separated from the rest of the community 92 Larger farmers and landlords were better able to cope with a boycott by weathering temporary loss of income hiring scabs or ordering supplies by mail 92 While the effectiveness of boycotting has been disputed the phrase and tactic has passed into the language of non violent action 93 Rent strike edit Rent strikes were used as a means of pressuring landlords to reduce the rent Withheld rents often went to a defence fund for legal representation in eviction cases and support for evicted families 94 Rent strikes could also be effected in a Slowdown way with paying a fraction now and promising more next week while making oneself unavailable it could include obstacles for rent collectors re occupation of farms rented by evicted defaulters etc The Meaghers of Kilbury are credited as the inventors of this kind of tactics when they practiced it in January 1880 95 Violence edit nbsp Evictions grey and agrarian crime orange during the Land War Contemporary opponents argued that the Land War amounted to an organised campaign of terrorism In his biography of Michael Davitt T W Moody acknowledged that the crime resulted from the Land League s militancy but argued that statistics disprove the idea that the Land League maintained a reign of terror 96 The most common type of agrarian offence was the sending of threatening letters 97 Davitt and other Land League leaders denounced agrarian crime in strong language 98 and local chapters of the National League passed many resolutions against it 99 However the organisations were not in control of their rank and file Between 1879 and in 1881 crimes related to the Land War rose from 25 to 58 of all crime in Ireland without the leaders calling for an end to the agitation 100 Only 16 percent of agrarian crimes led to arrests much less than the 50 rate for non agrarian offences 101 Gladstone believed that escalating crimes were proof of the failure both of his government s policy of coercion and the Land League s No Rent strategy 102 Agrarian outrages decreased significantly after the founding of the Irish National League in 1882 due to the latter s system of dispute resolution for agrarian issues which imposed boycotting as its most severe punishment 103 British officials often claimed that the National League s effectiveness was due to the fear of violence from lawless elements if the litigant did not comply 104 Sociologist Samuel Clark argued that the threat of violence helped the Land League enforce its rulings and silence its enemies 105 In 1889 the Special Commission on Parnellism and Crime found no links between the IPP and agrarian crime 99 106 One British official explained that while he was certain that the League did not plan or commit crimes without outrage and intimidation the League could not possibly exist 103 Land Acts editMain article Land Acts Ireland The land question in Ireland was ultimately defused by a series of Irish Land Acts beginning in 1870 with rent reform 107 establishing the Land Commission in 1881 and providing for judicial reviews to certify fair rents The Ashbourne Act of 1885 started a limited process of allowing tenant farmers to buy their freeholds which was greatly extended following the 1902 Land Conference by the Land Purchase Ireland Act 1903 Augustine Birrel s Act of 1909 allowed for compulsory purchase and also allowed the purchase and division of untenanted land that was being directly farmed by the owners These Acts allowed tenants first to attain extensive property rights on their leaseholdings and then to purchase their land off their landlords via UK government loans and the Land Commission The 1903 Act gave Irish tenant farmers a government sponsored right to buy which is still not available in Great Britain today The success of the Land Acts in reducing the concentration of land ownership is indicated by the fact that in 1870 only 3 of Irish farmers owned their own land while 97 were tenants By 1929 this ratio had been reversed with 97 4 of farmers holding their farms in freehold 108 However the Land Acts were not the only factor causing this redistribution the Great War and conflict during the Irish revolutionary period also facilitated the selling of land 109 Land agitators came to see the reforms they sought as a panacea for rural Ireland s ills In fact emigration and economic disadvantage continued apace 110 111 while the greatest beneficiaries of land reform were the middle class of medium farmers 108 References editCitations edit University of Delaware 2016 Clark 2014 p 3 McLaughlin 2015 p 89 Winstanley 2003 p 5 Winstanley 2003 p 11 Vaughan 1994 p 218 a b Bew 1979 p 90 Bew 1979 pp 15 74 Bew 2007 p 274 Bull 1996 p 35 Bull 1996 pp 51 52 Guinnane amp Miller 1997 p 601 Dooley 2014 p 8 a b Jackson 2010 p 87 a b Dooley 2014 p 9 Bew 2007 p 296 Vaughan 1994 p 209 Bew 2007 pp 309 310 Janis 2015 p 24 Janis 2015 pp 26 27 Janis 2015 pp 10 11 Jordan 1994 pp 203 204 McLaughlin 2015 p 88 Jordan 1994 pp 207 209 Bull 1996 p 86 Jordan 1994 pp 199 217 Kane 2011 p 67 Jordan 1994 p 217 Jordan 1994 pp 219 220 Jordan 1994 p 224 Jordan 1994 p 222 Jordan 1994 p 226 Jordan 1994 p 223 Jordan 1994 p 225 Jordan 1994 pp 228 229 Jordan 1994 pp 231 239 240 Bull 1988 p 28 a b c Janis 2015 p 11 Jordan 1994 p 241 Jordan 1994 p 245 Bull 1996 pp 83 84 Bew 1979 pp 98 99 Biagini 2007 p 302 Jordan 1994 p 203 Bew 1979 pp 99 100 Bew 1979 p 107 Bew 1979 pp 101 126 Bew 1979 p 87 Bull 1988 p 27 Jordan 1998 pp 149 150 Bull 1996 p 85 Lyons F S L John Dillon Ch 2 pp 55 60 Routledge amp Kegan Paul London 1968 SBN 7100 2887 3 Lyons F S L p 64 Lyons F S L pp 66 68 The Land War 1879 1903 The National Library of Ireland 1976 ISBN 0 907328 06 7 Bull 1996 pp 101 102 CATHOLIC LIBRARY Saepe Nos 1888 Retrieved 25 June 2016 Casey 2018 p 220 Laird 2005 pp 115 116 Bew 1987 p 169 Bew 1987 pp 138 139 143 Campbell 2005 p 2 Casey 2018 p 237 Bew 1987 p 144 Laird 2005 p 115 Bew 1987 p 142 Bew 1988 p 234 Bew 2007 p 367 a b Dooley 2014 pp 14 15 Laird 2005 p 120 Jackson 2010 p 266 Dooley 2014 pp 15 16 Jordan 1998 p 161 Campbell 2005 p 7 Jordan 1998 pp 161 162 Laird 2005 p 27 Ledwidge 2017 p 40 Townshend 1984 p 130 Laird 2005 p 35 Jordan 1998 p 152 Jordan 1998 p 159 Jordan 1998 pp 159 161 Jordan 1994 p 286 Laird 2005 pp 29 30 Townshend 1984 pp 116 130 Laird 2005 p 28 Laird 2013 p 185 Jordan 1994 pp 285 286 Jordan 1994 pp 286 289 Laird 2005 p 34 Townshend 1984 p 173 a b Campbell 2005 p 15 Townshend 1984 p 116 Clark 2014 p 345 Bew 1979 p 116 Gantt 2010 p 70 Vaughan 1994 pp 142 150 Biagini 2007 pp 136 137 a b Jordan 1998 p 168 Janis 2015 p 163 Jackson 1997 p 273 Bew 2007 p 332 a b Jordan 1998 p 169 Jordan 1998 p 164 Clark 2014 pp 320 326 cited in Jordan 1994 p 236 Jackson 2010 p 133 Guinnane amp Miller 1997 p 594 a b Bew 2007 p 568 Vaughan 1994 pp 226 228 King 2009 p 81 Vaughan 1994 p 225 Print sources edit Bew Paul 1979 Land and the National Question in Ireland 1858 82 Amherst Humanities Press ISBN 9780391009608 Bew Paul 1987 Conflict and Conciliation in Ireland 1890 1910 Parnellites and Radical Agrarians Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 9780198227588 Bew Paul 1988 Sinn Fein Agrarian Radicalism and the War of Independence 1919 1921 In Boyce David George ed The Revolution in Ireland 1879 1923 Dublin Gill and Macmillan pp 217 234 ISBN 9780717115563 Bew Paul 2007 Ireland The Politics of Enmity 1789 2006 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198205555 Bull Philip 1988 Land and Politics 1879 1903 In Boyce David George ed The Revolution in Ireland 1879 1923 Dublin Gill and Macmillan pp 24 46 ISBN 9780717115563 Bull Philip 1996 Land Politics and Nationalism a Study of the Irish Land Question Dublin Gill amp Macmillan ISBN 9780717121908 Biagini Eugenio F 2007 British Democracy and Irish Nationalism 1876 1906 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781139467568 Campbell Fergus 2005 The Law of the League United Irish League Justice 1898 1910 Land and Revolution Nationalist Politics in the West of Ireland 1891 1921 Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199273249 001 0001 ISBN 9780191706387 From an Oxford Handbooks reprint paginated 1 45 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint postscript link Casey Brian 2018 Class and Community in Provincial Ireland 1851 1914 Cham Switzerland Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 9783319711201 Clark Samuel 2014 1979 Social Origins of the Irish Land War Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 9781400853526 Dooley Terence 2014 Land and the People In Alvin Jackson ed The Oxford Handbook of Modern Irish History Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199549344 013 006 ISBN 9780199549344 From Oxford Handbooks reprint paginated 1 23 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint postscript link Gantt Jonathan 2010 Irish Terrorism in the Atlantic Community 1865 1922 London Springer ISBN 9780230250451 Guinnane Timothy W Miller Ronald I 1997 The Limits to Land Reform The Land Acts in Ireland 1870 1909 Economic Development and Cultural Change 45 3 University of Chicago Press 591 612 doi 10 1086 452292 hdl 10419 160647 ISSN 0013 0079 JSTOR 10 1086 452292 S2CID 17477539 Hansson Heidi Murphy James H 2014 The Irish Land War and its Fictions Fictions of the Irish Land War Peter Lang ISBN 9783034309998 Jackson Alvin 2010 1999 Ireland 1798 1998 Chichester John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9780631195429 Jackson Patrick 1997 Education Act Forster A Political Biography of W E Forster 1818 1886 Teaneck Fairleigh Dickinson University Press ISBN 9780838637135 Janis Ely M 2015 A Greater Ireland The Land League and Transatlantic Nationalism in Gilded Age America Madison University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 9780299301248 Jordan Donald 1994 Land and Popular Politics in Ireland County Mayo from the Plantation to the Land War Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521466837 Jordan Donald 1998 The Irish National League and the Unwritten Law Rural Protest and Nation Building in Ireland 1882 1890 Past amp Present 158 158 Oxford University Press 146 171 doi 10 1093 past 158 1 146 ISSN 0031 2746 JSTOR 651224 Kane Anne 2011 Constructing Irish National Identity Discourse and Ritual during the Land War 1879 1882 London Springer ISBN 9781137001160 King Carla 2009 Michael Davitt Dublin University College Dublin Press ISBN 9781910820964 Laird Heather 2005 Subversive Law in Ireland 1879 1920 from Unwritten Law to Dail Courts PDF Dublin Four Courts Press ISBN 9781851828760 Laird Heather 2013 Decentring the Irish Land War Women Politics and the Private Sphere In Campbell Fergus Varley Tony eds Land Questions in Modern Ireland Manchester Manchester University Press pp 175 193 ISBN 978 0 7190 7880 4 Ledwidge Frank 2017 Rebel Law Insurgents Courts and Justice in Modern Conflict Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9781849049238 McLaughlin Eoin 2015 Competing forms of cooperation Land League Land War and cooperation in Ireland 1879 to 1914 PDF Agricultural History Review 3 81 112 Townshend Charles 1984 Land War Political Violence in Ireland Oxford Oxford University Press pp 105 180 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780198200840 001 0001 ISBN 9780198200840 Vaughan William Edward 1994 Landlords and Tenants in Mid Victorian Ireland Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 9780198203568 Winstanley Michael J 2003 1984 Ireland and the Land Question 1800 1922 Routledge ISBN 9781135835538 Web sources edit Land League A terrible beauty is born The Easter Rising at 100 University of Delaware Library Exhibitions 2016 Retrieved 26 October 2019 Further reading editCurtis Lewis Perry 2015 1963 Coercion and Conciliation in Ireland 1880 1892 Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 9781400877003 Murphy James H 2014 Ireland s Czar Gladstonian Government and the Lord Lieutenancies of the Red Earl Spencer 1868 86 Dublin University College Dublin Press ISBN 9781906359812 O Neill Brian 1933 with introduction by Peadar O Donnell The War for the Land in Ireland London Martin Lawrence Walsh Rachael Fox O Mahony Lorna 1 March 2018 Land law property ideologies and the British Irish relationship Common Law World Review 47 1 7 34 doi 10 1177 1473779518773641 ISSN 1473 7795 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Land War Landed estates database compiled by University College Galway Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Land War amp oldid 1207015878, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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