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Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829

The Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829, also known as the Catholic Emancipation Act 1829, removed the sacramental tests that barred Roman Catholics in the United Kingdom from Parliament and from higher offices of the judiciary and state. It was the culmination of a fifty-year process of Catholic emancipation which had offered Catholics successive measures of "relief" from the civil and political disabilities imposed by Penal Laws in both Great Britain and in Ireland in the seventeenth, and early eighteenth, centuries.

Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829[1]
Long titleAn Act for the Relief of His Majesty's Roman Catholic Subjects.
Citation10 Geo. 4. c. 7
Introduced byDuke of Wellington
Dates
Royal assent13 April 1829
Status: Current legislation
Text of statute as originally enacted
Revised text of statute as amended

Convinced that the measure was essential to maintain order in Catholic-majority Ireland, the Duke of Wellington helped overcome the opposition of the King, George IV, and of the House of Lords, by threatening to step aside as Prime Minister and retire his Tory government in favour of a new, likely-reform-minded Whig, ministry.

In Ireland, the Protestant Ascendancy had the assurance of the simultaneous passage of the Parliamentary Elections (Ireland) Act 1829. Its substitution of the British ten-pound, for the Irish forty shilling, freehold qualification disenfranchised over eighty percent of Ireland's electorate. This included a majority of the tenant farmers who had helped force the issue of emancipation in 1828 by electing to parliament the leader of the Catholic Association, Daniel O'Connell.

Agitation and concession edit

Daniel O'Connell (1775–1847) had rejected a suggestion from "friends of emancipation", and from the English Roman Catholic bishop, John Milner,[2] that the fear of Catholic advancement might be allayed if the Crown were accorded the same right exercised by continental monarchs: a veto on the confirmation of Catholic bishops. O'Connell insisted that Irish Catholics would rather "remain forever without emancipation" than allow the government "to interfere" with the appointment of their senior clergy.[3][4] Instead, he relied on their confidence in the independence of the priesthood from Ascendancy landowners and magistrates to build his Catholic Association into a mass political movement. On the basis of a "Catholic rent" of a penny a month (typically paid through the local priest), the Association mobilised not only the Catholic middle class, but also poorer tenant farmers and tradesmen. Their investment enabled O'Connell to mount "monster" rallies (crowds of over 100,000) that stayed the hands of authorities, and emboldened larger enfranchised tenants to vote for pro-emancipation candidates in defiance of their landlords.[5]

His campaign reached its climax when he himself stood for parliament. In July 1828, O'Connell defeated a nominee for a position in the British cabinet, William Vesey Fitzgerald, in a County Clare by-election, 2057 votes to 982. This made a direct issue of the parliamentary Oath of Supremacy by which, as a Catholic, he would be denied his seat in the Commons.[6][7]

As Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, Wellington's brother, Richard Wellesley, had attempted to placate Catholic opinion, notably by dismissing of the long-serving Attorney-General for Ireland, William Saurin, whose rigid Ascendancy views and policy made him bitterly unpopular, and by applying a policy of prohibitions and coercion against not only the Catholic Ribbonmen but also the Protestant Orangemen.[8] But now both Wellington and his Home Secretary, Robert Peel, were convinced that unless concessions were made, a confrontation was inevitable. Peel (nicknamed "Orange Peel" by O'Connell on account of his anti-Catholic views) concluded: "though emancipation was a great danger, civil strife was a greater danger".[9] Fearing insurrection in Ireland, he drafted the Relief Bill and guided it through the House of Commons. To overcome the vehement opposition of both the King and of the House of Lords, Wellington threatened to resign, potentially opening the way for a new Whig majority with designs not only for Catholic emancipation but also for parliamentary reform.[10] The King initially accepted Wellington's resignation and the King's brother, the Duke of Cumberland, attempted to put together a government united against Catholic emancipation. Though such a government would have had considerable support in the House of Lords, it would have had little support in the Commons and Ernest abandoned his attempt. The King recalled Wellington. The bill passed the Lords and became law.[11]

Provisions and assurances edit

The key, defining, provision of the Act's was its repeal of "certain oaths and certain declarations, commonly called the declarations against transubstantiation and the invocation of saints and the sacrifice of the mass, as practised in the Church of Rome", which had been required "as qualifications for sitting and voting in parliament and for the enjoyment of certain offices, franchises, and civil rights". For the Oath of Supremacy, the act substituted a pledge to bear "true allegiance" to the King, to recognise the Hanoverian succession, to reject any claim to " temporal or civil jurisdiction" within the United Kingdom by "the Pope of Rome" or "any other foreign prince ... or potentate", and to "abjure any intention to subvert the present [Anglican] church establishment".[12]

This last abjuration in the new Oath of Allegiance was underscored by a provision forbidding the assumption by the Roman Church of episcopal titles, derived from "any city, town or place", already used by the United Church of England and Ireland.[13][14][15] (With other sectarian impositions of the Act, such as restrictions on admittance to Catholic religious orders and on Catholic-church processions, this was repealed with the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1926.)[16][17][18]

The one major security required to pass the Act was the Parliamentary Elections (Ireland) Act 1829 (10 Geo 4 c. 8).[19] Receiving its royal assent on the same day as the relief bill, the act disenfranchised Ireland's Forty Shilling Freeholders, by raising the property threshold for the county vote to the British ten pound standard.[20] As a result, "emancipation" was accompanied by a more than five-fold decrease in the Irish electorate, from 216,000 voters to just 37,000.[21][22] That the majority of the tenant farmers who had voted for O'Connell in the Clare by-election were disenfranchised as a result of his apparent victory at Westminster was not made immediately apparent, as O'Connell was permitted in July 1829 to stand unopposed for the Clare seat that his refusal to take the Oath of Supremacy had denied him the year before.[23]

Political results edit

J. C. D. Clark (1985) depicts England before 1828 as a nation in which the vast majority of the people still believed in the divine right of kings, and the legitimacy of a hereditary nobility, and in the rights and privileges of the Anglican Church. In Clark's interpretation, the system remained virtually intact until it suddenly collapsed in 1828, because Catholic emancipation undermined its central symbolic prop, the Anglican supremacy. Clark argues that the consequences were enormous: "The shattering of a whole social order ... What was lost at that point ... was not merely a constitutional arrangement, but the intellectual ascendancy of a worldview, the cultural hegemony of the old elite."[24]

Clark's interpretation has been widely debated in the scholarly literature.[25] Other historians examining the issue highlight the amount of continuity before and after the period of 1828 through 1832.[26]

Eric J. Evans (1996) emphasises that the political importance of emancipation was that it split the anti-reformers beyond repair and diminished their ability to block future reform laws, especially the great Reform Act of 1832. Paradoxically, Wellington's success in forcing through emancipation led many Ultra-Tories to demand reform of Parliament after seeing that the votes of the rotten boroughs had given the government its majority. Thus, it was an ultra-Tory, the Marquess of Blandford, who in February 1830 introduced the first major reform bill, calling for the transfer of rotten borough seats to the counties and large towns, the disfranchisement of non-resident voters, the preventing of Crown office-holders from sitting in Parliament, the payment of a salary to MPs, and the general franchise for men who owned property. The ultras believed that a widely based electorate could be relied upon to rally around anti-Catholicism.[27]

In Ireland, emancipation is generally regarded as having come too late to influence the Catholic-majority view of the union. After a delay of thirty years, an opportunity to integrate Catholics through their re-emerging propertied and professional classes as a minority within the United Kingdom may have passed.[28]: 291  [29] In 1830, O’Connell, invited Protestants to join in a campaign to repeal the Act of Union and restore the Kingdom of Ireland under the Constitution of 1782. But in breaking the link between Catholic inclusion and democratic reform, the terms under which he was able to secure the final measure of relief may have weakened the case for a restored Irish parliament.

George Ensor, a leading Protestant member of the Catholic Association in the Ulster, protested "relief" being bought at the price of "casting" forty-shilling freeholders, both Catholic and Protestant, "into the abyss". While it allowed a few Catholic barristers to attain a higher grade in their profession, and a few Catholic gentlemen to be returned to Parliament, the "indifference" demonstrated to parliamentary reform would prove "disastrous" for the cause of repeal.[30]

Seeking, perhaps, to rationalise the sacrifice of his freeholders, O'Connell wrote privately in March 1829 that the new ten-pound franchise might actually "give more power to Catholics by concentrating it in more reliable and less democratically dangerous hands".[31] The Young Irelander John Mitchel believed that this was the intent: to detach propertied Catholics from the increasingly agitated rural masses.[32]

In a pattern that had been intensifying from the 1820s as landlords cleared land to meet the growing livestock demand from England,[33] tenants had been banding together to oppose evictions, and to attack tithe and process servers. On his visit to Ireland, Alexis De Tocqueville recorded these Whiteboys and Ribbonmen protesting:

The law does nothing for us. We must save ourselves. We have a little land which we need for ourselves and our families to live on, and they drive us out of it. To whom should we address ourselves?... Emancipation has done nothing for us. Mr. O'Connell and the rich Catholics go to Parliament. We die of starvation just the same.[34]

Amendment and repeal edit

One civil disability not removed by 1829 Act were the sacramental tests required for professorships, fellowships, studentships and other lay offices at universities. These were abolished for the English universities--Oxford, Cambridge and Durham--by the Universities Tests Act 1871,[35] and for Trinity College Dublin by the "Fawcett's Act" 1873.[36]

Section 18 of the 1829 act, "No Roman Catholic to advise the Crown in the appointment to offices in the established church", remains in force in England, Wales and Scotland, but was repealed with respect to Northern Ireland (the Church of Ireland having been disestablished in 1869) by the Statute Law Revision (Northern Ireland) Act 1980.[37] The entire act was repealed in the Republic of Ireland by the Statute Law Revision Act 1983.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The citation of this Act by this short title was authorised by the Short Titles Act 1896, section 1 and the first schedule. Due to the repeal of those provisions it is now authorised by section 19(2) of the Interpretation Act 1978.
  2. ^ Leighton, C. D. A. (September 2008). "John Milner and the Orthodox Cause" (PDF). Journal of Religious History. 32 (3): 345–360. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9809.2008.00718.x. hdl:11693/23022.
  3. ^ Luby, Thomas Clarke (1870). The life and times of Daniel O'Connell. Glasgow: Cameron, Ferguson & Company. p. 418. from the original on 31 July 2021. Retrieved 22 August 2020.
  4. ^ MacDonagh, Oliver (1975). "The Politicization of the Irish Catholic Bishops, 1800-1850". The Historical Journal. 18 (1): 40. doi:10.1017/S0018246X00008669. JSTOR 2638467. S2CID 159877081.
  5. ^ Geoghegan, Patrick M. (2008). King Dan. Gill and Macmillan, Dublin, p. 168
  6. ^ MacDonagh, Oliver (1991). The Life of Daniel O'Connell.
  7. ^ Barron, Declan. "Clare History: The Clare Election of 1828". Clare County Library.
  8. ^ DeMichele, Michael D. (June 1970). "Richard Colley Wellesley: An Anglo-Irish Advocate of Catholic Emancipation". American Benedictine Review. 21 (7): 254–267. ISSN 0002-7650.
  9. ^ Peel, Arthur George Villiers (1895). "Peel, Robert (1788-1850)" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 44. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  10. ^ Holmes, Richard (2007). Wellington: The Iron Duke. London: HarperCollins. pp. 274–277. ISBN 978-0-00-713750-3.
  11. ^ Van der Kiste (204). George III's Children (Revised ed.). Stroud: Sutton Publishing. p. 204. ISBN 978-0-7509-3438-1.
  12. ^ Curtis, Edmund and R B McDowell eds. (1943). Irish Historical Documents 1172-1922. London, Methuen, pp. 247-250
  13. ^ Reports from Committees, Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 1867. p. 87.
  14. ^ Parliament, Great Britain (1851). Hansard's Parliamentary Debates. Vol. CXIV. London. p. 1145.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  15. ^ Bowyer, George (1850). The Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster and the New Hierarchy. London: James Ridgeway, Piccadilly. pp. 1–30.
  16. ^ Text of Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829, retrieved 28 January 2018
  17. ^ "Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829". legislation.gov.uk. ss. 28–36. 10 Geo 4 c. 7. Retrieved 28 January 2018.
  18. ^ "Debates: Roman Catholic Relief Act 1926". Hansard. Retrieved 28 January 2018.
  19. ^ Evans, William David; Hammond, Anthony; Granger, Thomas Colpitts, eds. (1836). Parliamentary Elections (Ireland) Act 1829. Vol. 8 (Third ed.). London: W. H. Bond. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  20. ^ Hilton, Boyd (2006). A Mad, Bad, and Dangerous People? England, 1783–1846. Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 384–391. ISBN 978-0-19-921891-2.
  21. ^ Foster, R. F. (1988). Modern Ireland, 1600–1972. London: Allen Lane. pp. 301–302. ISBN 0713990104.
  22. ^ Johnston, Neil (1 March 2013). "The History of the Parliamentary Franchise (Research Paper 13–14)" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 3 November 2021. Retrieved 21 June 2023.
  23. ^ The History of Parliament 1820–1832, vol. VI, pp. 535–536.
  24. ^ Clark, J. C. D. (28 March 2000). English Society 1688–1832: Ideology, Social Structure and Political Practice during the Ancien Regime (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 90, 409. ISBN 978-0-521-66627-5.
  25. ^ Hilton 2006, pp. 668–671.
  26. ^ O'Gorman, Frank (November 1997). "Review of English Society 1688–1832: Ideology, Social Structure and Political Practice During the Ancien Regime". Reviews in History. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  27. ^ Evans, Eric J. (1996). The Forging of the Modern State: Early Industrial Britain, 1783–1870 (2nd ed.). Longman. p. 216. ISBN 978-0-582-47267-9.
  28. ^ Foster, R. F. (1988). Modern Ireland 1600–1972. London: Allen Lane. p. 291. ISBN 0-7139-9010-4.
  29. ^ Geoghegan, Patrick M. (2000). "The Catholics and the Union". Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. 10: (243–258) 258. doi:10.1017/S0080440100000128. ISSN 0080-4401. JSTOR 3679381. S2CID 153949973.
  30. ^ MacAtasney, Gerard (2007). "'Brunswick Bloodhounds and Itinerant Demagogues': The Campaign for Catholic Emancipation in County Armagh 1824-29". Seanchas Ardmhacha: Journal of the Armagh Diocesan Historical Society. 21/22: (165–231), 176. ISSN 0488-0196. JSTOR 29742843.
  31. ^ Hoppen, K. Theodore (1999). Ireland since 1800: conflict and conformity (Second ed.). London: Longman. pp. 22, 24. ISBN 9780582322547.
  32. ^ John Mitchel, Jail Journal, or five years in British Prisons, M. H. Gill & Son, Ltd., 1914, pp. xxxiv–xxxvi
  33. ^ Murray, A.C. (1986). "Agrarian Violence and Nationalism in Nineteenth-Century Ireland: the Myth of Ribbonism". Irish Economic and Social History. 13: 56–73. doi:10.1177/033248938601300103. JSTOR 24337381. S2CID 157628746.
  34. ^ de Tocqueville, Alexis. (1968). Journeys to England and Ireland [1833-35]. New York: Anchor Books. p. 123.
  35. ^ Universities Tests Act 1871 15 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine, UK Government.
  36. ^ Webb, D. A. (1992). "Religious Controversy and Harmony at Trinity College Dublin over Four Centuries". Hermathena: (95–114) 107. ISSN 0018-0750. JSTOR 23046516.
  37. ^ Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829, UK Public General Acts 1829 c. 7 (Regnal. 10_Geo_4) Section 18

Further reading edit

  • Davis, Richard W. (Spring 1997). "Wellington and the 'Open Question': The Issue of Catholic Emancipation, 1821–1829". Albion. 19#1 pp. 39–55. doi:10.2307/4051594.
  • Davis, Richard W. (February 1999). "The House of Lords, the Whigs and Catholic Emancipation 1806–1829". Parliamentary History. 18#1 pp. 23–43. doi:10.1111/j.1750-0206.1999.tb00356.x.
  • Gash, Norman (1961). Mr Secretary Peel: The Life of Sir Robert Peel to 1830. London: Longmans, Green. OCLC 923815682. pp. 545–598. Chapter 16 "Catholic Emancipation" (2011 Faber Finds E-book edition) at Google Books.
  • Jenkins, Brian (1988). Era of Emancipation: British Government of Ireland, 1812–1830. Kingston, Ont.: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-0659-6. OCLC 1034979932.
  • Kingon, Suzanne T. (November 2004). "Ulster opposition to Catholic emancipation, 1828–9". Irish Historical Studies. 34.134: 137–155. JSTOR 30008708.
  • Linker, R. W. (April 1976). "The English Roman Catholics and Emancipation: The Politics of Persuasion". Journal of Ecclesiastical History. 27#2: 151–180. doi:10.1017/S0022046900052970.
  • Machin, G. I. T. (March 1979). "Resistance to Repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts, 1828". Historical Journal. 22#1 pp. 115–139. doi:10.1017/S0018246X00016708.

External links edit

  • Text of the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 as in force today (including any amendments) within the United Kingdom, from legislation.gov.uk.
  • Catholic Emancipation (Article by Marjie Bloy, August 2002)

roman, catholic, relief, 1829, also, known, catholic, emancipation, 1829, removed, sacramental, tests, that, barred, roman, catholics, united, kingdom, from, parliament, from, higher, offices, judiciary, state, culmination, fifty, year, process, catholic, eman. The Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 also known as the Catholic Emancipation Act 1829 removed the sacramental tests that barred Roman Catholics in the United Kingdom from Parliament and from higher offices of the judiciary and state It was the culmination of a fifty year process of Catholic emancipation which had offered Catholics successive measures of relief from the civil and political disabilities imposed by Penal Laws in both Great Britain and in Ireland in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 1 Parliament of the United KingdomLong titleAn Act for the Relief of His Majesty s Roman Catholic Subjects Citation10 Geo 4 c 7Introduced byDuke of WellingtonDatesRoyal assent13 April 1829Status Current legislationText of statute as originally enactedRevised text of statute as amended Convinced that the measure was essential to maintain order in Catholic majority Ireland the Duke of Wellington helped overcome the opposition of the King George IV and of the House of Lords by threatening to step aside as Prime Minister and retire his Tory government in favour of a new likely reform minded Whig ministry In Ireland the Protestant Ascendancy had the assurance of the simultaneous passage of the Parliamentary Elections Ireland Act 1829 Its substitution of the British ten pound for the Irish forty shilling freehold qualification disenfranchised over eighty percent of Ireland s electorate This included a majority of the tenant farmers who had helped force the issue of emancipation in 1828 by electing to parliament the leader of the Catholic Association Daniel O Connell Contents 1 Agitation and concession 2 Provisions and assurances 3 Political results 4 Amendment and repeal 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Further reading 8 External linksAgitation and concession editDaniel O Connell 1775 1847 had rejected a suggestion from friends of emancipation and from the English Roman Catholic bishop John Milner 2 that the fear of Catholic advancement might be allayed if the Crown were accorded the same right exercised by continental monarchs a veto on the confirmation of Catholic bishops O Connell insisted that Irish Catholics would rather remain forever without emancipation than allow the government to interfere with the appointment of their senior clergy 3 4 Instead he relied on their confidence in the independence of the priesthood from Ascendancy landowners and magistrates to build his Catholic Association into a mass political movement On the basis of a Catholic rent of a penny a month typically paid through the local priest the Association mobilised not only the Catholic middle class but also poorer tenant farmers and tradesmen Their investment enabled O Connell to mount monster rallies crowds of over 100 000 that stayed the hands of authorities and emboldened larger enfranchised tenants to vote for pro emancipation candidates in defiance of their landlords 5 His campaign reached its climax when he himself stood for parliament In July 1828 O Connell defeated a nominee for a position in the British cabinet William Vesey Fitzgerald in a County Clare by election 2057 votes to 982 This made a direct issue of the parliamentary Oath of Supremacy by which as a Catholic he would be denied his seat in the Commons 6 7 As Lord Lieutenant of Ireland Wellington s brother Richard Wellesley had attempted to placate Catholic opinion notably by dismissing of the long serving Attorney General for Ireland William Saurin whose rigid Ascendancy views and policy made him bitterly unpopular and by applying a policy of prohibitions and coercion against not only the Catholic Ribbonmen but also the Protestant Orangemen 8 But now both Wellington and his Home Secretary Robert Peel were convinced that unless concessions were made a confrontation was inevitable Peel nicknamed Orange Peel by O Connell on account of his anti Catholic views concluded though emancipation was a great danger civil strife was a greater danger 9 Fearing insurrection in Ireland he drafted the Relief Bill and guided it through the House of Commons To overcome the vehement opposition of both the King and of the House of Lords Wellington threatened to resign potentially opening the way for a new Whig majority with designs not only for Catholic emancipation but also for parliamentary reform 10 The King initially accepted Wellington s resignation and the King s brother the Duke of Cumberland attempted to put together a government united against Catholic emancipation Though such a government would have had considerable support in the House of Lords it would have had little support in the Commons and Ernest abandoned his attempt The King recalled Wellington The bill passed the Lords and became law 11 Provisions and assurances editThe key defining provision of the Act s was its repeal of certain oaths and certain declarations commonly called the declarations against transubstantiation and the invocation of saints and the sacrifice of the mass as practised in the Church of Rome which had been required as qualifications for sitting and voting in parliament and for the enjoyment of certain offices franchises and civil rights For the Oath of Supremacy the act substituted a pledge to bear true allegiance to the King to recognise the Hanoverian succession to reject any claim to temporal or civil jurisdiction within the United Kingdom by the Pope of Rome or any other foreign prince or potentate and to abjure any intention to subvert the present Anglican church establishment 12 This last abjuration in the new Oath of Allegiance was underscored by a provision forbidding the assumption by the Roman Church of episcopal titles derived from any city town or place already used by the United Church of England and Ireland 13 14 15 With other sectarian impositions of the Act such as restrictions on admittance to Catholic religious orders and on Catholic church processions this was repealed with the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1926 16 17 18 The one major security required to pass the Act was the Parliamentary Elections Ireland Act 1829 10 Geo 4 c 8 19 Receiving its royal assent on the same day as the relief bill the act disenfranchised Ireland s Forty Shilling Freeholders by raising the property threshold for the county vote to the British ten pound standard 20 As a result emancipation was accompanied by a more than five fold decrease in the Irish electorate from 216 000 voters to just 37 000 21 22 That the majority of the tenant farmers who had voted for O Connell in the Clare by election were disenfranchised as a result of his apparent victory at Westminster was not made immediately apparent as O Connell was permitted in July 1829 to stand unopposed for the Clare seat that his refusal to take the Oath of Supremacy had denied him the year before 23 Political results editJ C D Clark 1985 depicts England before 1828 as a nation in which the vast majority of the people still believed in the divine right of kings and the legitimacy of a hereditary nobility and in the rights and privileges of the Anglican Church In Clark s interpretation the system remained virtually intact until it suddenly collapsed in 1828 because Catholic emancipation undermined its central symbolic prop the Anglican supremacy Clark argues that the consequences were enormous The shattering of a whole social order What was lost at that point was not merely a constitutional arrangement but the intellectual ascendancy of a worldview the cultural hegemony of the old elite 24 Clark s interpretation has been widely debated in the scholarly literature 25 Other historians examining the issue highlight the amount of continuity before and after the period of 1828 through 1832 26 Eric J Evans 1996 emphasises that the political importance of emancipation was that it split the anti reformers beyond repair and diminished their ability to block future reform laws especially the great Reform Act of 1832 Paradoxically Wellington s success in forcing through emancipation led many Ultra Tories to demand reform of Parliament after seeing that the votes of the rotten boroughs had given the government its majority Thus it was an ultra Tory the Marquess of Blandford who in February 1830 introduced the first major reform bill calling for the transfer of rotten borough seats to the counties and large towns the disfranchisement of non resident voters the preventing of Crown office holders from sitting in Parliament the payment of a salary to MPs and the general franchise for men who owned property The ultras believed that a widely based electorate could be relied upon to rally around anti Catholicism 27 In Ireland emancipation is generally regarded as having come too late to influence the Catholic majority view of the union After a delay of thirty years an opportunity to integrate Catholics through their re emerging propertied and professional classes as a minority within the United Kingdom may have passed 28 291 29 In 1830 O Connell invited Protestants to join in a campaign to repeal the Act of Union and restore the Kingdom of Ireland under the Constitution of 1782 But in breaking the link between Catholic inclusion and democratic reform the terms under which he was able to secure the final measure of relief may have weakened the case for a restored Irish parliament George Ensor a leading Protestant member of the Catholic Association in the Ulster protested relief being bought at the price of casting forty shilling freeholders both Catholic and Protestant into the abyss While it allowed a few Catholic barristers to attain a higher grade in their profession and a few Catholic gentlemen to be returned to Parliament the indifference demonstrated to parliamentary reform would prove disastrous for the cause of repeal 30 Seeking perhaps to rationalise the sacrifice of his freeholders O Connell wrote privately in March 1829 that the new ten pound franchise might actually give more power to Catholics by concentrating it in more reliable and less democratically dangerous hands 31 The Young Irelander John Mitchel believed that this was the intent to detach propertied Catholics from the increasingly agitated rural masses 32 In a pattern that had been intensifying from the 1820s as landlords cleared land to meet the growing livestock demand from England 33 tenants had been banding together to oppose evictions and to attack tithe and process servers On his visit to Ireland Alexis De Tocqueville recorded these Whiteboys and Ribbonmen protesting The law does nothing for us We must save ourselves We have a little land which we need for ourselves and our families to live on and they drive us out of it To whom should we address ourselves Emancipation has done nothing for us Mr O Connell and the rich Catholics go to Parliament We die of starvation just the same 34 Amendment and repeal editOne civil disability not removed by 1829 Act were the sacramental tests required for professorships fellowships studentships and other lay offices at universities These were abolished for the English universities Oxford Cambridge and Durham by the Universities Tests Act 1871 35 and for Trinity College Dublin by the Fawcett s Act 1873 36 Section 18 of the 1829 act No Roman Catholic to advise the Crown in the appointment to offices in the established church remains in force in England Wales and Scotland but was repealed with respect to Northern Ireland the Church of Ireland having been disestablished in 1869 by the Statute Law Revision Northern Ireland Act 1980 37 The entire act was repealed in the Republic of Ireland by the Statute Law Revision Act 1983 See also editPapists Act 1778 Roman Catholic Relief Act 1791 Ultra ToriesNotes edit The citation of this Act by this short title was authorised by the Short Titles Act 1896 section 1 and the first schedule Due to the repeal of those provisions it is now authorised by section 19 2 of the Interpretation Act 1978 Leighton C D A September 2008 John Milner and the Orthodox Cause PDF Journal of Religious History 32 3 345 360 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9809 2008 00718 x hdl 11693 23022 Luby Thomas Clarke 1870 The life and times of Daniel O Connell Glasgow Cameron Ferguson amp Company p 418 Archived from the original on 31 July 2021 Retrieved 22 August 2020 MacDonagh Oliver 1975 The Politicization of the Irish Catholic Bishops 1800 1850 The Historical Journal 18 1 40 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00008669 JSTOR 2638467 S2CID 159877081 Geoghegan Patrick M 2008 King Dan Gill and Macmillan Dublin p 168 MacDonagh Oliver 1991 The Life of Daniel O Connell Barron Declan Clare History The Clare Election of 1828 Clare County Library DeMichele Michael D June 1970 Richard Colley Wellesley An Anglo Irish Advocate of Catholic Emancipation American Benedictine Review 21 7 254 267 ISSN 0002 7650 Peel Arthur George Villiers 1895 Peel Robert 1788 1850 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 44 London Smith Elder amp Co Holmes Richard 2007 Wellington The Iron Duke London HarperCollins pp 274 277 ISBN 978 0 00 713750 3 Van der Kiste 204 George III s Children Revised ed Stroud Sutton Publishing p 204 ISBN 978 0 7509 3438 1 Curtis Edmund and R B McDowell eds 1943 Irish Historical Documents 1172 1922 London Methuen pp 247 250 Reports from Committees Great Britain Parliament House of Commons Oxford Oxford University Press 1867 p 87 Parliament Great Britain 1851 Hansard s Parliamentary Debates Vol CXIV London p 1145 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Bowyer George 1850 The Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster and the New Hierarchy London James Ridgeway Piccadilly pp 1 30 Text of Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 retrieved 28 January 2018 Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 legislation gov uk ss 28 36 10 Geo 4 c 7 Retrieved 28 January 2018 Debates Roman Catholic Relief Act 1926 Hansard Retrieved 28 January 2018 Evans William David Hammond Anthony Granger Thomas Colpitts eds 1836 Parliamentary Elections Ireland Act 1829 Vol 8 Third ed London W H Bond a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Hilton Boyd 2006 A Mad Bad and Dangerous People England 1783 1846 Oxford Clarendon Press pp 384 391 ISBN 978 0 19 921891 2 Foster R F 1988 Modern Ireland 1600 1972 London Allen Lane pp 301 302 ISBN 0713990104 Johnston Neil 1 March 2013 The History of the Parliamentary Franchise Research Paper 13 14 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 3 November 2021 Retrieved 21 June 2023 The History of Parliament 1820 1832 vol VI pp 535 536 Clark J C D 28 March 2000 English Society 1688 1832 Ideology Social Structure and Political Practice during the Ancien Regime 2nd ed Cambridge University Press pp 90 409 ISBN 978 0 521 66627 5 Hilton 2006 pp 668 671 O Gorman Frank November 1997 Review of English Society 1688 1832 Ideology Social Structure and Political Practice During the Ancien Regime Reviews in History Retrieved 20 July 2015 Evans Eric J 1996 The Forging of the Modern State Early Industrial Britain 1783 1870 2nd ed Longman p 216 ISBN 978 0 582 47267 9 Foster R F 1988 Modern Ireland 1600 1972 London Allen Lane p 291 ISBN 0 7139 9010 4 Geoghegan Patrick M 2000 The Catholics and the Union Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 10 243 258 258 doi 10 1017 S0080440100000128 ISSN 0080 4401 JSTOR 3679381 S2CID 153949973 MacAtasney Gerard 2007 Brunswick Bloodhounds and Itinerant Demagogues The Campaign for Catholic Emancipation in County Armagh 1824 29 Seanchas Ardmhacha Journal of the Armagh Diocesan Historical Society 21 22 165 231 176 ISSN 0488 0196 JSTOR 29742843 Hoppen K Theodore 1999 Ireland since 1800 conflict and conformity Second ed London Longman pp 22 24 ISBN 9780582322547 John Mitchel Jail Journal or five years in British Prisons M H Gill amp Son Ltd 1914 pp xxxiv xxxvi Murray A C 1986 Agrarian Violence and Nationalism in Nineteenth Century Ireland the Myth of Ribbonism Irish Economic and Social History 13 56 73 doi 10 1177 033248938601300103 JSTOR 24337381 S2CID 157628746 de Tocqueville Alexis 1968 Journeys to England and Ireland 1833 35 New York Anchor Books p 123 Universities Tests Act 1871 Archived 15 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine UK Government Webb D A 1992 Religious Controversy and Harmony at Trinity College Dublin over Four Centuries Hermathena 95 114 107 ISSN 0018 0750 JSTOR 23046516 Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 UK Public General Acts 1829 c 7 Regnal 10 Geo 4 Section 18Further reading editDavis Richard W Spring 1997 Wellington and the Open Question The Issue of Catholic Emancipation 1821 1829 Albion 19 1 pp 39 55 doi 10 2307 4051594 Davis Richard W February 1999 The House of Lords the Whigs and Catholic Emancipation 1806 1829 Parliamentary History 18 1 pp 23 43 doi 10 1111 j 1750 0206 1999 tb00356 x Gash Norman 1961 Mr Secretary Peel The Life of Sir Robert Peel to 1830 London Longmans Green OCLC 923815682 pp 545 598 Chapter 16 Catholic Emancipation 2011 Faber Finds E book edition at Google Books Jenkins Brian 1988 Era of Emancipation British Government of Ireland 1812 1830 Kingston Ont McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 7735 0659 6 OCLC 1034979932 Kingon Suzanne T November 2004 Ulster opposition to Catholic emancipation 1828 9 Irish Historical Studies 34 134 137 155 JSTOR 30008708 Linker R W April 1976 The English Roman Catholics and Emancipation The Politics of Persuasion Journal of Ecclesiastical History 27 2 151 180 doi 10 1017 S0022046900052970 Machin G I T March 1979 Resistance to Repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts 1828 Historical Journal 22 1 pp 115 139 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00016708 External links editText of the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 as in force today including any amendments within the United Kingdom from legislation gov uk The text of the act Catholic Emancipation Article by Marjie Bloy August 2002 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 amp oldid 1218709762, wikipedia, wiki, 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