The great famine in Ireland
- Fiche de cours
- Quiz
- Profs en ligne
- Videos
- Application mobile
In 1541, Henry VIII, the king of England, directly claimed the throne of Ireland. From then on, the land of Ireland was gradually taken over by English and Scottish settlers who obeyed the orders of the English kings.The Irish peasants often tried to rebel against their English landowners but they couldn't shake the yoke of their invaders.
English domination was completed in 1800
when the English Parliament voted the Union Act
which made Ireland part of the United Kingdom.
Political unrest then began in Ireland.
The situation was made worse by the fact that the
Irish were mostly Catholics, whereas the
English were Protestants.
The landlords were English, or Scottish, and they didn't live on their Irish estates. They became known as "the absentee landlords": they lived far away and had very little contact with their tenants in Ireland.
The main crop in Ireland was the potato. It was the staple diet of the Irish peasants, and it also provided food for the rest of the United Kingdom.
In 1846, however, the potato crop failed,
and the seeds went rotten. The potato blight
went on for four years. There was very little
food in Ireland, and the British government of Lord
Russell, under Queen Victoria, didn't do anything to
help relieve the famine.
Between 1846 and 1850, one
and a half million Irish people died of
starvation.
Another one and a half million left Ireland
forever. They emigrated mostly to the United
States of America.
The population of Ireland fell from about 8 million people in 1845 to under 5 million by 1850. It still hasn't returned to its 1845 level today.
Irish Catholics began to organize for rebellion. Irish people who had emigrated to the USA never forgot their origins and why they had to leave their homeland.
In 1858, O'Mahoney founded the Fenian Brotherhood in the USA. They began to organize support for rebellion, mostly in terms of money and arms supply.
It marked the beginning of terrorist actions for the independence of Ireland.
Vous avez obtenu75%de bonnes réponses !