The humble petition of the Roman Catholics of Ireland to the Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland ; Impartial detail of the proceedings and debates in both Houses of the Iimperial Parliament of the United Kingdom, in the session of 1805, upon the Catholic petition

Bibliographic Information

The humble petition of the Roman Catholics of Ireland to the Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland ; Impartial detail of the proceedings and debates in both Houses of the Iimperial Parliament of the United Kingdom, in the session of 1805, upon the Catholic petition

(The Catholic question in Ireland, 1762-1829 / edited and introduction by Nicholas Lee, v. 3)

Thoemmes Press , Edition Synapse, 2000

[Reprint ed.]

  • : uk
  • : ja

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Note

Reprint. Originally published: London : Printed and published by Keating, Brown and Co., 1805

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Catholic emancipation - freedom from the restrictions of the penal laws that had successively been imposed on Roman Catholics since the mid-16th century - seemed an inevitable consequence of the 1801 Act of Union with Great Britain, but it is not until 1829, and then only when faced with probable revolution in Ireland, that it was conceded by the British Government. What seems in retrospect a simple question of the granting of civil rights was attended by vehement resistance from vested interests, rebellion and reaction in 1798, a systematic coercion of Irish opinion thereafter, and rural unrest. "The Catholic Question in Ireland" is a collection of ten key works tracing the path of reform, from early claims for Catholic equality to the eventual granting of political and civil rights. They illustrate particular moments in the struggle: the organization of an effective Catholic Committee in 1760; the 1793 Relief Act which gave some Irish Catholics the right to vote, though not sit in Parliament; the Humble Petition of 1805 which resulted in the first parliamentary debate on emancipation since the Act of Union; the short-lived "Catholic Convention" of 1811; the creation of the Catholic Association by Daniel O'Connell in 1823; and the Parliamentary Inquiry of 1824-5 into the state of Ireland. It would be hard to overestimate the significance of the Catholic Question in the determination of national consciousness in Ireland and in signalling the beginning of an eventual transfer of power from a relatively privileged minority to the majority of the Irish people. The books and pamphlets reprinted here, now very hard to obtain, provide information about the debate itself and about contemporary social conditions and public opinion.

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Details

  • NCID
    BA50193908
  • ISBN
    • 1855068540
    • 4931444407
  • Country Code
    uk
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Bristol,Tokyo
  • Pages/Volumes
    190, 98, 63-169, 28 p.
  • Size
    23 cm
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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