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Page 1: Introduction to Plantations. Ireland in the early 1500s Thick forest & scrub covered the country. No roads, only dirt tracks. Easier to travel by sea,

Introduction to Plantations.Ireland in the early 1500s

•Thick forest & scrub covered the country.

•No roads, only dirt tracks.

•Easier to travel by sea, then across the country.

•Dangerous to travel through an area without the local lords permission.

Page 2: Introduction to Plantations. Ireland in the early 1500s Thick forest & scrub covered the country. No roads, only dirt tracks. Easier to travel by sea,

How the country was divided:

•King of England was the ‘Lord of Ireland’

•He only controlled an area called ‘The Pale’

•The rest of the country was controlled by Gaelic & Anglo-Norman Lords.

•Anglo-Norman Lords controlled most of the South of Ireland

•Gaelic Lords name began with ‘Mac’ or ‘O’. Do you know why?

Page 3: Introduction to Plantations. Ireland in the early 1500s Thick forest & scrub covered the country. No roads, only dirt tracks. Easier to travel by sea,

Control outside of the Pale:

Gaelic Lords• Descendants of the Celts.

• The Lord ruled over the ‘Clan’.

• The Lord was elected from the derbhfine, usually their father & grandfather was the Lord before them (this often caused tension!)

• Their title was “The O’Neill” or “The O’Connor”

Page 4: Introduction to Plantations. Ireland in the early 1500s Thick forest & scrub covered the country. No roads, only dirt tracks. Easier to travel by sea,

The Gaelic way of life:Language & dress

• Spoke Gaelic• Men: o wore knee length tunic /

“léine”o Had long moustache & fringe /

“glib”o Wore an Irish “Mantle”

(English word) / “Brat” (Irish word)

• Women:o Long tunico Irish “Brat”• Both went barefoot.

Page 5: Introduction to Plantations. Ireland in the early 1500s Thick forest & scrub covered the country. No roads, only dirt tracks. Easier to travel by sea,

The Brehon Laws

• Ancient Gaelic Laws

• The Brehon (judge) administered the laws.

• Brehon court held on a hillside open to everyone.

• Only form of punishment was an ‘éric’ (a fine), to be paid to victims family.

Marriage

• Under the Brehon Law;

• Women kept their own name & property.

• Divorce was allowed.

• Children born outside of wedlock were entitled to a share of the fathers property.

Page 6: Introduction to Plantations. Ireland in the early 1500s Thick forest & scrub covered the country. No roads, only dirt tracks. Easier to travel by sea,

Cattle & Land• The land was the property of the

whole clan.

• A persons wealth was measured by the amount of cattle they owned.

• Only Freemen owned cattle.

• Peasants & Labourers had few rights, though they were free to work for which ever Lord they wanted to.

Page 7: Introduction to Plantations. Ireland in the early 1500s Thick forest & scrub covered the country. No roads, only dirt tracks. Easier to travel by sea,

Anglo-Norman Lords:• Descendants of the Normans who arrived during the Middle

Ages (1200s)Remember!!!! These Normans influenced Ireland by

introducing:Norman castles, Norman towns, parliaments, the common law, place

names, farming systems, changing the church.

• They were granted a “title deed” to Irish land by the King of England. (under English law, all land belonged to the King)

When the Lord died his eldest son got all the land & became the new Lord.

The Earl of Kildare: member of Fitzgeralds, ruled in Kildare & Meath.

Page 8: Introduction to Plantations. Ireland in the early 1500s Thick forest & scrub covered the country. No roads, only dirt tracks. Easier to travel by sea,

• The King of England was technically their ‘Over-Lord’, but the Anglo-Norman Lords were more like the Gaelic people.

They used the Brehon Law They married Gaelic people They adopted Gaelic Customs

• By 1500 the most powerful Anglo-Norman lords were: The Earl of Ormond: ruled the Butlers in Kilkenny & Tipperary The Earl of Desmond: member of Fitzgeralds, ruled in Munster

The Anglo-Norman Lords

were more Gaelic than

English!!

Page 9: Introduction to Plantations. Ireland in the early 1500s Thick forest & scrub covered the country. No roads, only dirt tracks. Easier to travel by sea,

The People of the Pale:• ‘The Pale’ stretched from

Drogheda to Dalkey, & from Kells to the Irish sea.

• It was controlled by the King of England in 1500.

• Many landowners & merchants lived there.

• These people were also descendants of the Normans, but kept closer ties to England.

Page 10: Introduction to Plantations. Ireland in the early 1500s Thick forest & scrub covered the country. No roads, only dirt tracks. Easier to travel by sea,

Close ties to Englandwere kept by the peopleof The Pale:

They spoke EnglishKept English customs &

cultureWore English style clothing,

shoes, hats, stockings. Forbidden to wear a

mantle.Always cleanly shaven or

with a full beard (never with a moustache as this was considered a Gaelic.

Page 11: Introduction to Plantations. Ireland in the early 1500s Thick forest & scrub covered the country. No roads, only dirt tracks. Easier to travel by sea,

The Common Law: English system of law that

was common to all of the King’s subjects.

A common law judge was appointed to travel from place to place to try serious crimes in courthouses.

Serious punishments included beheading, hanging, imprisonment.

Marriage: Under the English common

law system:

Divorce was forbidden.

The wife took the husbands name & he controlled all of their property.

Any child born outside of wedlock couldn’t inherit their fathers property.

Page 12: Introduction to Plantations. Ireland in the early 1500s Thick forest & scrub covered the country. No roads, only dirt tracks. Easier to travel by sea,

What did the people of the Pale think of the Gaelic & Norman Lords???

• Landowners & merchant hated the Lords from outside of the Pale.

• The Pale was frequently Raided:

Gaelic Lords stole cattle Farmers within the Pale had

to pay ‘black rent’ to Gaelic Lords

• War was common between rival Lords & this disrupted trade in the Pale.

• They called Gaelic Lords “the Irish enemy”

• They called Anglo-Norman Lords “The degenerate English”

• They saw themselves as superior to those outside the Pale.

Page 13: Introduction to Plantations. Ireland in the early 1500s Thick forest & scrub covered the country. No roads, only dirt tracks. Easier to travel by sea,

Celtic warriors. Can you recognise any of their clothes???


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