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4 - ‘With justice but not favour’: Implementing the articles of Limerick, 1691–1704

from Part II - The Articles of Surrender

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 June 2018

Eoin Kinsella
Affiliation:
University College Dublin
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Summary

The articles of Galway and Limerick were considerably more complex than the surrenders previously negotiated and, owing to the number of Catholics expected to claim their benefit, were much more important to the Williamite settlement in Ireland. As a consequence both sets of articles – particularly the articles of Limerick – were subjected to intense scrutiny by the Irish and English administrations. Moreover, the greater number of claimants to the articles of Limerick allowed the articlemen to fund and direct a lobbying effort more concentrated in nature than that of the minor articlemen. Throughout the 1690s, the interpretation and implementation of the articles of Galway and Limerick provoked controversy. This chapter examines the articles of Limerick, with a particular focus on their early interpretation by the Irish and English governments. The articles of Limerick were viewed with deep suspicion and hostility by Irish Protestants, who feared a repeat of the Catholic resurgence of the 1680s. The Irish government came under intense pressure, both from the articlemen and the Protestant polity, to interpret the articles in different ways. Protestants argued for as narrow an interpretation as possible, while the articlemen naturally pressed the opposite case.

Section II identifies the leading Catholic lobbyists in London and analyses the inconsistent attitude adopted by the Irish government to the implementation of the articles. The king's official attitude to the articles of surrender during the 1690s was that they should be interpreted with ‘justice but not favour’. Justice was, however, a fluid concept and the Irish and English administrations sought ways to exploit the weaknesses of the articles. The potential for instability in Ireland was enormous, and the Williamite authorities were mindful that to revoke the articles entirely was potentially catastrophic. They were required to tread a fine line between pandering to Protestant hostility to the articles, and appearing overly sympathetic to the recently defeated Jacobite rebels. Section III addresses attempts in 1692 to give legislative protection to the articles of Limerick through a proposed bill of indemnity, while Section IV provides an overview of continued hostility to the articles among Protestant politicians, up to the passing of the act confirming an abridged version of the articles of Limerick in 1697 and the opening of the third and final court of claims.

Type
Chapter
Information
Catholic Survival in Protestant Ireland, 1660–1711
Colonel John Browne, Landownership and the Articles of Limerick
, pp. 95 - 122
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2018

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