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An imperial harbinger: Sylvester O’Halloran’s General history (1778)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 July 2015

Abstract

This article investigates the antiquarian response to the opportunity for Irish Catholic relief during the Anglo–American crisis and views Sylvester O’Halloran’s General history as an innovative attempt to initiate Irish Catholic participation in the British empire predicated on a historic and current fittingness. The London publication of the General history indicated that this work was directed at an audience outside of, as well as within, Ireland. An investigation of the subscription-list confirms that that audience consisted of members of Britain’s political élite and successful émigré Irishmen in the service of European Catholic powers. The narrative analysis, when compared with its principal sources, Keating’s seventeenth-century Foras feasa ar Éirinn and the twelfth-century Lebor gabála Érenn, shows that O’Halloran altered his source materials to construct an historical picture of a Milesian maritime empire. O’Halloran’s argument for Catholic inclusion in the British empire was twofold. He altered his source material to suggest an ancient parity with the contemporary British empire to demonstrate an Irish historical fittingness for an imperial role, while his subscription-list confirmed a current aptitude. This argument was directed at and partly endorsed by another section of the subscription-list, London’s political élite.

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Research Article
Copyright
© Irish Historical Studies Publications Ltd 2015 

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References

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71 Charles James Fox is listed as ‘Hon. Charles Fox’ in O’Halloran’s list. See L. G. Mitchell, ‘Fox, Charles James (1748-–1806)’ in Oxford D.N.B.

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90 O’Halloran, General history, i, 40.

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94 Ibid., i, 43. A similar comment appears in Foras feasa, ii, 20, and Lebor gabála, i, 165, but no linkage is made with ancient Phoenicia.

95 A.M. dates refer to the year of the world, while A.C. refers to years after the birth of Christ.

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101 Ibid., 85.

102 Ibid.

103 Ibid., 85–6.

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105 Lebor gabála, ii, 69, 71; Keating, Foras feasa, ii, 32–7.

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113 Ibid., v–vi.

114 Ibid., ii, 98. Also, ibid., 19, 105.

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130 Ibid., 291–2.

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137 John was secretary to the governor of the Bahamas by 1787, when he was so listed in the subscription-list to John Ferrar’s The History of Limerick (Limerick, 1787), of which he ordered thirty copies. John was granted three hundred acres on Long Island in December 1787, and a further five hundred acres in January 1788. He was a peace commissioner, a member of the Committee of Correspondence and a very active member of the General Assembly there: Lyons, ‘Sylvester O’Halloran (1728–1807)’, p. 279.

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