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Irish adventurers and godly militants in the 1640s
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2016
Extract
This paper will attempt to shed some additional light on the background and motives of those who were to play a leading part in the scheme for the Irish adventurers. The focus will be upon those Englishmen, and Londoners in particular, who invested from 1642 onwards in the reconquest of Ireland in return for grants of Irish land once the island had been secured again. It will be argued that militants who regarded themselves as belonging to the chosen ranks of the godly — that is the minority of mankind singled out for salvation by God, and thus constituting his elect or saints — played a leading part in the scheme and were among its most committed participants, and that they later helped to shape English policy towards Ireland. These militants were also ardent advocates of reformation in church and state in England in the 1640s, and they viewed Ireland and the successful Catholic rising in 1641 from a perspective highly coloured by antipopery. They tended to see the struggle taking place in the mid-seventeenth century in Britain, Ireland and Europe generally in black-and-white terms, as a struggle between true religion (by which was meant a thoroughly reformed Protestant church) and the Antichrist as represented by the pope and the forces believed to be ranged under him in the Catholic church.
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References
1 For an excellent recent analysis of antipopery see Lake, Peter, ‘Anti-popery: the structure of a prejudice’ in Cust, Richard and Hughes, Ann (eds), Conflict in early Stuart England: studies in religion and politics, 1603–42 (London, 1989), pp 72–106.Google Scholar
2 The standard modern authority on the Irish adventurers is Bottigheimer, Karl S., English money and Irish land: the ‘adventurers’ in the Cromwellian settlement of Ireland (Oxford, 1971).Google Scholar
3 Ibid., pp 40–42, 45, 54; Moody, T. W., Martin, F. X. and Byrne, F. J. (eds), A new history of Ireland, iii: Early Modern Ireland (Oxford, 1976), p. 295.Google Scholar
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9 Seaver, Wallington’s world, pp 83, 165–6.
10 Select committee of adventurers for Ireland chosen in London, 3 Sept. 1642 (B.L., Add. MS 4771, f. 3).
11 Bottigheimer, English money, p. 73; app. A, p. 194; app. B, adventurers who drew Irish land, p. 212.
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18 Firth & Rait (eds), Acts & ordinances, i, 223; Corporation of London Records Office, journals of common council, vol. 40, f. 174; Bottigheimer, English money, app. A, p. 179.
19 Bottigheimer, English money, app. A, pp 181, 185; app. B, p. 205. Foot did not draw any Irish land.
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25 Two orders of the Lords and Commons; The manuscripts of the House of Lords, new series, xi: Addenda, 1514–17¡4, ed. Bond, Maurice F. (H.M.C., London, 1962), p. 393 Google Scholar. Langham invested £700 in the adventurers but did not draw any Irish land (Bottigheimer, English money, app. A, p. 185).
26 Beaven, A. B., The aldermen of the city of London (2 vols, London, 1908-13), ii, 68, 181Google Scholar; Commons’ jn., iii, 408. Methwold invested £1,100 in the adventurers but drew no Irish land (Bottigheimer, English money, app. A, p. 187).
27 Greaves, & Zaller, (eds), British radicals, iii, 232 Google Scholar. Thomason adventured £700 and drew 1,166 acres in Queen’s County (Bottigheimer, English money, app. A, p. 192; app. B, p. 211).
28 See above, p. 6.
29 Bottigheimer, English money, app. A, p. 194; House of Lords Record Office, main papers, petition of the parson, churchwarden and inhabitants of the parish of St Thomas the Apostle, 30 June 1641.
30 Guildhall Library, London, MS 5019/1, ff 76, 83–4. He invested £200 but drew no Irish land (Bottigheimer, English money, app. A, p. 188).
31 Richard Symonds, ‘The king’s army in 1643’ (B.L., Harl. MS 986, f. 21); House of Lords Record Office, main papers, petition of the parishioners of St Mary le Bow, 14 Feb. 1644.
32 Commons’ jn., ii, 851–2. Waldo invested £600 and drew 1,833 acres in Tipperary (Bottigheimer, English money, app. A, p. 194; app. B, p. 212).
33 P.R.O., S.P. dom. 23/251/88. Goodwin invested £300 and drew 875 acres in Kilkenny West, County Westmeath (Bottigheimer, English money, app. A, p. 182; app. B, p. 203).
34 Corporation of London Records Office, journals of common council, vol. 40, f. 153.
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36 Greaves, & Zaller, (eds), British radicals, iii, 167-8Google Scholar; Farnell, ‘The usurpation of honest London householders’, pp 29–30. Shute invested £300 in the ‘sea adventure’, having previously invested £200 in the original adventure (Bottigheimer, English money, app. A, p. 191).
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38 Bottigheimer, English money, app. A, p. 192; P.R.O., S.P. dom. 28/131/pt 3, f. 14; Firth, & Rait, (eds), Acts & ordinances, i, 914 Google Scholar; Woodhead, Rulers of London, pp 161–2; P.R.O., PROB 11/366/64 will of William Thomson.
39 Bottigheimer, English money, app. A, p. 179; Firth & Rait, (eds), Acts & ordinances, i, 9, 1254, 1261–2, ii, 524, 562.Google Scholar
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41 P.R.O., S.P. dom. 16/486/32; Cai. committee for compounding, i, 10, 162; Cal. committee for advance of money, i, 105. Waring invested £1,000 in the adventurers and drew 4,444 acres in Waterford (Bottigheimer, English money, app. A, p. 194; app. B, p. 212).
42 Woodhead, Rulers of London, p. 44; Symonds, ‘The king’s army in 1643’, f. 8. Chamberlaine’s total investment in the project was £800, and he drew 2,165 acres in Limerick (Bottigheimer, English money, app. A, p. 178; app. B, p. 200).
43 Nagel, L. C., ‘The militia of London, 1641–9’ (unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of London, 1982), app. 3, p. 317 Google Scholar; Firth, & Rait, (eds), Acts & ordinances, i, 1057, ii, 123Google Scholar; Commons’ jn., ii, 926; P.R.O., S.P. dom. 28/131/pt 3, f. 3. Willoughby and Pennoyer invested £200 and £500 respectively, but neither man drew any Irish land (Bottigheimer, English money, app. A, pp 194, 188).
44 Aylmer, G. E., The Levellers in the English revolution (London, 1975), pp 26, 28–9Google Scholar. Rainsborough invested £500 in the adventurers but drew no Irish land (Bottigheimer, English money, app. A, p. 189).
45 Bottigheimer, English money, app. A, p. 179; Pearl, London, pp 119, 121, 194; Certain informations, 18–25 September 1643 (London, 1643) (Thomason, B.L., E. 68/3).Google Scholar
46 Firth, & Rait, (eds), Acts & ordinances, i, 70–73, 220Google Scholar; P.R.O., S.P. dom. 21/26/121.
47 Firth, & Rait, (eds), Acts & ordinances, i, 1147-66.Google Scholar
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49 Ibid., 233–5; Hill, Christopher, The century of revolution, 1603–1714 (2nd ed., London, 1980), p. 32 Google Scholar. Brenner, Robert, Merchants and revolution: commercial change, political conflict, and London’s overseas traders, 1550–1653 (Cambridge, 1993)Google Scholar, which appeared after the completion of this paper, contains much greater detail upon the colonial interests and activities of Maurice Thomson and many of his fellow London merchants who also became Irish adventurers. Brenner stresses the colonial interests of a significant cross-section of the original London backers of the ‘sea adventure’ (pp 400–10), yet he inexplicably fails to draw upon Bottigheimer, English money.
50 Greaves, & Zaller, (eds), British radicals, iii, 232-3.Google Scholar
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54 Brenner, ‘Civil War politics of London’s merchant community’, p. 94; P.R.O., Exchequer 122/196/24; Woodhead, Rulers of London, p. 44; Beaven, Aldermen of London, ii, 181.
55 P.R.O., PROB 11/301/213 will of Richard Floyd.
56 Oliver Cromwell had himself invested £300 in the original scheme and a further £300 in the ‘sea adventure’ and drew 1,257 acres in King’s County (Bottigheimer, English money, app. A, p. 179; app. B, p. 201).
57 Gentles, Ian, The New Model Army in England, Ireland and Scotland (Oxford, 1992), pp 375, 381, 382–4.Google Scholar
58 An earlier version of this paper was read on 17 October 1992 at a symposium organised by the Kilkenny Archaeological Society to commemorate the 350th anniversary of the Confederation of Kilkenny. I am extremely grateful to my colleague, Mr R. J. Hunter, for his advice and comments.
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