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Jonathan Swift’s “A Modest Proposal”
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Terms: Roman Catholic: the original type of Christian church
Protestant: Any Christian church that is NOT Catholic Anglican: a member of the Church of England (a specific type of Protestant church) Papist: a Roman Catholic person (slightly derogatory) Absentee Landlord: someone who owns land in a country and rents it out, but lives and spends the money in a different country (if you owned and rented out a condo in Canada and lived here)
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How it all started: Ireland Roman Catholic
English influence in Ireland began during the Middle Ages
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Ireland Church of England (Anglican church) England Ireland
Roman Catholic Roman Catholic 1534 England charges Ireland high rent, takes over parliament, passes Anti-Catholic legislation
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1536 Irish parliament makes Henry VIII head of the Church of Ireland. However, Reformation makes little progress in Ireland. Vast majority of Irish still Catholic. 1541 King Henry VIII is determined to re-assert his authority over Ireland. He changes his title from Lord of Ireland to king. The Irish parliament assents. 1603 Enforcement of English Law in Ireland. 1641 Catholics hold 59% of land in Ireland. 1649 English soldier & statesman, Oliver Cromwell, landed at Dublin. His troops killed 2,000 men. Land was confiscated and divided among the English soldiers 1653 Cromwell decides to confiscate land held by Irish Catholics. 1656 Over 60,000 Irish Catholics sent as slaves to Barbados/other islands in Caribbean. 1658 Population of Ireland (around 1,500,000, before Cromwell) was reduced by two-thirds, to 500,000, at Cromwell's death in 1658. 1672 Over 6,000 Irish boys/women sold as slaves since England gained control of Jamaica. 1688 Catholics now hold 22% of land in Ireland. 1692 Exclusion of Catholics from Parliament and all professions. 1695 Anti-Catholic Penal Laws Introduced. Catholics hold 14% of land in Ireland. 1714 Catholics hold 7% of land in Ireland. 1727 Catholics are deprived of the right to vote
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Ireland Church of England (Anglican church) England Ireland
Roman Catholic Roman Catholic 1534 1729: Modest Proposal England charges Ireland high rent, takes over parliament, passes Anti-Catholic legislation
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Jonathan Swift Born in Hoey’s Alley, Dublin, Ireland in 1667, to English parents (Church of England, Anglican). After his father died, his mother went back to England, and Swift was raised by his father’s wealthy family in Ireland. He became an Anglican minister, went to England, came back to Ireland to be a minister there (in Church of England) Always wanted to return to England (he loved it there), but church kept giving him positions in Ireland. Anglican, but sympathetic to the Irish cause, became strong defender of Irish rights. Considered most distinguished satirist in English language. Died in Dublin on October 19,1745.
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