Clanricard and Thomond, 1540-1640 :

provincial politics and society transformed /
Bernadette Cunningham.
Bibliographic Details
Main Creator: Cunningham, Bernadette.
Summary:"This short book compares and contrasts key developments in two neighboring lordships in counties Galway and Clare, investigating how and why the impact of central government policy was ultimately dictated by local circumstances. As royal authority expanded in early modern Connacht, English common law replaced Gaelic custom and local lordships were transformed into landed estates on the English model. The willingness of th Burkes of Clanricard and the O'Briens of Thomond to condone a process of anglicization, under the auspices of a provincial presidency, allowed them to stabilize their authority within a new political structure. by the early seventeenth century the earls of Clanricard and Thomond were working to consolidate their English-style landed estates in changed political circumstances. When government-sponsored plantation threatened in the 1620s, the active, if self-interested, participation by the earls in the debate over land titles int he province further enhanced their power both locally and in the broader political sphere. By comparing the processes of political and social change in the two lordships, this study illustrates the centrality of local political considerations in determining the direction of societal change in early modern Connacht."--P. [4] of cover.
Format: Book
Language:English
Published / Created: Dublin, Ireland : Four Courts Press LTD, [2012]
Series:Maynooth studies in local history ; no. 100.
Subjects:
Notes:Physical description: 71 pages ; 22 cm.
ISBN:9781846823527 (paperback)
1846823528 (paperback)
Table of Contents:
The Connacht presidency and the earls
The composition of Connacht
The native response, 1569-1635
Estate consolidation
Land and politics, 1615-41.