Britain and Ireland P1
Britain and Ireland P1
Britain and Ireland P1
Christianity
- Introduced in the 3rd century, suffered setbacks but gained acceptance by
the elites and peoples of Ireland and the western Celtic fringes of Britain;
the monks became the leaders of the Church; disagreements between Celtic
and Roman branches; Theodore of Tarsus succeeded in creating an
organized, united church
Kingship
- By the 7th century: the Heptarchy; by the mid 9th century: three larger
kingdoms resulted from internal competition and external pressure from the
Scandinavian invaders; kingdom of Alba (Scots), kingdom of England,
subservient Wales, divided Ireland
THE SCANDINAVIANS
- Norwegians in Scotland, Ireland and north-west England, Danes in eastern
and southern England; raided the Welsh coast; first they came for booty
from unprotected monasteries and coastal settlements, then they came to
stay; in 865 a raiding army invaded East Anglia and captured York, but was
defeated by Alfred, recognized the Danelaw
- Second wave: aim was political domination, Cnut became king of England in
1016; gave England a period of peace and prosperity; throne passed to
Edward the Confessor
- Scottish territories colonized by the Scandinavians; settlements established
in Ireland, trading gave a boost to Irish economy; Wales remained
untouched (ish)
THE NORMANS
- Battle of Hastings: one of the longest battles in medieval history, bloody
- After the Norman Conquest: changes in land ownership, in 1086 only four of
the great landowners were Anglo-Saxon; old families protested but were
harried; Norman Conquest imposed a new royal family, culture, language
and a new ruling class
- English stratum replaced by Norman elite: i) greater emphasis on the
obligation of English subjects to Norman lords ii) control from the center
increased iii) shift away from close relations with Scandinavia to Continental
Europe iv) Norman French became the language of the ruling class until the
14th century
The Periphery
- Administrative Reorganisation of Wales: Acts of Union (1536, 1543): i)
reduced the powers of the marcher lords; ii) created seven new shires; iii)
introduced the English county government apparatus; iv) established
English laws; v) made English the language of judicial and administrative
business, but maintained Welsh as the language of worship
- Henry VIII and the integration of Ireland: H proclaimed king of Ireland in
1541 by the Irish parliament, Gaelic noble and lands: ‘surrender and re-
grant’; however Ireland was much larger and politically fragmented than
Wales, failed and doed with H.
- Edward VI: Anglo-Irish relations broke down
- Mary I: Irish Parliament passed laws that let Eglish settlers take land
in Ireland (1557)
- Elisabeth I: English colonists introduced to monitor and control
strategic trouble spots; Catholic Gaelic chiefs and Old English
landowners vs Protestant New English settlers - revolts - Nine Years
War - defeat (English Reformation exacerbated the problems of the
borderlands)
The Restoration
- Restoration Settlement: granted full indemnity to all but regicides, settled
disputes over confiscated land; monarchy returned
- Religious intolerance: resentment over imposed bishops on presbyterians in
Scotland, in England Anglican church re-established and tolerance of sects
ended
- Anti-Catholic feeling: Charles II agreed to convert to Catholicism and
improve the lot of English Catholics in exchange for a pension from Louis
XIV
- Response from Parliament: office holders required to receive Anlican
communion, swear allegiance to the monarch and repudiate Catholic
doctrine
- Test Act (1673): excluded Catholics from the military and civil office
- Test Act the second (1678): excluded Catholics from Parliament
- Popish Plot (1678)
- Exclusion Crisis (1678-81)
Witch hunts
- Anxiety caused by changing views, e.g. across religious lines, common
spacegoat: people practising magic and witchcraft
- Between 1400-1700: 70,000 to 100,000 people condemned to death
for practising witchcraft
- England and Scotland: legislation against witchcraft passed in 1563; more
panics in Scotland
- England, mid-sixteenth to end of seventeenth century: 500 persons
put to death; in Scotland: 1000 to 1500 persons, 85% single women
between forty and sixty
- Torture of suspects not allowed in England while allowed in
Scotland
- Aggressive Calvinist of the Kirk regarded witchcraft as a
heretical, diabolical conspiracy against God and the state
- Statutes against witchcraft replaced in 1736
Literature
- Humanism encouraged individual reading; tenfold increase of published
books between 1500-1630; need for financial support and protection
because of drastic censorship
- Literature became a central means of depicting, disseminating and
discussing the material and intellectual transformations of the age
- Elisabethan Era
- Prose: treatises on education and court etiquette, historical chronicals
and histories, geographical descriptions and philosophical essays
- Poetry: the sonnet; drama
- Shakespeare
- Metaphysical poets
1 those who are not members of the nobility but are entitled to a coat of arms,
especially those owning large tracts of land
THE ENLIGHTNMENT
- The creation of a ned network of ideas about nature, society and the place of
human beings in them; a communicating network of intellectuals
subscribing to a characteristic cluster of ideas which grew into an
intellectual movement, created an international community of philosophers
and irreversibly influenced the world view of generations to come; key ideas:
- i) reason and rationality tempered by experience and experiment as
ways of organising knowledge; ii) reason as the prime faculty of
human beings, producing secular knowledge free of religious dogma;
iii) all knowledge about the natural and social world is based upon
empirical facts which human beings can through their sense organs;
iv) scientific knowledge and the scientific method; v) scientific
discovery can produce general laws which govern the universe
without exception; vi) the individual is the starting point of
knowledge, society consists of the individuals living in it; vii) the
principle characteristics of human nature are always the same
everywhere, thus cultural differences should be tolerated; viii) the
human condition can be improved and happiness increased, however
the extension of freedom to the lower classes and women is
problematic
Literary culture
- Emergence of print culture, chief vehicle for communicating ideas; reading
as an individual activity, discussion as a group activity; lending libraries;
periodicals communicated information and opinions, encouraging thought
and discussion; 50% of men literate, 30%-50% of women; rise of prose
fiction, 40% of literary production
Political corruption
- Robert Walpole: Whig MP from 1701 to 1742
- George I and George II depended on the advice of a group of Whig
politicians who had supported the Hanovian succession; George III (r. 1760-
1820) wanted to choose his own ministers (instead of those few Whigs) and
enhance his monarchical powers, attempted to buy influence in Parliament
through royal patronage but Parliament resisted; 1763: John Wilkes
becomes the spokesperson for the opposition to the king; Wilkes accused of
libel and expelled, re-elected in 1768 (and three times after that) but was
refused his seat; campaigns in support for Wilkes (‘Wilkes and Liberty’) by
the middle classes and aristocrats; 1774: allowed to take his seat
- Put into question the monarchy and Parliament
EUROPEAN PERSPECTIVES
- Conflicts: i) the French Revolution and its aftermath; ii) political order
pressured by a) popular demands for liberal reforms and b) internal and
colonial rivalries; iii) the Industrial Revolution and its repercussions; iv)
enfrinchisement; v) loss of traditional worldviews and their replacement
Industrialisation
- Labour power (increasing number of workers) were mobilised and
effectively combined with new sources of power (and power-driven machines
and engines) to work in places of production (mills, factories) under
contractual wage labour conditions; increasing labour divisions, longer
hours and contracts)
- Suez canal (1869) and Panama canal (1914); growth of railway system;
postal system, telegraph; telephone; photography, sound recording, radio,
moving picture
Colonialism - Imperialism
- Colonies were profitable as suppliers of raw materials, buyers of goods, and
strategic spots
- Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars were fought both on the Continent and
abroad; resulted in huge territorial losses for France but gains for Britain;
- Post-war years: Portugal and Spain lost their colonies in South
America, France took Algiers (1830)
- British ‘dual-strategy’: i) penetrated other countries economically ii)
but would occupy the region based on the ‘need’ to anticipate a
competitor
- Economic explanations: need for resources, trade and export of capital
- Political explenations: nationalism
- Sociological explenations: racial superiority, social organisation, culture,
religion
The right to vote
- Enfrinchisement of men then women (step by step, limited by property,
literacy and gender)
- Fall in illiteracy rates
Political reform
- Protests, riots and revolts of the labouring populations; some concessions
but also centralised bureaucratic state excersising high level of social
control (ex. Poor laws, moral codes, police force)
- Social classes: landowners, trading and manufacturing bourgeoisie & rural
middle classes (tenant farmers) & the labouring classes
- Machines and factories demanded that the labouring people adapted to
unknown work processes, high demands of discipline, articicial work flow;
reactions:
- i) protests, demonstrations, riots, attacks on factories, armed
uprisings; ii) forming political and cultural organisations, agitated and
petitioned for improvement
- Factory laws (1833/44/47/50) reduced working hours of women and children
but gave them lower stature; reformed penal code, convicted criminal would
not be ‘lost’ but ‘corrected’ and reitroduced into the workforce; Poor Law
Amendment Act (1834) intended to prevent the starvation of the poor;
Reforms Acts (1832/67/84) extended the franchise and reorganised the
constituencies
- First Reforms Act (1832) increased the electorate; most new voters were
from the middle classes
- Working classes perceived themselves as excluded; Chartism,
demanded equal constituencies, universal male suffrage, vote by
secret ballot, payment for MPs, abolition of property qualification for
MPs, annual elections; chart submitted three times, rejected
- Second Reforms Act (1867) extended the vote to working-class electors in
the boroughs on the basis of household suffrage; Third Reforms Act (1884)
extended the vote to working class voters in the countryside
The monarchy
- Prestige of the monarchy waned under the Hanoverian successors; George I
& II did not speak English, were dependent on the Whig faction; George III
was relieved of his duties in 1811 because of madness, tried to gain greater
influence through patronage, ‘old corruption’, lost the American colonies;
George VI & William IV were despised; monarchy was regarded as
incompetent, decadent and corrupt, debates on its abolition
- Republicanism grew under Victoria’s reign (1837-1901); simultaneously the
monarchy was reinvented, Victoria made herself ‘empress of india’
transforming the monarchy into an imperial institution
Gender relations
- Middle-class family: hirearchally structured social group with the husband’s
absolute authority as its apex, responsible for the economic prosperity,
legal security, and social contact of the family with the outside world;
woman as the ‘angel of the house’, responsible for running the household,
raising the children, creating a sphere of warmth and harmony
- Working class family: necessity for two wages, still gender divisions
remained; technologies were developed using women workers, then
replaced by men; family wage, men received higher wages because they
were believed to be responsible for the whole family while women were only
responsible for themselves
Famines
- Union with Ireland was universally interpreted as an annexation in response
to the revolutionary conflicts of 1798 because it was accompanied by hardly
any economic and administrative integration; administration remained
distinctly colonial; economic non-development particularly in the agrarian
sector left a growing population dangerously dependent on decreasing
means of subsistence, the potato was the staple diet of a third of the
population by the mid-1840s
- The blight struck in 1845: population fell by 2 million, 1 million died of
starvation, the rest emigrated to Britain, the US and Australia
- Peel’s Whig government bought and distributed corn from America and
established a programme of public works; Russel’s Whig government (1846)
refused to temper with market forces; relief through workhouses instead of
kitchens, more people died of disease
- In the Scottish Highlands, the potato famine was avoided: i) only 200,000
people at risk; ii) less potato dependency, greater diversity of food, better
ratio of land to population; iii) the Free Church of Scotland, the Edinburgh
and Glasgow Relief Committees provided relief, insead of the state; iv)
landowners supported the inhabitants of their estates in times of crisis; v)
simultaneous economic boom in the Lowlands, people could emigrate and
earn their living
The economy
- 2.7 million dollars from the Marshall Plan; first post-war decade: rapid
growth, full employment, low inflation
- Decline: cuts to the welfare state because of massive rearmament
programme, pound devalued in 1947; resources were redirected from
export-oriented industries to the armament industry, causing Britain to lose
important export markets and slowing down recovery; GDP grew by 2.5%,
but rivals grew faster; Britain’s share of world trade shrank from 25% to
10%, shipbuilding market shrank from 37% to 3.7%
- Reasons for decline: poor labour relations, bad management,
contradictory government policies towards industry discouraging
higher levels of investment
- Pound devalued again in 1973, unemployment reached 1 million in 1978
- Thatcher & neoliberalism: cut spending, provided incentives for the private
sector, privatised industries, emasculated the trade unions
- Successfully combated inflation, turned industries profitable and cut
government services
- 3 million unemployed for 5 years, 20% living under the poverty line