The Irish Holocaust, often called the Great Famine, was the end of an economic plundering carried out by Britain. Most people are unaware of just how brutal Britain was to Ireland in depriving the Irish people the right of free citizens and free trade. We found this useful information from the website of Old Ireland. Additional information on the genocidal famine can be found at Irish Famine/Genocide Committee website.


The Penal Laws

The fertile mind of the conqueror invented the Penal Laws. The object of the Penal Laws was threefold ;

  1. To deprive the Catholics of all civil life

  2. To reduce them to a condition of most extreme and brutal ignorance

  3. To dissociate them from the soil

The Penal Laws enacted or re-enacted in the new era succeeding the siege of Limerick, when under the pledged faith and honour of the English crown, the Irish Catholics were to be "protected in the free and unfettered exercise of their religion", provided amongst other things that :

The Irish Catholic was forbidden the exercise of his religion

  • He was forbidden to receive education.

  • He was forbidden to enter a profession.

  • He was forbidden to hold public office.

  • He was forbidden to engage in trade or commerce.

  • He was forbidden to live in a corporate town or within five miles thereof.

  • He was forbidden to own a horse of greater value than five pounds.

  • He was forbidden to purchase land.

  • He was forbidden to lease land.

  • He was forbidden to vote.

  • He was forbidden to keep any arms for his protection.

  • He was forbidden to hold a life annuity.

  • He could not be guardian to a child.

  • He could not attend catholic worship.

  • He could not himself educate his child.

The law soon came to recognise an Irishman in Ireland only for the purpose of repressing him.
The Volunteer movement in the 1780’s first began to take the edge off Protestant prejudice. In the year 1793, an Act was passed relieving the Catholics of many of their disabilities - in theory at least. Another thirty-six years were to elapse before the next step was taken, under compulsion from the O’Connell agitation, and the Act known as Catholic Emancipation made law but Ireland was no economic condition to deal with the coming famine.

The Suppression of Irish Trade:

In the early centuries of the Christian Era the highly civilised Celt was inclined to trade and commerce. The early Irish, were famous for their excellence in the arts and crafts - particularly for their wonderful work in metals, bronze, silver and gold. By the beginning of the 14th Century, the trade of Ireland with the Continent of Europe was important. This condition of things naturally did not suit commercial England. So at an early period she began to stifle Irish industry and trade.
The Irish woollen manufacturers began to rival Englands. So in 1571 Elizabeth imposed restriction upon the Irish woollen trade that crippled the large Irish trade with the Netherlands and other parts of the Continent.
Ireland tried its hand at manufacturing cotton. England met this move with a twenty-five per cent duty upon Irish cotton imported into England. And next forbade the inhabitants of England to wear any cotton other than of British manufacture.
Ireland attempted to develop her tobacco industry. But a law against its growth was passed in the first year of Charles the Second.
Four and five centuries ago and upward the Irish fisheries were the second in importance in Europe. Under careful English nursing they were, a century and a half ago, brought to the vanishing point. Then the independent Irish Parliament at the end of the eighteenth century saved them. Here we have set down only examples of the principal Acts and devices for the suppression of Irish manufacturers and Irish industries, but yet sufficient to show how England protected her beloved Irish subjects in the enjoyment of all they have - how Ireland prospered under English Rule in a material way - and how England in her step-motherly way, took each toddling Irish industry by the hand, led its childish footsteps to the brink of the bottomless pit, and gave it a push - thus ending its troubles forever.
And thus is explained in part why Ireland, one of the most favoured by nature and one of the most fertile countries in Europe, is yet one of the poorest. And why it is that, as recent statistics show, ninety-eight per cent of the export trade of the three kingdoms is in the hands of Britain and in Ireland’s hands only two per cent.



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