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Catholic Emancipation

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Catholic Emancipation

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The Irish barrister Daniel O'Connell, who became a formidable Roman Catholic political leader in the 19th century. Initially barred by his religion from entering Parliament, his election as member of Parliament for Clare forced the British government to concede Catholic emancipation. As a pacifist, he later came into conflict with the more revolutionary ideas of the Young Ireland group.

In British history, acts of Parliament passed between 1780 and 1829 to relieve Roman Catholics of civil and political restrictions imposed from the time of Henry VIII and the Reformation.



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He appreciated the value of timely reform and as a junior minister promoted reforms that included Catholic Emancipation, partial adjustment of parliamentary representation, decimal coinage, railway development, and support for libraries and the arts.
This, however, was nullified when Catholic emancipation was accepted in Great Britain and extended to the whole empire in 1829.
Although Gross assumes rather than demonstrates constituent influence, perhaps his findings suggest that Catholic Emancipation, the repeal of the Test and Corporations Act, and the Reform Act of 1832 all set the stage for newly enfranchised dissent to provide religious freedom to the slave.
 
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