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Ulster plantation

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Ulster plantation

In Irish history, the confiscation and resettlement, in 1609, of the Ulster counties of Armagh, Cavan, Donegal, Derry, Fermanagh, and Tyrone by the English government after the Flight of the Earls. Provided with lots of 2,000, 1,500, and 1,000 acres as determined by government surveyors, the English and Scottish undertakers (those accepting grants of land) were also burdened with unrealistically heavy obligations relating to the settlement, development, and defence of their holdings. Delays in preparing the territory for occupancy, coupled with disputes among prospective settlers and government officials, accentuated these difficulties. Harsh treatment of native freeholders whose existing rights were frequently overridden by the new grants ensured an extremely hostile reception for the newcomers.

By the mid-1620s the progress of the official plantation was inconsiderable as undertakers frequently defaulted on their obligations, particularly in regard to the matter of removing native tenants. By then, however, independent migrations from England and especially from Scotland were rapidly creating patterns of settlement far different from the intentions of the original planners. Interspersed pockets of English, Scottish, and native Irish settlements were thus emerging within the planted territories. This situation was to prove explosive by 1641 and thereafter laid the basis for the chronic sectarian problems of the province as a whole.



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The structure of the book is about geographical contexts for England--the East Indies, the Mediterranean, the Americas, the border between England and Scotland, and the Ulster plantation.
Topics include the functional dynamics of manuscript and electronic literary cultures, The Holgate Miscellany as a case study of editing a Renaissance commonplace book, and the Ulster Plantation and Colonial Archive.
Undeniably, families holding tennon or church lands fared badly in the Ulster Plantation no matter how much we play down the ill effects of dispossession.
 
 
 
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