IRELAND’S LANDLORDS DURING THE HOLOCAUST. WHO WERE THEY?
© 2022 Chris Fogarty
This is a follow-up to my “Ireland 1845-1850: the Perfect Holocaust, and Who Kept it ‘Perfect'.”
That book wrought some changes in the official narrative of 1845-1850 Ireland. The Exhibits B in my book was/is of records of ships’ manifests of Irish food landing in English ports while Ireland starved. Exhibits C names all of Britain’s armed forces that robbed the Irish of their production of those foods. Included are names and English provenances of each of the sixty-seven British army regiments, the thirty-seven English landlords’ militias, the carbine-toting constabulary, Coast Guard facilities, etc. Exhibits D include the location by county and town land of each of Ireland’s food processing facilities; each grain kiln, grain mill, flour mill, grain-using brewery and distillery, woolen mill (mutton and lamb), livestock pound, etc. Exhibits E is a partial list of Ireland’s landlords of those years, while the results of the foregoing are shown in the book’s Exhibits A show the consequences of the above; the locations of some two hundred of the mass graves left behind. Nobody has disputed any of the above – nobody can.
That evidence of Irish food exports became so readily verifiable in old copies of The Times (London), etc. that historiographers ceased denying that Irish food was exported while its people starved. To concede the fact of the vast export of Irish food while continuing to falsely exculpate the British government, Ireland’s academia 1) falsely ignored the existences in Ireland of Britain’s perpetrating armed forces, and 2) falsely conjured Ireland’s English landlords of that era as “Irish landlords.” The changed official narrative thus became “It was the rich Irish landlords that starved the poor Irish.”
Their false exculpation of the British government is cunningly concealed by their seeming sympathy for the millions murdered. With plausible but false pathos they have created “Famine Porn;” e.g.; “The famine came” (“but best not examine too deeply because they really died of terminal stupidity; having fallen into a lethal trap of their own making by growing only one failure-prone crop.”) They describe in great, sympathetic detail the suffering of the doomed. They present heart-strings-tugging anecdotes and portrayals of family loss and pain. Despite all of their seeming empathy, they conceal the CAUSE of all of the death and suffering; they conceal the food robbery. They thus falsely exculpate the perpetrators of genocide. There is no excuse for their falsification of history, their concealment of genocide and their betrayals of their own ancestors and ours.
Centuries earlier the Anglo-Normans stripped the Irish, all but the “Five Bloods,” of their legal personhood, thus of all property; enslaving them. These five Irish septs, due to their legal personhood, had not been robbed of their lands by the Brits. Four of the “Five Bloods” septs are listed below as landlords of significant estates as recently as 1878.
IRELAND’S LANDLORDS OF 1845-1850; WERE THEY ENGLISH OR IRISH?
Ireland’s officially-enforced falsehood about its 1845-1850 Holocaust (An t-Án Mór) has changed. It has become “The landlords were Irish; not English.” Even once-reliable historical balladeer Derek Warfield (of Wolfe Tones fame) was selected by promoters of the “famine” lie. Chicago’s Irish Heritage Center officials, pre-Covid, scheduled Warfield to provide instruction on “Famine Landlords of Ireland” in which he tried to drive home that new lie by the “Irish” government. Respect for the murdered millions compelled me to correct my friend, Derek, on the spot - which I did.
When I was a youth in County Roscommon “landlord,” “English,” and “Protestant,” were local synonyms. It wasn’t necessary to prove that the landlords were English; everyone knew it; they knew the names of those landlords. To this day the landlords’ abandoned “Church of Ireland” churches decay on hilltops across Ireland. So, in the 1980s, when I discovered, while researching the life of my paternal grandfather at Britain’s Public Record Office, that the “famine” had been perpetrated by the British army and was thus a genocide on behalf of those landlords, I had to spread the truth.
My book includes this indisputable map. (Download Here)
Data on the ethnicity of Ireland’s latifundist's are from four reference works,
One is by John Raymond, Editor; Queen Victoria’s Early Letters London 1907. MacMillan Company NY 1963.
It is clear that Victoria’s correspondence has been edited into propaganda for Britain and to burnish her persona; but it establishes that Victoria’s closest advisers were not only aware of the scandalous misrule of Ireland; they were the creators of it; all while owning latifundia in Ireland.
Click Here to see the graphic of Victoria’s Inaugural ceremony.
Click Here to see the Annual Register (1786) one page of it.
Click Here to see land ownership by the Church of Ireland Bishops’ in Ireland.
Click HERE to see the land owned by Trinity College
INTRODUCTION TO JOHN BATEMAN’S BOOK - THE GREAT LANDOWNERS OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND: a list of all owners of at least 3,000 acres with rental income of £3,000 a year in England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales, their Acreage, Income from Land, Colleges, Club, and Services. LONDON, HARRISON AND SONS, 1878.
During the Holocaust there WERE Irish owners of estates in Ireland (in addition to four of “The Five Bloods”). To get full details a perusal of my source books would be required; but short of that I will try to condense their contents.
Clicking on links below you will see:
1) Click HERE to see the book’s cover and HERE for its title page;
2) Click HERE to see its Tables I, II, and III with my notes;
3) Click HERE to see the book’s start of listings,
4) Click HERE to see Table IV; Counties A to L
5 ) Click HERE Table IV, Counties M to W.
Study all well, keeping in mind that Bateman’s work covers estates of at least 3,000 acres AND £3,000 rental income annually.
The informative Table IV is omitted from recent reprints of Bateman’s book. Table IV contains, for each county, the following categories of owners and the acreage owned by each. Here are its totals for Ireland:
Peers’ acreage: 3,910,572
(Commoners’) Estates of at least 3,000 acres OR rented for at least £3,000 per annum: 5,310,117
(Commoners’) Estates of less than 3,000 acres rented at less than £3,000 per annum: 10,527,760
Small properties (farms): 9,050 - (Ireland’s “strong farmers”)
Government: 8,256
Religious (glebes?): 275,910
Commercial: 217,993
Waste: 156,471
Grand Total: 20,316,129
Note: Of the Peers’ Irish estates totaling 3,910,572 acres, 2,330,601 acres are already accounted for in the above thirty-nine Peers’ ownership of Ireland’s largest (>30,000-acre) estates.. Thus, only 1,579,971 acres remain to be included in Peers’ estates of 3,000 to 30,000 acres. This shows that Peers’s estates were heavily concentrated among Ireland’s largest.
A. TOTAL OF SUCH LANDLORDS/ESTATES IN IRELAND, per Bateman
….633, of which were:
Analyses below of Bateman’s The Great Landowners of Great Britain and Ireland (1878)
The Landlords with the Largest Holdings (30,000 acres or more) in Ireland in 1878
(In 1900-1910, Ireland’s landlords of all sizes were bought-out compulsorily but at above-market prices, by the British government. A few were left in possession of their castles and demesnes, but not their productive agricultural land)
(The island of Ireland comprises 20,316,129 acres.)
Click HERE to see Landlords with largest holdings in 1877 Ireland
Asterisk (*) indicates owner of another estate on the neighboring island.
Underline indicates a Peer (Lord) of the (British) Realm; (duke, marquis, earl, or viscount/baron).
Half-Underline indicates baronet (a “Clout”-heavy aristocrat, but not a Peer/Legislator).
That book wrought some changes in the official narrative of 1845-1850 Ireland. The Exhibits B in my book was/is of records of ships’ manifests of Irish food landing in English ports while Ireland starved. Exhibits C names all of Britain’s armed forces that robbed the Irish of their production of those foods. Included are names and English provenances of each of the sixty-seven British army regiments, the thirty-seven English landlords’ militias, the carbine-toting constabulary, Coast Guard facilities, etc. Exhibits D include the location by county and town land of each of Ireland’s food processing facilities; each grain kiln, grain mill, flour mill, grain-using brewery and distillery, woolen mill (mutton and lamb), livestock pound, etc. Exhibits E is a partial list of Ireland’s landlords of those years, while the results of the foregoing are shown in the book’s Exhibits A show the consequences of the above; the locations of some two hundred of the mass graves left behind. Nobody has disputed any of the above – nobody can.
That evidence of Irish food exports became so readily verifiable in old copies of The Times (London), etc. that historiographers ceased denying that Irish food was exported while its people starved. To concede the fact of the vast export of Irish food while continuing to falsely exculpate the British government, Ireland’s academia 1) falsely ignored the existences in Ireland of Britain’s perpetrating armed forces, and 2) falsely conjured Ireland’s English landlords of that era as “Irish landlords.” The changed official narrative thus became “It was the rich Irish landlords that starved the poor Irish.”
Their false exculpation of the British government is cunningly concealed by their seeming sympathy for the millions murdered. With plausible but false pathos they have created “Famine Porn;” e.g.; “The famine came” (“but best not examine too deeply because they really died of terminal stupidity; having fallen into a lethal trap of their own making by growing only one failure-prone crop.”) They describe in great, sympathetic detail the suffering of the doomed. They present heart-strings-tugging anecdotes and portrayals of family loss and pain. Despite all of their seeming empathy, they conceal the CAUSE of all of the death and suffering; they conceal the food robbery. They thus falsely exculpate the perpetrators of genocide. There is no excuse for their falsification of history, their concealment of genocide and their betrayals of their own ancestors and ours.
Centuries earlier the Anglo-Normans stripped the Irish, all but the “Five Bloods,” of their legal personhood, thus of all property; enslaving them. These five Irish septs, due to their legal personhood, had not been robbed of their lands by the Brits. Four of the “Five Bloods” septs are listed below as landlords of significant estates as recently as 1878.
IRELAND’S LANDLORDS OF 1845-1850; WERE THEY ENGLISH OR IRISH?
Ireland’s officially-enforced falsehood about its 1845-1850 Holocaust (An t-Án Mór) has changed. It has become “The landlords were Irish; not English.” Even once-reliable historical balladeer Derek Warfield (of Wolfe Tones fame) was selected by promoters of the “famine” lie. Chicago’s Irish Heritage Center officials, pre-Covid, scheduled Warfield to provide instruction on “Famine Landlords of Ireland” in which he tried to drive home that new lie by the “Irish” government. Respect for the murdered millions compelled me to correct my friend, Derek, on the spot - which I did.
When I was a youth in County Roscommon “landlord,” “English,” and “Protestant,” were local synonyms. It wasn’t necessary to prove that the landlords were English; everyone knew it; they knew the names of those landlords. To this day the landlords’ abandoned “Church of Ireland” churches decay on hilltops across Ireland. So, in the 1980s, when I discovered, while researching the life of my paternal grandfather at Britain’s Public Record Office, that the “famine” had been perpetrated by the British army and was thus a genocide on behalf of those landlords, I had to spread the truth.
My book includes this indisputable map. (Download Here)
Data on the ethnicity of Ireland’s latifundist's are from four reference works,
One is by John Raymond, Editor; Queen Victoria’s Early Letters London 1907. MacMillan Company NY 1963.
It is clear that Victoria’s correspondence has been edited into propaganda for Britain and to burnish her persona; but it establishes that Victoria’s closest advisers were not only aware of the scandalous misrule of Ireland; they were the creators of it; all while owning latifundia in Ireland.
Click Here to see the graphic of Victoria’s Inaugural ceremony.
Click Here to see the Annual Register (1786) one page of it.
Click Here to see land ownership by the Church of Ireland Bishops’ in Ireland.
Click HERE to see the land owned by Trinity College
INTRODUCTION TO JOHN BATEMAN’S BOOK - THE GREAT LANDOWNERS OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND: a list of all owners of at least 3,000 acres with rental income of £3,000 a year in England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales, their Acreage, Income from Land, Colleges, Club, and Services. LONDON, HARRISON AND SONS, 1878.
During the Holocaust there WERE Irish owners of estates in Ireland (in addition to four of “The Five Bloods”). To get full details a perusal of my source books would be required; but short of that I will try to condense their contents.
Clicking on links below you will see:
1) Click HERE to see the book’s cover and HERE for its title page;
2) Click HERE to see its Tables I, II, and III with my notes;
3) Click HERE to see the book’s start of listings,
4) Click HERE to see Table IV; Counties A to L
5 ) Click HERE Table IV, Counties M to W.
Study all well, keeping in mind that Bateman’s work covers estates of at least 3,000 acres AND £3,000 rental income annually.
The informative Table IV is omitted from recent reprints of Bateman’s book. Table IV contains, for each county, the following categories of owners and the acreage owned by each. Here are its totals for Ireland:
Peers’ acreage: 3,910,572
(Commoners’) Estates of at least 3,000 acres OR rented for at least £3,000 per annum: 5,310,117
(Commoners’) Estates of less than 3,000 acres rented at less than £3,000 per annum: 10,527,760
Small properties (farms): 9,050 - (Ireland’s “strong farmers”)
Government: 8,256
Religious (glebes?): 275,910
Commercial: 217,993
Waste: 156,471
Grand Total: 20,316,129
Note: Of the Peers’ Irish estates totaling 3,910,572 acres, 2,330,601 acres are already accounted for in the above thirty-nine Peers’ ownership of Ireland’s largest (>30,000-acre) estates.. Thus, only 1,579,971 acres remain to be included in Peers’ estates of 3,000 to 30,000 acres. This shows that Peers’s estates were heavily concentrated among Ireland’s largest.
A. TOTAL OF SUCH LANDLORDS/ESTATES IN IRELAND, per Bateman
….633, of which were:
- LORDS (PEERS OF THE [BRITISH] REALM)...184 with 3,910,572 acres
- BRITISH BARONETS (“BARTS”)………………..80
- “HON.” and “RT. HON.”……………………………5
- British Gov’t Officials (M.P.s, etc)………………….31
- British State Church (C. of I.) Reverends..….……...26
- Other Commoners………………………..…………307
Analyses below of Bateman’s The Great Landowners of Great Britain and Ireland (1878)
The Landlords with the Largest Holdings (30,000 acres or more) in Ireland in 1878
(In 1900-1910, Ireland’s landlords of all sizes were bought-out compulsorily but at above-market prices, by the British government. A few were left in possession of their castles and demesnes, but not their productive agricultural land)
(The island of Ireland comprises 20,316,129 acres.)
Click HERE to see Landlords with largest holdings in 1877 Ireland
Asterisk (*) indicates owner of another estate on the neighboring island.
Underline indicates a Peer (Lord) of the (British) Realm; (duke, marquis, earl, or viscount/baron).
Half-Underline indicates baronet (a “Clout”-heavy aristocrat, but not a Peer/Legislator).
Of the above 167 owners of estates in both Ireland and the neighboring island, 26 of them are in the above list of owners of the largest estates in Ireland of whom essentially all were peers.
Of the 649 estates in Ireland how many were Irish-owned?
These would include estates of descendants of the five septs not stripped of their legal personhood (O’Neills of Ulster, O'Conors of Connacht, O’Briens of Thomond, O’Laghlans or Melaghlans of Meath, and the MacMurroughs [also called Kavanaghs] of Leinster).
How many Irish married into English-owned estates and became owners, or their descendants did?
The line of O Conor Don line (the last Árd Rí) ran out when its successor, a Jesuit priest, died sometime in the 1940s(?). Their 11.651-acre estate of mostly spotty land proved to be a lifesaving refuge for vast numbers during the Holocaust.
Did those Thomond O’Briens and Ulster O’Neils become British when they converted to Anglicanism and became British Lord Inchiquin of Dromoland Castle and Anglican Rev. and British Lord O’Neill?
They were Irish; at least through their patrilineal line.
Ireland’s “Churches of Ireland” (C. of I.) were English gov’t Churches (Catholic churches were officially designated “chapels,”and commonly referred to as such into the 1950s). The C.of I. churches remain vacant on the hilltops of towns and villages across Ireland since the repatriation to England of the local C. of I. landlord and his support group. Also vacant since then are the Methodist and Presbyterian churches once attended mostly by the local landlord’s support staff who repatriated with him. Their locations are shown on the Ordnance Survey of Ireland (1845). Internet trolls insist upon Ireland’s population of “strong farmers;” but Bateman lists a total of only 9,050 acres of non-estate agricultural land; so the storied “strong farmers” were, at best, extremely few or “strong tenants.” The Irish became owner-operators of farmland only upon the end of landlordism. As tenants of a few acres they had paid their rent in the form of unpaid labor for the landlord 250-260 days per year (per Arthur Young, et al.). They thus had to try to survive and keep their families alive on what they produced during the remaining 105-115 days per year (including Sundays).
Owners of Estates of >10,000 acres. See here and here.
The question of English, Anglo-Irish or Irish ownership of the land of Ireland and the extent of each are extracted from these two volumes by Bateman and DeBurgh.
We were all taught in school that “The Anglo-Normans became more Irish than the Irish themselves.” This is true to the extent that the “new English (the armies of Elizabeth I and Cromwell) expropriated the wealth of Ireland; the land and all thereupon, that had been previously usurped by Anglo-Normans, thus rendering them as dispossessed as the Irish. But not quite: many Norman names are listed by Bateman and DeBurgh. Also; some Norman names had arrived with Elizabethan and Cromwellian forces.
Note well the title of DeBurgh’s book. See its list of owners of estates of more than 10,000 acres HERE. Then study key excerpts from it here. . it what I have excerpted
For centuries, until Britain’s 1900-1910 buy out of its landlords from Ireland, the Irish, excepting five families (“septs”), were tenants. These were permanently robbed of the value of their labor; paying rent to Anglo-Norman, later English, landlords. The slavery began to end in 1778 when laws prohibiting Irish Catholics from owning any property were modified. The land rents paid by the Irish, in 1838, was 250 days per year. In 1900-1910 the British government, compulsorily, but at above market prices, bought all of Ireland’s estates. The landlords not already domiciled in England, repatriated to it. Their estates were “striped” into, typically, 28-acre holdings (with a few acres of the nearest bog for fuel) and granted to the Irish. To amortize the sums gifted to the departing landlords the new owner-operator grantees continued to pay rent, but to The Land Commission, until the 1970s when the 68.5-year amortization period ended. This ended rural Ireland’s centuries of imposed poverty.
The British government’s own Devon Commission of 1845 had reported that the Irish perceived their landlords as “alien conquerors.” The standard land rent consisted of 250 days of unpaid labor per year for the landlord. Despite these facts the Irish gov’t and academia are promoting the false notion that, during what they call “the famine” (or “the potato famine”), the landlords were “Irish.” They even got once-truthful balladeer Derek Warfield to deliver a lecture at Chicago’s Irish-American Heritage Center during which he stated; “The famine landlords were not English, they were Irish.” (I corrected him, publicly, on the spot.)
Here is reality beyond the contents of my book that includes this indisputable map. See it HERE.
It would be best to read my source books in their entirety, but presented below are key extracts from them.
John Bateman: The Great Landowners of Great Britain and Ireland. London: Harrison & Sons 1878. The list of that era’s landlords of upwards of 3,000 acres AND upwards of £3,000 annual rental income, their names, titles, schools, military service, addresses, and acreage.
U.H. Hussey DeBurgh: The Landowners of Ireland. Dublin: Hodges, Foster & Figgis 1878. Similar to Bateman’s work, but includes landowners Essentially, regarding Ireland, the same as Bateman, but lists all owners of estates of annual rental income of £10,000 and upwards, of owners of 3,000 acres and upwards, and the largest estates ;
1. One of the last false denials on record was that of Professor Christine Kinealy in FORTNIGHT Magazine (June 1990)
2. Derek Warfield, Elizabeth Groves Wilson, et al. Prof. Ruan O’Donnell’s “Ireland’s Famine” is a particular vile “the lumpers were particularly susceptible to blight” cover-up of genocide. He promoted it in Chicago on 18Oct2018.
3. O’Neills of Ulster, O’Conors of Connacht, O’Briens of Thomond, McMorroughs/Kavanaghs of Leinster, and O’Loughlins/Meloughlins of Meath.
4. See, among others, Lewis’ Typographical Dictionary of Ireland London: S. Lewis & Co. 1837
5. The Congested Districts Board, and The Land Commission were created for that purpose.
6. Arthur Young’s “Tour of Ireland (1776-1777), p.288. Also see pp. 384 & 400.
7. Michael Davitt’s “The Fall of Feudalism in Ireland…” p.
8. Lists only holdings in excess of 3,000 acres with rental income of £3,000/year.
Of the 649 estates in Ireland how many were Irish-owned?
These would include estates of descendants of the five septs not stripped of their legal personhood (O’Neills of Ulster, O'Conors of Connacht, O’Briens of Thomond, O’Laghlans or Melaghlans of Meath, and the MacMurroughs [also called Kavanaghs] of Leinster).
How many Irish married into English-owned estates and became owners, or their descendants did?
The line of O Conor Don line (the last Árd Rí) ran out when its successor, a Jesuit priest, died sometime in the 1940s(?). Their 11.651-acre estate of mostly spotty land proved to be a lifesaving refuge for vast numbers during the Holocaust.
Did those Thomond O’Briens and Ulster O’Neils become British when they converted to Anglicanism and became British Lord Inchiquin of Dromoland Castle and Anglican Rev. and British Lord O’Neill?
They were Irish; at least through their patrilineal line.
Ireland’s “Churches of Ireland” (C. of I.) were English gov’t Churches (Catholic churches were officially designated “chapels,”and commonly referred to as such into the 1950s). The C.of I. churches remain vacant on the hilltops of towns and villages across Ireland since the repatriation to England of the local C. of I. landlord and his support group. Also vacant since then are the Methodist and Presbyterian churches once attended mostly by the local landlord’s support staff who repatriated with him. Their locations are shown on the Ordnance Survey of Ireland (1845). Internet trolls insist upon Ireland’s population of “strong farmers;” but Bateman lists a total of only 9,050 acres of non-estate agricultural land; so the storied “strong farmers” were, at best, extremely few or “strong tenants.” The Irish became owner-operators of farmland only upon the end of landlordism. As tenants of a few acres they had paid their rent in the form of unpaid labor for the landlord 250-260 days per year (per Arthur Young, et al.). They thus had to try to survive and keep their families alive on what they produced during the remaining 105-115 days per year (including Sundays).
- U.H. Hussey de Burgh’s THE LANDOWNERS OF IRELAND. An Alphabetical List of OWNERS OF ESTATES of 500 Acres or 500 Valuation and upwards, IN IRELAND, with THE ACREAGE AND VALUATION IN EACH COUNTY. DUBLIN; HODGES, FOSTER, AND FIGGIS 1878.
Owners of Estates of >10,000 acres. See here and here.
The question of English, Anglo-Irish or Irish ownership of the land of Ireland and the extent of each are extracted from these two volumes by Bateman and DeBurgh.
We were all taught in school that “The Anglo-Normans became more Irish than the Irish themselves.” This is true to the extent that the “new English (the armies of Elizabeth I and Cromwell) expropriated the wealth of Ireland; the land and all thereupon, that had been previously usurped by Anglo-Normans, thus rendering them as dispossessed as the Irish. But not quite: many Norman names are listed by Bateman and DeBurgh. Also; some Norman names had arrived with Elizabethan and Cromwellian forces.
Note well the title of DeBurgh’s book. See its list of owners of estates of more than 10,000 acres HERE. Then study key excerpts from it here. . it what I have excerpted
For centuries, until Britain’s 1900-1910 buy out of its landlords from Ireland, the Irish, excepting five families (“septs”), were tenants. These were permanently robbed of the value of their labor; paying rent to Anglo-Norman, later English, landlords. The slavery began to end in 1778 when laws prohibiting Irish Catholics from owning any property were modified. The land rents paid by the Irish, in 1838, was 250 days per year. In 1900-1910 the British government, compulsorily, but at above market prices, bought all of Ireland’s estates. The landlords not already domiciled in England, repatriated to it. Their estates were “striped” into, typically, 28-acre holdings (with a few acres of the nearest bog for fuel) and granted to the Irish. To amortize the sums gifted to the departing landlords the new owner-operator grantees continued to pay rent, but to The Land Commission, until the 1970s when the 68.5-year amortization period ended. This ended rural Ireland’s centuries of imposed poverty.
The British government’s own Devon Commission of 1845 had reported that the Irish perceived their landlords as “alien conquerors.” The standard land rent consisted of 250 days of unpaid labor per year for the landlord. Despite these facts the Irish gov’t and academia are promoting the false notion that, during what they call “the famine” (or “the potato famine”), the landlords were “Irish.” They even got once-truthful balladeer Derek Warfield to deliver a lecture at Chicago’s Irish-American Heritage Center during which he stated; “The famine landlords were not English, they were Irish.” (I corrected him, publicly, on the spot.)
Here is reality beyond the contents of my book that includes this indisputable map. See it HERE.
It would be best to read my source books in their entirety, but presented below are key extracts from them.
John Bateman: The Great Landowners of Great Britain and Ireland. London: Harrison & Sons 1878. The list of that era’s landlords of upwards of 3,000 acres AND upwards of £3,000 annual rental income, their names, titles, schools, military service, addresses, and acreage.
U.H. Hussey DeBurgh: The Landowners of Ireland. Dublin: Hodges, Foster & Figgis 1878. Similar to Bateman’s work, but includes landowners Essentially, regarding Ireland, the same as Bateman, but lists all owners of estates of annual rental income of £10,000 and upwards, of owners of 3,000 acres and upwards, and the largest estates ;
1. One of the last false denials on record was that of Professor Christine Kinealy in FORTNIGHT Magazine (June 1990)
2. Derek Warfield, Elizabeth Groves Wilson, et al. Prof. Ruan O’Donnell’s “Ireland’s Famine” is a particular vile “the lumpers were particularly susceptible to blight” cover-up of genocide. He promoted it in Chicago on 18Oct2018.
3. O’Neills of Ulster, O’Conors of Connacht, O’Briens of Thomond, McMorroughs/Kavanaghs of Leinster, and O’Loughlins/Meloughlins of Meath.
4. See, among others, Lewis’ Typographical Dictionary of Ireland London: S. Lewis & Co. 1837
5. The Congested Districts Board, and The Land Commission were created for that purpose.
6. Arthur Young’s “Tour of Ireland (1776-1777), p.288. Also see pp. 384 & 400.
7. Michael Davitt’s “The Fall of Feudalism in Ireland…” p.
8. Lists only holdings in excess of 3,000 acres with rental income of £3,000/year.
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This document, written by Christopher Fogarty lays out an historical overview of the Landlords of Ireland during the Irish Holocaust.
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bookcover.pdf |
title_page.pdf |
tables_i_ii_iii_and_notes.pdf |
data_on_57_largest.pdf |
1920_names_of_6029.pdf |
iva-l___notes.pdf |
iv._mayo_to_wicklow.pdf |
trinity_lands.pdf |
tgl_of_gb___ire._start_of_a_listings.pdf |