CATHOLIC EMANCIPATION

term applied to the process by which Roman Catholics in the British Isles were relieved in the late 18th and early 19th cent. of civil disabilities. They had been under oppressive regulations placed by various statutes dating as far back as the time of Henry VIII (see Penal Laws). This process of removing the disabilities culminated in the Catholic Emancipation Act of 1829 (and some subsequent provisions), but it had begun a number of years before. Priest hunting, in general, ended by the mid-18th cent.

In 1778, English Catholics were relieved of the restrictions on land inheritance and purchase. A savage reaction to these concessions produced the Gordon Riots (see Gordon, Lord George) of 1780, and the whole history of Catholic Emancipation is one of struggle against great resistance. In 1791 the Roman Catholic Relief Act repealed most of the disabilities in Great Britain, provided Catholics took an oath of loyalty, and in 1793 the army, the navy, the universities, and the judiciary were opened to Catholics, although seats in Parliament and some offices were still denied. These reforms were sponsored by William Pitt the Younger, who hoped thereby to split the alliance of Irish Catholics and Protestants. But Pitt's attempt to secure a general repeal of the Penal Laws was thwarted by George III. Pope Pius VII consented to a royal veto on episcopal nominations if the Penal Laws were repealed, but the move failed. In Ireland the repeal (1782) of Poynings' Law (see under Poynings, Sir Edward) was followed by an act (1792) of the Irish Parliament relaxing the marriage and education laws and an act (1793) allowing Catholics to vote and hold most offices.

By the Act of Union (1800) the Irish Parliament ceased to exist, and Ireland was given representation in the British Parliament. Then, since the Irish were a minority group in the British legislature, many English ministers began to advocate Catholic Emancipation, influenced also by the decline of the papacy as a factor in secular politics. Irish agitation, headed by Daniel O'Connell and his Catholic Association, was successful in securing the admission of Catholics to Parliament. In 1828 the Test Act was repealed, and O'Connell, although still ineligible to sit, secured his election to Parliament from Co. Clare. Alarmed by the growing tension in Ireland, the duke of Wellington, the prime minister, allowed the Catholic Emancipation Bill, sponsored by Sir Robert Peel, to pass (1829). Catholics were now on the same footing as Protestants except for a few restrictions, most of which were later removed. The Act of Settlement is still in force, however, and Catholics are excluded from the throne.

See studies by B. Ward (1911), D. Gwynn (1929), J. A. Reynolds (1954, repr. 1970), and G. I. T. Machin (1964); S. L. Gwynn, Henry Grattan and His Times (1939, repr. 1971).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Catholic Emancipation  - 16829 results

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...Association 216 9 Catholic Emancipation 245 10 The...alienating them by fastening Catholic Emancipation to the project of union...as it was by the issue of Catholic Emancipation, the period which opened...
...simultaneously in different countries. The presentation of Jewish emancipation in the West as a meaningful whole is legitimate. For even...guidance in the present. Some institutions, for instance the Catholic church, trace their origins to the remote past, while others...
...much attention by Catholics but ignored by...pioneers of Jewish emancipation at the time of...post, had turned Catholic, causing tremendous...achieved their formal emancipation almost at one stroke...indebted to the Catholic tradition. It will...fact of formal emancipation was only apt to...
...the unease and tensions that were part of the process of emancipation. It often used the metaphor of symbiosis. Thus, in March...against Jews--in striking contrast to its persecution of Roman Catholics in the mid-1870s and its banning of Socialism from 1878...
...of Slavery and the Aftermath of Emancipation in Brazil The Abolition of Slavery and the Aftermath of Emancipation in Brazil REBECCA J. SCOTT...0-8223-0888-6 1. Slavery-- Brazil--Emancipation. I. Scott, Rebecca J. Rebecca...
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journal articles on: Catholic Emancipation  - 704 results

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...Catholic Traitors in the Age of Catholic Emancipation JOHN E. DRABBLE Debates...true in the years before Catholic Emancipation, when political tensions...political climate. Thus, while Catholic Emancipation alone held the Whig party...
...Daniel OConnells campaign for Catholic Emancipation in the 1820s. The success...commemoration for Ulstermen. Catholic Emancipation--the act passed in 1829...br/ 1829 Catholic Emancipation passed...
...Wisconsin and the Civil War" (M.A. thesis, Catholic University, 1937), 36. (17.) Minneapolis...of Freedom: A Documentary History of Emancipation, 1861-1867 (New York: Cambridge Univ...of Freedom: A Documentary History of Emancipation, 1861-1867 (New York: Cambridge Univ...
...71.9 percent of the Roman Catholics in Massachusetts voted for...Disowning Slavery: Gradual Emancipation and "Race" in New England...1862; Franklin B. Sanborn, Emancipation in the West Indies (Concord...the Boston Pilot, an Irish Catholic newspaper that supported...
...growth and expansion, emancipation de jure was not necessarily emancipation de facto. The author shows that policies of reform were simultaneously...French, Ghanaian, and Senegalese) and missionary records (e.g., Catholic mission, Basel mission, and the Wesleyan Methodist mission...
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magazine articles on: Catholic Emancipation  - 256 results

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...better than traitors to their heritage as subjects of the English crown. It was only with the passage of the Catholic Emancipation acts that they could vote, serve in Parliament, and study in the ancient universities of Oxford and Cambridge...
...the backbone of Daniel OConnells constitutional Catholic Emancipation and Repeal movements, while the rural poor were...They played a crucial role in the campaign for Catholic Emancipation in the 1820s, the Tithe War of the 1830s, and...
...Colonial legislation kept non-Catholics and, generally, non-Spaniards...political advancement and social emancipation and the other seeing it as...find traces of the Mexican Catholic past in the mission churches...five are, at least nominally, Catholics. This is about 91 per cent...
...Wellington ministry to pass Catholic emancipation in 1829. Politics...Dawson, was persuaded by Catholic activists to stand as a pro-emancipation candidate. Addressing...sting in the tail of Catholic emancipation in 1829. This is an...
...above), Irish campaigner for Catholic Emancipation and Repeal of the Act of...Association, which sought to win Catholic Emancipation--the right of Catholics...OConnells success in achieving Catholic Emancipation in 1829 brought him international...
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newspaper articles on: Catholic Emancipation  - 71 results

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...Union of Two Parliaments and Catholic Emancipation. 1687 - William Pettys...the notion of combining Catholic Emancipation with a union of the two...of following union with Catholic emancipation and offering his resignation...
...Cleburne was publicly identified as sympathetic to Catholic emancipation. This may have been an influence that young Pat...enough on his plate without issuing a Confederate emancipation proclamation. DOOMED CAUSE Cleburne, a good...
...no change there, then) and to build churches, provided that the doors remained unlocked during services. The Catholic Emancipation Act of 1829 gave them more confidence still, allowing Catholics to play a full part in public life. The Reformation...
...Court are intrinsically linked to Catholic persecution in England, from the time of the Reformation through to Catholic emancipation in the 19th century. However, Dr Starkey believes it was not as oppressive as often first assumed. We often...
...19th-century laws that some experts believe bar Roman Catholics from the highest office. When Catholics were granted political rights under the Emancipation Act of 1829, some new barriers were erected to appease the anti-Roman lobby. One clause...
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encyclopedia articles on: Catholic Emancipation  - 38 results

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CATHOLIC EMANCIPATION term applied to the process...disabilities culminated in the Catholic Emancipation Act of 1829 (and some subsequent...1780, and the whole history of Catholic Emancipation is one of struggle against great...
...Gradually he became involved in the Irish fight for Catholic Emancipation ; his abilities as a speaker, organizer, and leader...the government was obliged to pass (1829) the Catholic Emancipation Act. In Parliament, OConnell supported the Whigs...
...Irish revolutionary. He entered Parliament from Ireland in 1828 and worked for Catholic Emancipation, Irish poor relief, and state support of the Irish Catholic clergy. OBriens political opinions moved steadily to the left. At first he opposed...
...ministered to several parishes in Co. Cork. His parishes were poor ones, but he became well known for his zeal for Catholic Emancipation and for advocating equality of his church with the Anglicans in Ireland. England was consecrated bishop of the...
...British administrator. Sent to Ireland as lord lieutenant in 1795, he expressed sympathy for the cause of Catholic Emancipation and was almost immediately recalled by William Pitts ministry for allegedly exceeding his instructions...
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