Irish Plantations
Developments in Ireland were a major factor in the English Civil War, plot the impact of the war on Ireland as events unfolded with our series of maps of the Irish plantations
Tudor Plantations in Ireland
The close physical proximity of Scotland, England and Ireland made social, economic and political linkage inevitable. England claimed overlordship of Ireland during the Middle Ages and, during this period, knights and adventurers claimed several estates on the island as their own. The impact of this settlement was minimal as the incomers were relatively few in number, they shared a Catholic faith with the locals and were gradually absorbed into Gaelic culture.
The imperialism of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries was much more intrusive. Following England's withdrawal from Europe, the Tudors (who proclaimed themselves monarchs of Ireland) initiated a 'plantation' policy in which much larger numbers of settlers arrived on the island and displaced the locals from their land. As this occurred in the wake of the English Reformation (during which Ireland remained substantially Catholic) a layer of religious antagonism was inserted into the colonial equation. The new settlers viewed the locals as primitive savages, mired in error and superstition. Map One depicts the extent and location of English plantations in Ireland prior to 1603.
Content last updated: 07/01/2001



Jacobean Plantations in Ireland, 1605 and 1609
Jacobean Plantations in Ireland,1618 and 1620
Irish Catholic Land Ownership, 1641 and 1688





