In Restoration Ireland the law primarily served the interests of the English state and the Anglo-Protestant community, oppressing the majority Catholic population. Catholics and the law in Restoration Ireland examines how Catholics engaged with and experienced English common law primarily through the accounts of Catholic clerics and Gaelic poets.
Analysing the letters of Oliver Plunkett and John Brenan, this book demonstrates the initial success and ultimate failure of their non-confrontational approach to legal and political processes. In contrast, the challenging stances of clerics Nicholas French and John Lynch offer a new perspective on the wide variety of clerical engagement with the law. Drawing on the considerable corpus of primary sources, the book examines the often overlooked Irish-language literary material, considering the work of Dáibhí Ó Bruadair and his contemporaries to show how Gaelic Ireland deeply resented a hostile legal environment. It also explores Catholic landed families who recovered their estates in the 1663 Court of Claims, highlighting their varied strategies amid Protestant hostility and further illustrating how some Catholic lawyers managed to survive and even prosper during this period.
This book provides a comprehensive examination of the many ways in which Irish Catholics experienced a legal system that proved fundamentally inimical to their interests.