Description
Book SynopsisThe first major academic study of the Ulster Plantation in over 25 years. This collection of essays by leading scholars in the field on a broad range of historical and literary topics redresses the previous coverage of the plantations, moving away from an exclusive colonial perspective, to include the native Catholic experience.
Trade Review"A great merit of the volume is the involvement of Scots historians."
(Jonathan Bardon, Familia: Ulster Genealogical Review. No 29 2013)
“this book has much to commend for its breadth of coverage, for its solid performance and for its interdisciplinary approaches.”
Allan I. Macinnes, University of Strathclyde, Northern Scotland, 2019
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Table of Contents1. Introduction: Micheál Ó Siochrú and Éamonn Ó Ciardha – The plantation of Ulster: ideas and ideologies
2. Jenny Wormald – ‘The ‘British’ Crown, the Earls and the Plantation of Ulster’
3. Martin MacGregor – ‘Civilizing’ Gaelic Scotland: The Scottish Isles and the Stuart Empire’
4. Philip Withington – ‘Plantation and Civil Society’
5. Ian Archer – ‘The City of London and the Ulster Plantation’
6. Raymond Gillespie – ‘Success and failure in The Ulster Plantation’
7. Brian MacCuarta – ‘The Catholic Church in Ulster under the Plantation, 1609–42’
8. Colin Breen – ‘Randal MacDonnell and early Seventeenth-Century Settlement in Northeast Ulster, 1603–30’
9. Andrew Hadfield – ‘Educating the Colonial Mind: Spenser and the Plantation’
10. Marc Caball – ‘Responses to transformation: Gaelic poets and the plantation of Ulster’
11. Diarmuid Ó Doibhlin – ‘The Plantation of Ulster: Aspects of Gaelic Letters’
12. Willy Maley – ‘Angling for Ulster: Ireland and plantation in Jacobean literature’
13. Nicholas McDowell – ‘The Scottish inhabitants of that Province are actually revolted’: John Milton on the failure of the Ulster Plantation’
Index