Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Preface
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Forging the Union
- 2 Dawn of a New Century
- 3 Catholic Mobilisations
- 4 The Achievement of Emancipation
- 5 Ireland under Whig Government
- 6 The Campaign for Repealing Union
- 7 The Age of Peel
- 8 Explaining the Famine
- 9 Response to Famine
- 10 Post-Famine Ireland
- 11 Mid-Victorian Ireland
- 12 Gladstone's First Mission
- 13 Parnell and the Land League
- 14 The Irish Liberals: A Union of Hearts?
- 15 Constructive Unionism, 1886–1906
- 16 Celtic Renaissance
- 17 The Story of Irish Socialism
- 18 The Home Rule Crisis
- 19 World War and Insurrection
- 20 The Rise of Sinn Féin
- 21 The Anglo–Irish War
- 22 North and South Settlements
- 23 Conclusion
- Chronology
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Glossary
- Questions
- Index
13 - Parnell and the Land League
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 April 2014
- Frontmatter
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Preface
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Forging the Union
- 2 Dawn of a New Century
- 3 Catholic Mobilisations
- 4 The Achievement of Emancipation
- 5 Ireland under Whig Government
- 6 The Campaign for Repealing Union
- 7 The Age of Peel
- 8 Explaining the Famine
- 9 Response to Famine
- 10 Post-Famine Ireland
- 11 Mid-Victorian Ireland
- 12 Gladstone's First Mission
- 13 Parnell and the Land League
- 14 The Irish Liberals: A Union of Hearts?
- 15 Constructive Unionism, 1886–1906
- 16 Celtic Renaissance
- 17 The Story of Irish Socialism
- 18 The Home Rule Crisis
- 19 World War and Insurrection
- 20 The Rise of Sinn Féin
- 21 The Anglo–Irish War
- 22 North and South Settlements
- 23 Conclusion
- Chronology
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Glossary
- Questions
- Index
Summary
Persona and Interpretations of Parnell
Who was he? Parnell was that most difficult of all types for a British politician to pin down – a member of the Irish-Protestant landed gentry with all the manners of a gentleman on the one hand, but possessing sympathies that were wider ranging than his own class and creed might conventionally dictate on the other. He had all the traditional traits of the Ascendancy: he hunted, played cricket, attended society balls at Dublin Castle and enjoyed horses. He was, in short, among the British elites, but not of them, a kind of enfant terrible. His contemporary Michael Davitt says of him that he was ‘an Englishman of the strongest type, moulded for an Irish purpose’; Bew that he was a conservative with a radical tinge. From a family established in the seventeenth century, he had an estate in Avondale, Co. Wicklow. His education in England had bestowed upon him an upper-class accent and a social circle which put him on an equal plane with those he interacted with in Parliament. But he had also developed a sort of interest in the plight of the Fenian martyrs, a luxurious eccentricity for an undergraduate at Cambridge in the late 1860s perhaps, but one with long-term political consequences. These paradoxes surrounding the persona of Parnell have often been remarked upon. Yet, according to Conor Cruise O'Brien, these very ambiguities gave him credibility both at Westminster and in Ireland.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- A History of Ireland, 1800–1922Theatres of Disorder?, pp. 147 - 156Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2014