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Irish Rebellion of 1798 | A Wisdom Archive on Irish Rebellion of 1798 |  | Irish Rebellion of 1798 A selection of articles related to Irish Rebellion of 1798 |  |
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Irish Rebellion of 1798
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| ARTICLES RELATED TO Irish Rebellion of 1798 |  |  |  | Irish Rebellion of 1798: Encyclopedia II - Irish Rebellion of 1798 - AftermathPockets of rebel resistance remained in Wexford with the last rebel group under James Corocoran, veterans of the battle of New Ross, not being defeated until February 1804. Wicklow experienced a form of fugitive warfare in the years after 1798 but the failure of Robert Emmet's rebellion in 1803 finally convinced the last organised rebel forces under Michael Dwyer to a negotiated surrender a few months later.
The 1798 rebellion was probably the most concentrated outbreak of violence in Irish history and resulted in the deaths of c. 30, ...
See also:Irish Rebellion of 1798, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Background, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Society of United Irishmen, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Government Crackdown and Counter Revolution, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Plan, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Outbreak of the Rebellion, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - The Rebellion Spreads, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Atrocities, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - French Landing, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Aftermath, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Legacy of 1798, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Sources Read more here: » Irish Rebellion of 1798: Encyclopedia II - Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Aftermath |
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|  |  |  | Irish Rebellion of 1798: Encyclopedia II - Irish Rebellion of 1798 - PlanThe initial plan was to take Dublin, with the counties bordering Dublin to then rise to prevent the arrival of reinforcements with the remainder of the country to then rise and tie down other garrisons. The agreed signal for the rest of the country to rise was to be the interception of the outward bound mail coaches from Dublin.
Last minute intelligence from informers provided details of rebel assembly points at Smithfield and Haymarket however, and they were occupied by a huge force of military barely one hour before rebels were to a ...
See also:Irish Rebellion of 1798, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Background, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Society of United Irishmen, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Government Crackdown and Counter Revolution, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Plan, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Outbreak of the Rebellion, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - The Rebellion Spreads, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Atrocities, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - French Landing, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Aftermath, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Legacy of 1798, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Sources Read more here: » Irish Rebellion of 1798: Encyclopedia II - Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Plan |
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|  |  |  | Irish Rebellion of 1798: Encyclopedia II - Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Government Crackdown and Counter RevolutionThe shaken Establishment responed by launching a campaign of repression and coercion using tactics that included house burnings, torture, pitchcapping and murder, particularly in Ulster as it was the one area of Ireland where large numbers of Catholics and Presbyterians had effected common cause.
Sectarianism was recognised as a usefully divisive tool in the classic "divide and rule" method of governance by the establishment and officially encouraged by the Government. For example, Brigadier-General C.E. Knox wrote to General L ...
See also:Irish Rebellion of 1798, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Background, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Society of United Irishmen, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Government Crackdown and Counter Revolution, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Plan, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Outbreak of the Rebellion, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - The Rebellion Spreads, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Atrocities, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - French Landing, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Aftermath, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Legacy of 1798, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Sources Read more here: » Irish Rebellion of 1798: Encyclopedia II - Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Government Crackdown and Counter Revolution |
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|  |  |  | Irish Rebellion of 1798: Encyclopedia II - Irish Rebellion of 1798 - PlanThe initial plan was to take Dublin, with the counties bordering Dublin to then rise to prevent the arrival of reinforcements with the remainder of the country to then rise and tie down other garrisons. The agreed signal for the rest of the country to rise was to be the simultaneous interception of the outward bound mail coaches from Dublin.
Last minute intelligence from informers provided details of rebel assembly points at Smithfield and Haymarket however, and they were occupied by a huge force of military barely one hour before reb ...
See also:Irish Rebellion of 1798, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Background, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Society of United Irishmen, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Government Crackdown and Counter Revolution, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Plan, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Outbreak of the Rebellion, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - The Rebellion Spreads, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Atrocities, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - French Landing, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Aftermath, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Legacy of 1798, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Sources Read more here: » Irish Rebellion of 1798: Encyclopedia II - Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Plan |
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|  |  |  | Irish Rebellion of 1798: Encyclopedia II - Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Society of United IrishmenThe promise of reform inspired liberals to found the Society of the United Irishmen in 1791, openly putting forward its policies of democratic reform and Catholic emancipation, reforms that the Irish Parliament had no intention of granting and the British government just as unwilling to enforce. The declaration of war against France in 1793 following the execution of Louis XVI forced the Society underground and toward the French revolutionary model of agitation as opposed to the American example. The avowed intent of the United Irishmen and ...
See also:Irish Rebellion of 1798, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Background, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Society of United Irishmen, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Government Crackdown and Counter Revolution, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Plan, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Outbreak of the Rebellion, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - The Rebellion Spreads, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Atrocities, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - French Landing, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Aftermath, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Legacy of 1798, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Sources Read more here: » Irish Rebellion of 1798: Encyclopedia II - Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Society of United Irishmen |
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|  |  |  | Irish Rebellion of 1798: Encyclopedia II - Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Outbreak of the RebellionThe nucleus of the rebellion had imploded but the counties surrounding Dublin rose as planned and the long threatened rising began, surrounding districts of Dublin were first to rise and rebels then began to assemble in Wicklow, Meath and Kildare. The first clashes of the rebellion took place just after dawn on May 24th, and widespread fighting quickly spreading throughout Leinster with the county Kildare bearing the brunt of rebel attacks.
Despite the Government successfully beating off almost every rebel attack, all military forces ...
See also:Irish Rebellion of 1798, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Background, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Society of United Irishmen, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Government Crackdown and Counter Revolution, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Plan, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Outbreak of the Rebellion, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - The Rebellion Spreads, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Atrocities, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - French Landing, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Aftermath, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Legacy of 1798, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Sources Read more here: » Irish Rebellion of 1798: Encyclopedia II - Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Outbreak of the Rebellion |
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|  |  |  | Irish Rebellion of 1798: Encyclopedia II - Irish Rebellion of 1798 - The Rebellion SpreadsIn Wicklow large numbers rose but largely operated away from settled areas and engaged in a bloody rural guerilla war with the military and loyalist forces. "General" Joseph Holt led up to 1,000 men in the Wicklow Hills forcing the British to commit substantial forces to the area until his capitulation in October.
In the north-east, Presbyterian rebels under Henry Joy McCracken briefly occupied Antrim town on 7 June before being defeated on 13 June. In Down, after initial success at Saintfield, the rebels led by Henry Munro were ...
See also:Irish Rebellion of 1798, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Background, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Society of United Irishmen, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Government Crackdown and Counter Revolution, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Plan, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Outbreak of the Rebellion, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - The Rebellion Spreads, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Atrocities, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - French Landing, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Aftermath, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Legacy of 1798, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Sources Read more here: » Irish Rebellion of 1798: Encyclopedia II - Irish Rebellion of 1798 - The Rebellion Spreads |
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|  |  |  | Irish Rebellion of 1798: Encyclopedia II - Irish Rebellion of 1798 - AtrocitiesThe prelude to the rebellion was characterised by the vicious brutality of Crown forces towards rebels, real or imagined, but large scale massacres quickly accompanied the outbreak of the rebellion. Almost every British victory in the rising was marked by the massacre of captured and wounded rebels, and they were responsible for particularly gruesome massacres at Gibbet Rath, New Ross and Enniscorthy, burning rebels alive in the latter two. In addition, countless civilians were murdered by the rampaging military who also practiced gang rape ...
See also:Irish Rebellion of 1798, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Background, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Society of United Irishmen, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Government Crackdown and Counter Revolution, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Plan, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Outbreak of the Rebellion, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - The Rebellion Spreads, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Atrocities, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - French Landing, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Aftermath, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Legacy of 1798, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Sources Read more here: » Irish Rebellion of 1798: Encyclopedia II - Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Atrocities |
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|  |  |  | Irish Rebellion of 1798: Encyclopedia II - Irish Rebellion of 1798 - French LandingOn 22 August, nearly two months after the main uprisings had been defeated, about 1,000 French soldiers under General Humbert landed in the north-west of the country, at Killala in County Mayo. Joined by up to 5,000 local rebels, they inflicted a humiliating defeat (known as the Castlebar races to commemorate the speed of the English retreat) on the British at Castlebar and set up a short-lived "Republic of Connaught", before final defeat at the Battle of Ballinamuck, in County Longford, on 8 September 1798. The French troops who surrendered were repatriated to France in exchange for British prisoners of war; ...
See also:Irish Rebellion of 1798, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Background, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Society of United Irishmen, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Government Crackdown and Counter Revolution, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Plan, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Outbreak of the Rebellion, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - The Rebellion Spreads, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Atrocities, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - French Landing, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Aftermath, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Legacy of 1798, Irish Rebellion of 1798 - Sources Read more here: » Irish Rebellion of 1798: Encyclopedia II - Irish Rebellion of 1798 - French Landing |
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