Abstract
Seventeenth-century English men and women, caught in the upheaval
of the Civil War,
sought to understand what it was to be English and sought to grasp
England's proper role in the world.
One of the ways in which they did this was through their encounters
with other people. The Irish had
a long history of interaction with the English, but in the middle of
the seventeenth century their role
in defining Englishness became acute. Late Tudor and early Jacobean commentaries
on Ireland had
stressed the superiority of English culture while acknowledging some
virtues of Ireland and its people
that would make it amenable to beneficial transformation by the English.
In the middle of the century,
occasioned by the events of the 1641 uprising, this ameliorative view
of the Irish gave way to the view
that English and Irish were incompatible. Earlier studies have emphasized
the role of religion in the
discordant relationship between the two peoples in the seventeenth
century. This essay maintains that
the shift in attitude had as much to do with ethnicity as it did with
religion and considers the central
role of John Temple and his treatise The Irish rebellion in changing
English attitudes on both a
national and local level. The study suggests that Temple's view
became the dominant one for more than
200 years because of the demographic changes within the Irish community
in London and puritan
concerns about a godly community that occurred at the time Temple set forth
his ideas.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
59 articles.
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