Agriculture and the Integration of British Colonial Migrants in Early Modern Ireland

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Abstract

This article offers a critical re-examination of Early Modern migrations to Ireland and their effect on farming practices, c.1580-1660. During and after the English conquest of Ireland, tens and eventually hundreds of thousands of settlers arrived from Britain. Focusing on Munster and to a lesser extent Ulster, I argue they were not greeted with an agricultural tabula rasa ripe for 'improvement'. In contrast to what Tudor writers claimed, and what some scholars today have assumed, cereal cultivation and field enclosure already formed important elements in the agricultural landscape. Changes clearly took place, but English, Welsh and Scots settlers also made some remarkable adaptations by accepting local breeds of livestock and relying economically on forms of semi-mobile pastoralism that earlier writers had decried. Looking outside Ireland helps to evaluate their actions, since livestock mobility was widespread in contemporary European pastoralism, and if anything contributed to, rather than conflicted with, the commercialisation of farming.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)291-312
Number of pages22
JournalJournal of Migration History
Volume8
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • agrarian capitalism
  • English colonialism
  • livestock
  • Munster plantation
  • rural landscapes
  • Ulster plantation

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