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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page research paper on one of the first women's organization in Ireland to take an active role in politics. In the early 1880s, a group of Irish women demonstrated for misogynist European culture that women could contribute actively to political causes that were typically considered to be the male arena. These women‹the members of the Irish Ladies Land League‹campaigned, protested and used passive resistance methods, such as boycotts, to eventually sway the mighty British government towards their position. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_90lll.rtf
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members of the Irish Ladies Land League?campaigned, protested and used passive resistance methods, such as boycotts, to eventually sway the mighty British government towards their position (Bew, 1978).
The formation of the Irish Ladies Land League hinged on what the nineteenth century referred to euphemistically as the "Irish Land
Question" (Jordan, 1994). This term referred to the problem of land ownership and agrarian distress in Ireland while under British rule. It was basically the long-term consequence of conquest, confiscation,
and colonization that resulted in the creation of a class of English and Scottish landlords who held complete power over an impoverished Irish peasantry through their use of Irish land
(Moody, 1981). Under the penal laws imposed on Ireland by Great Britain, Roman Catholics?the vast majority of the Irish population?were legally prevented from owning land. Tenants were discouraged
from making improvements on property because, if they did, it inevitably led to the landlord raising the rent. Tenants could be evicted with short notice for no discernible reason. During
the latter half of the nineteenth century, Irish history was characterized by a series of campaigns for Irish national independence and land reform (Anonymous, 1991). The vast majority of
Irish land was owned by English landlords with the average Irishman merely occupying the role of tenant farmer. In 1879, Michael Davitt founded the Irish National Land League, whose goal
it was to secure basic rights for Irish tenant farmers?the rallying cry was "fair rent, free sale, and fixity of tenure" (Anonymous, 1991). When Charles Stewart Parnell agreed to accept
the presidency of the organization it greatly widened the potential scope (Connolly, 1998). In 1881, at Davitts request, Parnells sister, Anna, established the Irish Ladies Land League (LLL) (Connolly,
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