
audiobook
This volume offers a vivid portrait of Ireland at the dawn of Elizabeth I’s reign, when the island’s fragile balance between native Gaelic clans and the expanding English administration began to unravel. The author traces the immediate aftermath of the queen’s accession, detailing how Protestant enthusiasm clashed with lingering Catholic hopes and how rival claimants like Shane O’Neill and the powerful Desmond family jockeyed for authority. Through parliamentary debates, royal edicts, and the personal ambitions of figures such as the Lord Deputies Sussex and Sidney, listeners gain insight into the political and religious turbulence that shaped everyday life.
The narrative also reveals the broader European context, highlighting the wary eyes of France, Spain, and Scotland as they watched England’s Irish policy unfold. Economic strains, from coinage reforms to the costs of military expeditions, underscore the fragile foundations of Tudor rule. By weaving official records with vivid anecdotes, the book brings to life a period of intrigue, rebellion, and uneasy compromise, making the complex history of early Tudor Ireland both accessible and compelling.
Language
en
Duration
~15 hours (874K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2015-02-21
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1840–1918
An Irish historian and barrister, he became known for large-scale studies of Tudor and Stuart Ireland and for writing with strong Unionist convictions. His work helped shape how many readers approached Ireland’s early modern past.
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