TY - BOOK AU - Brian Fleming PY - 2017 CY - Oxford, United Kingdom PB - Peter Lang Verlag SN - 9781787076594 TI - Irish Education and Catholic Emancipation, 1791–1831 T2 - The Campaigns of Bishop Doyle and Daniel O’Connell DO - 10.3726/b10723 UR - https://www.peterlang.com/document/1055130 N2 - The restrictions applied to Catholics in the early eighteenth century to curtail their political and economic power in Ireland were gradually removed by the British government in response to changing circumstances. By 1800 the remaining restrictions related to membership of Parliament and a few senior judicial positions. The removal of these, while important symbolically, could have direct implications for very few people, given the limited franchise. Yet the campaign for their abolition, known as Catholic emancipation, presented successive British governments with serious problems and led to one prime ministerial resignation, one government collapse and many crises. How did Daniel O’Connell use this situation to create a successful mass movement, broadening the emancipation campaign to include the issue of education? How did the area of educational provision become a sectarian battleground, and what part did Bishop James Doyle play in forcing a reluctant government to become involved in setting up a state-run education system, a highly unusual step at the time? Does his vision have a message for us now, when school patronage is such a contested issue in Ireland? This book provides an intriguing new perspective on a critical period in Irish history. KW - History of Irish education, Anglo-Irish politics in the eighteenth century, sectarian conflict LA - English ER -