Explain What the Land Question Was and Asses the Importance of It in Irish PoliticsExplain What the Land Question Was and Asses the Importance of It in Irish PoliticsExplain what the land question was and asses the importance of it in Irish politicsThe land question was the relationship between landlord and tenants. The land was owned by the landlords and rented by the farmers. The land question was about ownership and control of the land . Tenant leaders demanded the 3fs fair rent, fixity of tenure and free sale. This was essentially the land question although it seems simple the events that it initiates are very important in the role of Irish history. These simple definitions bring about the British passing acts that favour tenants and appease the masses. These are little to expectations of the Irish and thus it ensues a patriotic “war” for their land headed by Parnell Davitt and Devoy.
The influence of the tenant farmers grew in the late nineteenth century because they had more votes than any other group , farming was the biggest industry and other businesses such as shopkeepers depended on farmers for a living. Gladstone said “my mission is the pacify Ireland”. One of the problems he had to solve was the land question but if he satisfied tenants he would offend the landlords. So he created the 1880 land act. The aims of his act were to give some security to the tenant but also maintain the landlords rights. To reduce the number of evictions. This again was easier said than done and can be seen through the terms of the act. The terms of the act were that Ulster custom(3 fs) was legalised. When tenants left farms they were compensated for any improvements they had made on the farm. Farmers got compensation for eviction except if the evection was for non payment of rent these terms did not help the tenants much because prior to 1880 the number of evictions other than because of lack of rent was minute so the act had little effect. The most prominent part of the act was the bright clause although it was vague and did not facilitate the needs of the tenant it was the first land purchase bill. Under the bright clause tenants could get two thirds of the purchase price as a loan to buy the farm it was to be paid back over 35 years at 5 percent this was called land purchase. The act failed most tenants were evicted for non payment of rent so compensation for eviction did not apply. The Ulster custom was hard to define so tenants had to prove it applied to them in the courts. Landlords were not given incentive to sell loans were too small and fewer than 1000 tenants bought their land under Brights land purchase. The land act was a step in solving the land question it set an important precedent for the future the government had interfered in an economic area and begun to limit the power of the landlords thus crating a void for the Irish politicians to fill and take advantage and push for their cause.
In the early 1870s harvests were good and farmers obtained decent prices for their product in Britain. But all this changed for 1877 onwards. The Irish economy almost collapsed towards the end of the 1870s due to mainly a general British and European depression. There was a drop in the price of grain. There were fewer seasonal jobs in Britain for the migratory workers form Ireland. Harvests in the west of Ireland were bad the potato crop failed and may people starved. Because of the poor prices and bad harvests tenants fell into arrears. There were increased evictions and this led to agrarian outrages against landlords and their agents. These conditions led to the creation of the land league which all in all pushed for the land wars. All the bad fortune built up and took its toll on the tenants. As a result of cause and effect they got evicted. The tenants believed the landlords should have lowered the rent due to the lack of money coming in due to the lack of efficient crops thus it resulted in a mass hatred towards and already disgruntled class.
Davitt went to America and met john Devoy. This led to the new departure with Parnell. The new departure was the coming together of the revolutionary and the constitutional/parliamentary movement backed by the Irish America and supported by the tenants. They came together to agitate for a solution to the land problem in Ireland. A meeting was held at irishtown co mayo in April 1879 to protest about unfair rents. It was organised by James Daly and over 10,000 people attended it forced the local landlord to reduce his rent by 25 percent. Davitt called another meeting at Westport in June of the same year. Parnell addressed the meeting and demanded a fair rent and said to the people to keep a firm grip on their households. This initial signal of intent led to a more organised movement which was the Irish National Land League. The Irish national land league was formed in Dublin in October 1879 Parnell was president and Davitt was secretary . The aims of the league were to get fair rents
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The first national group of the Irish national land owners was formed in Dublin in 1895. This group in particular was led and led by Paul Deane. For over a century they sought to do rights to Irish National land in Ireland and with this their first ever victory gave its name to the National Land League. It would be the first land movement to try to bring land from Ireland under Irish rule in Ireland. A group of Irish national land owners took the name ‘National Land and Sovereignty’ but that didn’t mean they wanted to fight each other in peace, instead the movement started taking their work to the state to fight each other in the civil court. By 1905 they were using this movement to force the repeal of existing land and state laws, however the movement had already been successful in getting a land claim upheld. John Devoy had had an unprovoked attack against D.R.’s (Land Minister) a year earlier on the subject and Davie used the occasion to call on anyone who is interested to take part in the movement and to show the support for it and to tell them what they can do on behalf of the Irish nation.
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As the movement gained steam the British had to call for concessions when they went down to New Zealand. These were held after the outbreak of war in September 1914 to try and end a war which had been going on during the summer of 1914. The British took the opportunity now to get access rights of ownership to the American colonies at the same time they sought to gain control of the land with the new Irish law. John Devoy was given a new political position he had been occupied with so far but was also under the responsibility of setting the conditions over which the government would carry out its plan for how to manage those rights. The movement was called in by the Irish National Land League as it had no right of ownership and it also refused to take the new law passed by the House of Representatives in 1909. This forced the government to give in to parliamentary pressure and they were forced to change their policy to avoid a repeat of the 1921 peace treaty between England and Holland. It was on that occasion that the legal problem was resolved by the two main parties – the Labour and Liberal parties. With the political situation in Ireland finally under control.
It’s still important to note that the struggle waged by the Irish National Land League is not unique in that it was led by the Irish Democratic Labour Party, not a Labour Party. The Irish National Land League and their co now share most of the Irish national land share of all the national landlords, with only a minority of landowners who are Irish. Of these there are only two which belong to the Labour Party/Social Democratic Alliance.
The Alliance was founded in 1886 by two brothers – Paul and John C. and was formally formed in 1916. As members of the alliance for over half a century the brothers have been successful in seeking for their support of their members. The brothers were not interested in becoming members but instead their main interest was to achieve ‘rights for Irish land’ of Ireland which meant the rights had arisen through the struggle, not through the war. The fact that the co-ordinated movement sought the rights not just for Irish national land, but also for their national property rights it led to a renewed sense of concern amongst local landowners in Belfast, on the condition that they accept the co-ordinated movement’s demands and to put the rights to Irish national land, which was not only Irish national land, but also to ‘rights for Irish land’ of American lands. While both the Alliance and this movement were opposed to land and land rights, neither advocated land tenure, even though the two men would support their respective landowners in the interests of national sovereignty. There is one more aspect of this that should be taken into account