Popery Act
Act of Parliament | |
Long title | An Act to prevent the further Growth of Popery |
---|---|
Citation | 2 Ann. c. 6 (I) |
Dates | |
Royal assent | 4 March 1704[1] |
Repealed | 13 August 1878 |
Other legislation | |
Amended by | Roman Catholic Relief Act 1793, Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 |
Repealed by | Promissory Oaths Act 1871, Statute Law Revision (Ireland) Act 1878 |
Status: Repealed | |
Text of statute as originally enacted |
An Act to prevent the further Growth of Popery (2 Ann. c. 6 (I); commonly known as the Popery Act or the Gavelkind Act)
Inheritance in
Enactment
Two separate bills "to prevent the further Growth of Popery" were introduced in the
Sir
Provisions
- Section 1 defined as praemunire the encouragement or act of apostasy from Protestantism to Catholicism. It also prohibited Catholics under 21 from going abroad without licence, to help enforce the Education Act 1695's prohibition on Catholic education overseas.
- Section 2 empowered judges to summon children to court to prove they had not gone abroad without licence under section 1.
- Section 3 empowered the Irish Chancery to take property from a Catholic parent to pay for their Protestant child's education. If the child was an eldest son, up to one-third of the parent's property could be transferred to him, the parent retained only a life interest.
- Section 4 prohibited Catholics from being legal guardians of Protestant children
- Section 5 extended the existing prohibition on Protestants marrying Catholics[5] to include marriages abroad.
- Section 6 prohibited Catholics from buying land or leasing it for more than 31 years.
- Section 7 gave a Catholic acquiring title to real property six months in which to enter into possessionof it, failing which it descended to the nearest Protestant relative.
- Section 8 was a proviso to section 7, whereby a nearer Catholic relative could pre-empt the Protestant relative by conforming to Protestantism within the six-month window
- Section 9 was a proviso to section 7, whereby the Protestant wife of a dispossessed Catholic remained entitled to her one-third dower.
- Section 10 mandated that inheritance from a Catholic would be by gavelkind, that is divided equally between all sons. If the deceased had no sons, the estate was likewise divided between his daughters, or the next closest kin.
- Section 11 was a proviso to section 10 to allow provision for daughters from the estate before the residue was subdivided among the sons.
- Section 12 was a proviso to section 10 to allow the eldest son to inherit the whole estate (by primogeniture) if he was a Protestant, or converted within three months of his father's death. Thus, the law had the effect of reducing the size and thus the influence of Roman Catholic landed estates, which was the act's ulterior motive.[2]
- Section 13 mandated that inheritance from a Protestant would according to common law, that is primogeniture.
- Section 14 provided that debts of Catholics be registered with the Court of Exchequer, to ensure they were paid out of the estate before the application of gavelkind
- Section 15 required a putative Protestant to prove their religion by taking specified oaths of supremacy, abjuration and allegiance
- Section 16 required that, by August 1704, any person with an existing civil or military office must subscribe at Londonderry Corporation.[7]
- Section 17 required that, within three months of appointment, any person appointed to a civil or military office must take the same oath and sacrament as in section 16.
- Section 18 provided that failure to comply with sections 16 or 17 would vacate the office and void acts done by the official, who would be fined £500 and subject to civil penalties.
- Section 19 provided for rolls of those subscribing to the oaths under section 15 to 17 be kept at the Four Courts. The surviving "convert roll" details are a valuable primary source for historians of 18th-century Ireland.[8]
- Section 20 empowered the Four Courts to administer the prescribed oaths
- Section 21 allowed someone disabled under section 18 to be rehabilitated by subsequent conformity.
- Section 22 allowed Irish people in England to take the equivalent oath and sacrament under the equivalent English laws (the Test Acts) and allowed those abroad elsewhere to do so when next in Ireland or England
- Section 23 prohibited Catholics from moving to Galway or Limerick, and required those already living there to deposit bonds with the corporations as proof of their loyalty.
- Section 24 required Catholics voting in elections for the Irish House of Commons to take oaths of allegiance and abjuration
- Section 25 provided that any advowsons of the Church of Ireland owned by Catholics would vest in the Crown
- Section 26 declared that "superstitious" gatherings at Saint Patrick's Purgatory or holy wells were punishable as unlawful assembly
- Section 27 declared that, for an assembly under section 26, the punishment for attending was a debtor's prisonin default
- Section 28 made an exception to section 23 for "seamen, fishermen, and county borough constituency.
Effect
Charles Ivar McGrath says that while the Popery Act had "evident ... negative effects", specific research is lacking,[9] and that it was intended more to prevent an increase in Catholic landholding than encourage further decrease:[9] the Catholic share of land had already fallen from 60% before the 1641 Rebellion to 22% before the Williamite War to 14% in 1704.[10] The figure of 5% in 1776 given in Arthur Young's Tour in Ireland is probably an underestimate,[9] although in 1778 only 1.5% of rent was paid to Catholics.[10]
Catholic gavelkind cemented a tradition of farm subdivision,[10] which persisted beyond the act's repeal and contributed to the Great Famine of the 1840s.
Lord Redesdale, the Lord Chancellor of Ireland, remarked in an 1805 case, based on a disputed inheritance of an estate originally purchased before and after 1704 by a Catholic:[11]
The purpose of [2 Ann. c. 6 (I)] was to disable papists from purchasing lands in future; and to make all lands of which any papist was or should be seised in fee or in tail, of the nature of gavelkind, and, if not sold in his life-time for money, really and bonâ fide paid, to descend accordingly, notwithstanding any other disposition, but subject to debts and provision for daughters: and in case of conformity of the eldest son, the act reduced the father to the condition of tenant for life, and gave the inheritance to the conforming son, subject to provisions for younger children. The second act [8 Ann. c. 3 (I)] is of a different kind. It was conceived that the first act was evaded in consequence of those who had a right to avail themselves of it not doing so. The second act, therefore, gives a right to any protestant to avail himself of the former act for his own benefit, and to file a bill for a discovery of all trusts or purchases made by, or on behalf of papists, contrary to the provisions of the former act, and to take the benefit of the same, as if made to or for such protestant discoverer. The result was, that although the first act made a purchase by a papist void, the second act made the purchase valid for the benefit of a protestant discoverer; and thus, that which was void as between the parties, was good for the benefit of a third person.
These acts had so embarrassed all the titles in the country, that if no other motive had occurred, it would have been a measure of policy to relax their severity: for no law is sufficient to restrain the desire of possessing landed property, and to evade these restrictive laws, contrivances were used, which perplexed almost every title, and made every protestant insecure in the possession of lands derived through a papist.
In 1866, Chancery Commissioners reported that the Law of Judgments was much more complicated in Ireland than in England, and traced the difference back to the steps introduced in Ireland to enforce the 1704 act and ensure property was not being secretly transferred from Protestants to Catholics.[12]
Amendment and repeal
The act was "explained and amended" by a 1709 act which specified certain time limits left ambiguous by the original act, and closed some loopholes used by Catholics to remain
A 1719 act[14] indemnified officials who had not thitherto subscribed to the oath required by the Popery Act. The time period for Dissenters subscribing to the oath was routinely extended, initially by an Indemnity Act at the start of each biennial parliamentary session.[15] Similar acts were passed by the British parliament, and after the union the UK parliament continued the practice.[16]
From the late 18th century
The Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829[30] abolished the declaration against transubstantiation[31] specified a new public oath for Catholics,[32][33] explicitly permitted Catholics to hold Irish civil or military offices other than Lord Lieutenant and Lord Chancellor,[33] with the same oaths as required of non-Catholics (in addition to the new Catholic oath).[34]
The Criminal Law Commission's 1845 report on oaths said sections 1, 3, and 6 of the 1704 act had fallen into disuse and should be repealed.[35] The Religious Disabilities Act 1846, passed in consequence of the committee's report, explicitly repealed provisions of sections 1, 3, and 4 of the 1704 act.[36]
The Popery Act was explicitly repealed as obsolete by the
Notes
- parliamentary sessionran across more than one calendar year, an act's informal name sometimes uses the year in which it was granted royal assent, sometimes the year in which the parliamentary session began — in this case, Popery Act 1704 and Popery Act 1703 respectively.
- ^ The 1780 act referred to "Protestants". A 1793 act[22] clarified that the 1780 act only applied to Dissenters, not members of the established Church of Ireland. An 1832 act repealed the 1793 act and extended the 1780 act to all Protestants.[23]
- ^ In consequence, the Sacramental Test Act 1828 did not extend to Ireland.
Sources
- Bartlett, Thomas (1992). The Fall and Rise of the Irish Nation : The Catholic Question, 1690–1830. ISBN 978-0-389-20974-4.
- Curry, John (1786). "Appendix XVI: Account of the Debates on the Popery Laws, 2 Ann.". An Historical and Critical Review of the Civil Wars in Ireland. Vol. 2. Dublin: Luke White. pp. 386–399.
- McGrath, Charles Ivar (29 October 2021). "The Penal Laws: Origins, Purpose, Enforcement and Impact". In Costello, Kevin; Howlin, Niamh (eds.). Law and Religion in Ireland, 1700–1970. Palgrave Modern Legal History. Springer Nature. pp. 13–48. ISBN 978-3-030-74373-4.
- Simms, J.G. (October 1960). "The making of a penal law (2 Anne, c.6), 1703–4". Irish Historical Studies. 12 (46): 105–118. JSTOR 30005169.
References
- ^ a b c d e "Bill Number 5355: To prevent the further growth of Popery". Irish Legislation Database. Queens University Belfast. Retrieved 8 February 2023.
- ^ ISBN 1-85800-199-4
- ^ Simms 1960 p. 105
- ^ "Bill 2065 : To prevent the further growth of Popery in this kingdom". Irish Legislation Database. Queens University Belfast. Retrieved 8 February 2023.
- ^ 9 Will 3 c.3 [Ir.]
- ^ 1 Anne c. 16 [Eng.]
- ^ The Annals of Derry, Robert Simpson 1847, page 203
- JSTOR 20547499.
- ^ a b c McGrath 2021 p. 45
- ^ ISBN 978-1-903688-60-1.
- ^ Moore v. Butler, 2 Schoales and Lefroy, 259–260 (High Court of Chancery, Ireland 7 February 1805).
- ^ Hancock, W. Neilson (April–November 1874). "An Account of the Progress that has been made in describing the differences between the Laws in force in England and those in force in Ireland; with some of the leading points not already noticed, and Suggestions for the most convenient division of the subject". Journal of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland. 6 (46). Dublin: E. Ponsonby: 375.
- ^ 8 Anne c.3 [Ir.]
- ^ 6 Geo. 1 c. 9 [Ir.]
- ^ "Bills with subject of 411 'Protestant dissent'" Irish Legislation Database; Irish acts 1 George II c.2, 3 George II c.6, 5 George II c.5, 7 George II c.4, 13 George II c.7, 15 George II c.4, 17 George II c.9, 19 George II c.8, 21 George II c.5, 23 George II c.7, 25 George II c.7, 29 George II c.2, 31 George II c.4, 33 George II c.3, 1 George III c.4, 3 George III c.3, 5 George III c.11, 7 George III c.16, 11 George III c.3, 11 & 12 George III c.29, 13 & 14 George III c.13, 15 & 16 George III c.5, 16 George III c.1, 17 & 18 George III c.5, 19 & 20 George III c.28, 21 & 22 George III c.7, 25 George III c.32
- ^ "The Annual Indemnity Act". Abstract of the Corporation and Test Acts: More Particularly as to Such Parts of Them as Relate to the Imposition of the Sacramental Test : Also of Subsequent Acts and Clauses which Affect the Same, Including the Annual Indemnity Act. London: United Committee United Committee appointed to conduct the application of Protestant Dissenters for relief. 1828. pp. 13–15.
- ^ 11 & 12 Geo. 3 c. 21 s. 1
- ^ 13 & 14 Geo. 3 c. 35 [Ir.]
- ^ 17 & 18 Geo. 3 c.49 [Ir.]
- ^ 17 & 18 Geo. 3 c.49 [Ir.] s.1
- ^ 17 & 18 Geo. 3 c.49 [Ir.] ss.2, 5–7
- ^ 33 Geo. 3 c. 51 [Ir.]
- ^ 2 Will. 4 c. 7
- ^ 19 & 20 Geo. 3 c. 6 [Ir.]
- ^ 21 & 22 Geo. 3 c. 24 [Ir.] s. 5, s. 15
- ^ 21 & 22 Geo. 3 c. 62 [Ir.] s. 5
- ^ 32 Geo. 3 c. 21 [Ir.] ss. 10–13
- ^ 33 Geo. 3 c. 21 [Ir.]
- ^ 33 Geo. 3 c. 21 [Ir.] s. 7
- ^ 10 Geo. 4 c. 7
- ^ 10 Geo. 4 c. 7 s. 1
- ^ 10 Geo. 4 c. 7 ss. 2–5
- ^ a b 10 Geo. 4 c. 7 ss. 10, 12, 14, 22, 23
- ^ 10 Geo. 4 c. 7 s. 23
- ^ Her Majesty's Commissioners for Revising and Consolidating the Criminal Law (30 May 1845). First Report, on Penalties and Disabilities in Regard to Religious Opinions. Sessional papers. Vol. HC 1845 XIV (631) 1. London: HMSO. pp. 19–20, 23, 49. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
- ^ 9 & 10 Vict. c. 59 s. 1
- ^ 34 & 35 Vict. c. 48 Sch. 3 Pt. 2
- ^ Attorney-General for Ireland; Lowther, James (1 March 1878). "Statute Law Revision (Ireland) Bill". Sessional papers. HC 1878 vii ((122) 275): 24.
External links
- An Act to prevent the further Growth of Popery from Statutes Passed in the Parliaments Held in Ireland