Ulster Scots people explained

Group:Ulster-Scots
Scots-Irish, Ulstèr-Scotch
Region1:United States
Region2:Canada
Region3:Northern Ireland
Region4:Republic of Ireland
Langs:Ulster English, Ulster Irish, Ulster Scots,
Scots Gaelic (small numbers historically)
Rels:Mainly Presbyterian, some Church of Ireland and other Protestant denominations

The Ulster Scots people are an ethnic group[1] [2] [3] [4] descended largely from Scottish and English settlers who moved to the north of Ireland during the 17th century.[5] [6] [7] There is an Ulster Scots dialect of the Scots language.

Found mostly in the province of Ulster, their ancestors were Protestant settlers who migrated from the Scottish Lowlands and Northern England during the Plantation of Ulster, which was a planned process of colonisation following the Tudor conquest of Ireland.[8] The largest numbers came from Dumfries and Galloway, Lanarkshire, Renfrewshire, Ayrshire, Scottish Borders, Northumberland, Cumbria, Durham, Yorkshire and, to a lesser extent, from the Scottish Highlands.[9]

Ulster Scots people emigrated in significant numbers to the American colonies, later the United States, and elsewhere in the British Empire. In North America, they are called Scotch-Irish or Scots-Irish,

History

See main article: History of Ireland and History of Scotland.

Early development

The first major influx of border English and Lowland Scots into Ulster came in the first two decades of the 17th century.

First, before the Plantation of Ulster and even before the Flight of the Earls, there was the 1606 independent Scottish settlement in east Down and Antrim. It was led by adventurers James Hamilton and Sir Hugh Montgomery, two Ayrshire lairds. Montgomery was granted half of Lord of Upper Clandeboye Conn McNeill O'Neill's land, a significant Gaelic lordship in Ulster, as a reward for helping him escape from English captivity. Hamilton forced himself in on this deal when he discovered it and, after three years of bickering, the final settlement gave Hamilton and Montgomery each one-third of the land.[10]

Starting in 1609, Scots began arriving into state-sponsored settlements as part of the Plantation of Ulster. This scheme was intended to confiscate all the lands of the Gaelic Irish nobility in Ulster and to settle the province with Protestant Scottish and English colonists. Under this scheme, a substantial number of Scots were settled, mostly in the south and west of Ulster, on confiscated land.

While many of the Scottish planters in Ulster came from southwest Scotland, a large number came from the southeast, including the unstable regions right along the border with England (the Scottish Borders and Northumberland). These groups were from the Borderers or Border Reivers culture, which had familial links on both sides of the Anglo-Scottish border. The plan was that moving these Borderers to Ireland would both solve the Borders problem and tie down Ulster. This was of particular concern to James VI of Scotland when he became King of England, since he knew Scottish instability could jeopardise his chances of ruling both kingdoms effectively.[11]

During the Irish Rebellion of 1641, the native Irish gentry attempted to extirpate the English and Scottish settlers in revenge for being driven off their ancestral land, resulting in severe violence, massacres and ultimately leading to the deaths of between four and six thousand settlers over the winter of 1641–42.[12] Native Irish civilians were massacred in return.[13] By 1642, native Irish were in de facto control of much of the island under a Confederate Ireland, with about a third under the control of the opposition. However, many Ulster-Scots Presbyterians joined with the Irish in rebellion and aided them in driving the English out.[14] [15]

The Ulster-Scottish population in Ireland was quite possibly preserved from complete annihilation during the subsequent Irish Confederate Wars, when a Scottish Covenanter army was landed in the province to protect the Ulster-Scottish settlers from native Irish landowners. The war itself, part of the Wars of the Three Kingdoms, ended in the 1650s, with the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland. At the head of the army, Oliver Cromwell conquered all of Ireland. Defeating the Irish Confederates and English Royalists on behalf of the English Parliamentarians, he and his forces employed methods and inflicted casualties among the civilian Irish population that have long been commonly considered by contemporary sources, historians and the popular culture to be outside of the accepted military ethics of the day (see more on the debate here). After the Cromwellian war in Ireland was over, many of their soldiers settled permanently in eastern Ulster.[16]

Under the Act of Settlement 1652, all Catholic-owned land was confiscated and the British Plantations in Ireland, which had been destroyed by the rebellion of 1641, were restored. However, due to the Scots' enmity to the English Parliament in the final stages of the English Civil War, English settlers rather than Scots were the main beneficiary of this scheme.

There was a generation of calm in Ireland until another war broke out in 1689, again due to political conflict closely aligned with ethnic and religious differences. The Williamite war in Ireland (1689–91) was fought between Jacobites who supported the restoration of the Catholic James II to the throne of England and Williamites who supported the Protestant William of Orange. The majority of the Protestant colonists throughout Ireland but particularly in Ulster, fought on the Williamite side in the war against the Jacobites. The fear of a repeat of the massacres of 1641, fear of retribution for religious persecution, as well as their wish to hold on to lands which had been confiscated from Catholic landowners, were all principal motivating factors.

The Williamite forces, composed of British, Dutch, Huguenot and Danish armies, as well as troops raised in Ulster,[17] [18] ended Jacobite resistance by 1691, confirming the Protestant minority's monopoly on power in Ireland. Their victories at Derry, the Boyne and Aughrim are still commemorated by the Orange Order into the 21st century.

Finally, another major influx of Scots into northern Ireland occurred in the late 1690s, when tens of thousands of people fled a famine in Scotland to come to Ulster.[19] [20]

It was only after the 1690s that Scottish settlers and their descendants, the majority of whom were Presbyterian, gained numeric superiority in Ulster, though still a minority in Ireland as a whole. Along with Catholics, they were legally disadvantaged by the Penal Laws, which gave full rights only to members of the Church of Ireland (the Anglican state church), who were mainly Anglo-Irish (themselves often absentee landlords), native Irish converts or the descendants of English settlers. For this reason, up until the 19th century, there was considerable disharmony between Dissenters and the ruling Protestant Ascendancy in Ireland. With the enforcement of Queen Anne's 1703 Test Act, which caused further discrimination against all who did not participate in the established church, considerable numbers of Ulster-Scots migrated to the colonies in British America throughout the 18th and 19th centuries.[21] In fact, these 'Scots-Irish' from Ulster and Lowland Scotland comprised the most numerous group of immigrants from Great Britain and Ireland to the American colonies between 1717 and 1775, with over 100,000 leaving Ulster at the time.[22]

Towards the end of the 18th century, many Ulster-Scots Presbyterians ignored religious differences and, along with many Catholic Gaelic Irish, joined the United Irishmen to participate in the Irish Rebellion of 1798 in support of republican and egalitarian ideals.[23]

Scotch-Irish

Just a few generations after arriving in Ulster, considerable numbers of Ulster-Scots emigrated to the North American colonies of Great Britain. Between 1717 and 1775, over 100,000 migrated to what became the United States of America. Around the same time, the British took control of the territory of New France, allowing many Ulster-Scots to migrate to these areas as well. These people are known as the Scotch-Irish Canadians.

In the United States census of 2000, 4.3 million Americans (1.5% of the population of the United States) claimed Scotch-Irish ancestry. Author and former United States Senator Jim Webb suggests that the true number of people with some Scots-Irish heritage in the United States is more—over 27 million—possibly because contemporary Americans with some Scotch-Irish heritage may regard themselves as either Irish, Scottish, or simply American instead.[24] [25] [26]

Culture

Over the centuries, Ulster Scots culture has contributed to the unique character of the counties in Ulster. The Ulster Scots Agency points to industry, language, music, sport, religion and myriad traditions brought to Ulster from the Scottish lowlands. In particular, the origin of country and western music was extensively from Ulster Scots folk music, in addition to English, German, and African-American styles.

The cultural traditions and aspects of this culture including its links to country music are articulated in David Hackett Fischer's book, . In 2010's documentary The Hamely Tongue, filmmaker Deaglán Ó Mocháin traces back the origins of this culture and language, and relates its manifestations in today's Ireland. The film's title refers to James Fenton's book, The Hamely Tongue: A personal record of Ulster-Scots in County Antrim.

Most Ulster Scots speak Ulster English as a first language. Ulster Scots is the local dialect of the Lowland Scots language which has, since the 1980s, also been called "Ullans", a portmanteau neologism popularised by the physician, amateur historian and politician Ian Adamson,[27] merging Ulster and Lallans – the Scots for 'Lowlands'[28]  – but also said to be a backronym for 'Ulster-Scots language in literature and native speech'.[29]

Hereditary disease

The North American ancestry of the X-linked form of the genetic disease congenital nephrogenic diabetes insipidus has been traced to Ulster Scots who travelled to Nova Scotia in 1761 on the ship Hopewell.[30]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Pauline Frommer's Ireland. google.ie. 9780470502969 . Hourican . Emily . Bain . Keith . 27 April 2009 . Wiley .
  2. Web site: Kennouche . Sofiane . The US presidents with the strongest Scottish roots . The Scotsman . JPIMedia . While 33 US Presidents have had ancestral links to Scotland, many of these men have heritage that is classified as Ulster-Scots. This ethnic group has historically been found in the Ulster region of Ireland, and is so-called because of their own historical links to the lowlands of Scotland, where the group's ancestors originated..
  3. Web site: McNeal . Michele . The Scots-Irish Americans A Guide to Reference and Information Sources for Research . ERIC Institute of Education Sciences . The Scots-Irish coming from the towns and countryside of Ulster County, Ireland, constitute a religiously and culturally distinct population from the remainder of Catholic Ireland. ... The section of "Works devoted to Scots-Irish Americans" provides 3 a wide variety of sources and approaches to the study of this ethnic group..
  4. Web site: Kelly . Mary . Kelly on Vann, 'In Search of Ulster-Scots Land: the Birth and Geotheological Imagings of a Transatlantic People' . H-Albion Resources . The emergence of an Ulster-Scots ethnicity within the broader transatlantic context is his primary focus, as per the headline of his title..
  5. Web site: Scots-Irish Definition & Meaning . 18 March 2023 . yourdictionary.com.
  6. Web site: Definition of Scotch-Irish . 18 March 2023 . Dictionary.com.
  7. Web site: Definition of Scotch-Irish . 18 March 2023 . Merriam-Webster.com.
  8. Web site: Ulster blood, English heart – I am what I am . 20 May 2004 . Newton . Emerson . Newshound . 31 December 2018.
  9. Book: Fischer, David Hackett . David Hackett Fischer . . "America: A Cultural History" series, vol. 1 . Oxford University Press . 1989 . 618 . Fischer-1989.
  10. Web site: Greencastle Museum . GreencastleMuseum.org.
  11. [#Fischer-1989|Fischer (1989)]
  12. Book: Macrory, Patrick . The Siege of Derry . Oxford University Press . 1980 . 97–98.
  13. Book: John . Kenyon . Jane . Ohlmeyer . The Civil Wars: A Military History of England, Scotland and Ireland 1638–1660 . Oxford University Press . 1998 . 74.
  14. Web site: Irish Rebellion . CaldwellGenealogy.com . 27 May 2014 . 27 August 2016.
  15. The Rebellion of 1641 . R. Barry . O'Brien . The Irish Ecclesiastical Record . XVII (4th Ser.) . 449 . May 1905.
  16. Book: Canny, Nicholas . Nicholas Canny . Making Ireland British, 1580–1650 . Oxford University Press . 2003 . 562.
  17. Book: Harris, Tim . Revolution: The Great Crisis of the British Monarchy 1685–1720 . Allen Lane . 2006 . 435–436.
  18. Book: Hayton, David . Ruling Ireland, 1685–1742: Politics, Politicians and Parties . Boydell Press . 2004 . 22.
  19. Web site: AOL UK – Search . aol.co.uk.
  20. Web site: AOL UK – Search . aol.co.uk.
  21. Book: Jones, Maldwyn . Scotch-Irish . Stephan . Thernstrom . Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups . 1980 . Harvard University Press . 895–908.
  22. Book: Encyclopedia of North American Immigration . John Powell . 2009 . Infobase Publishing . 301 .
  23. Web site: 1798 Rebellion . UlsterScotsTrail.com.
  24. http://www.parade.com/articles/editions/2004/edition_10-03-2004/featured_0 Why You Need To Know The Scotch-Irish
  25. Book: Webb, James H. . Born Fighting: How the Scots-Irish Shaped America . Crown . 2005 . 9780767916899.
  26. Web site: Alister . McReynolds . Scots-Irish . Northern Ireland: Take a Closer Look . British Tourist Authority . https://web.archive.org/web/20090216090343/http://www.nitakeacloserlook.gov.uk/index/american-connections/scots-irish.htm . 16 February 2009.
  27. Falconer . G. . 2006 . The Scots Tradition in Ulster . Scottish Studies Review . 7 . 2 . 97.
  28. Book: Hickey, Raymond . 2004 . A Sound Atlas of Irish English . "Topics in English Linguistics" series . . 156.
  29. Book: Tymoczko . Maria . Maria Tymoczko . Ireland . C. A. . 2003 . Language and Tradition in Ireland: Continuities and Displacements . University of Massachusetts Press . 159.
  30. D. G. . Bichet . M. F. . Arthus . M. . Lonergan . G. N. . Hendy . A. J. . Paradis . T. M. . Fujiwara . K. . Morgan . M. C. . Gregory . W. . Rosenthal . A. . Didwania . X-linked nephrogenic diabetes insipidus mutations in North America and the Hopewell hypothesis . Journal of Clinical Investigation . September 1993 . 92 . 3 . 1262–1268 . 10.1172/JCI116698 . American Society for Clinical Investigation. 8104196 . 288266 . free .