DCU Home | Our Courses | Loop | Registry | Library | Search DCU
<< Back to Module List

Module Specifications.

Current Academic Year 2024 - 2025

All Module information is indicative, and this portal is an interim interface pending the full upgrade of Coursebuilder and subsequent integration to the new DCU Student Information System (DCU Key).

As such, this is a point in time view of data which will be refreshed periodically. Some fields/data may not yet be available pending the completion of the full Coursebuilder upgrade and integration project. We will post status updates as they become available. Thank you for your patience and understanding.

Date posted: September 2024

Module Title The Age of Protestant Ascendancy
Module Code HY214 (ITS) / HIS1020 (Banner)
Faculty Humanities & Social Sciences School History & Geography
Module Co-ordinatorJames Kelly
Module Teachers-
NFQ level 8 Credit Rating 5
Pre-requisite Not Available
Co-requisite Not Available
Compatibles Not Available
Incompatibles Not Available
Repeat examination
Description

The purpose of this module is to locate and examine the age of Protestant ascendancy in Ireland in context. It will explore and analyse the exercise of Protestant power between the military triumph of 1689-91 and the challenge it was posed by emergence in the early nineteenth century of a politically and demographically energised Catholic population led by Daniel O'Connell. The course also engages closely with the economic and social history of the period.

Learning Outcomes

1. Demonstrate an understanding of the main issues, key episodes, formative trends and major personalities of eighteenth and early nineteenth-century Irish History
2. Recognise how different ideological vantage points shape historical interpretation, and possess an awareness of the contingency of historical interpretation
3. Identify and distinguish between minor and major causative factors and possess an awareness of the consequences of the main events and trends in this historical period
4. Engage in appropriately critical manner with historical texts and historical documentation
5. Present appropriately researched historical arguments that are evidentially based and historiographically informed



Workload Full-time hours per semester
Type Hours Description
Lecture24Attendance and participation
Assignment Completion40Study Journal: Reflection on assigned and others readings
Assignment Completion40Reading, preparation and writing of assignment
Independent Study21Reading, note taking etc.
Total Workload: 125

All module information is indicative and subject to change. For further information,students are advised to refer to the University's Marks and Standards and Programme Specific Regulations at: http://www.dcu.ie/registry/examinations/index.shtml

Indicative Content and Learning Activities

Indicative Content
This course provides students with an opportunity to explore a crucial era in Irish history. Set against the backdrop of the defeat of the Irish Jacobites between 1689 and 1691, its focus is the exercise of Protestant ascendancy in Ireland between then and the emergence between 1823 and 1847 of a politicised Irish (Catholic) population guided by Daniel O’Connell. Based on a close engagement with the large volume of research completed on this era in the last quarter century that has fundamentally recast how this ear is interpreted and understood, this course provides, firstly, a comprehensive overview of the politics of ‘Protestant Ireland’ through an exploration of the creation of a ‘Protestant constitution’ in the 1690s and its subsequent evolution, of the role of management in parliament in the manner in which political power was exercised, and the Protestant elite was permitted to shape and influence the administration of the kingdom of Ireland in tandem with the Crown appointed executive based at Dublin Castle. This also involves exploring the nature of the Anglo-Irish nexus and the politics of patriotism, the myth and reality of Grattan’s parliament, the challenge of radicalism in the 1790s, and the rational for and implementation of an Anglo-Irish Union. Its second focus is the survival, negotiation and emergence of Catholics as a political interest though an examination of the nature, impact and repeal of the ‘Penal Laws’, and the transformative impact, both positive and negative, of Daniel O’Connell. Particular attention is accorded the historiographical revolution that sustains the radical re-interpretation that this period permits. As well as the politics of the era, the course will engage with the nature of the Irish ancien regime, economic growth, and formative social and economic changes such as population growth, the language shift, and agrarian violence. But it was the susceptibility of the society to subsistence crisis and famine that provides the context for an analysis of the background to and impact of the Great Famine – which was the single greatest and, arguably, the most formative episode of the era with which the course engages.

Assessment Breakdown
Continuous Assessment100% Examination Weight0%
Course Work Breakdown
TypeDescription% of totalAssessment Date
Reassessment Requirement Type
Resit arrangements are explained by the following categories:
Resit category 1: A resit is available for both* components of the module.
Resit category 2: No resit is available for a 100% continuous assessment module.
Resit category 3: No resit is available for the continuous assessment component where there is a continuous assessment and examination element.
* ‘Both’ is used in the context of the module having a Continuous Assessment/Examination split; where the module is 100% continuous assessment, there will also be a resit of the assessment
Resit category for this module is temporarily unavailable
Indicative Reading List

  • David Dickson: 2000, Ireland: new foundations, 1660-1800, Irish Academic Press, Dublin,
  • S.J. Connolly: 2008, Divided kingdom: Ireland 1630-1800, Oxford University Press, Oxford,
  • Ian McBride: 2009, Eighteenth-century Ireland: the isle of slaves, Gill and Macmillan, Dublin,
  • Donal McCartney: 2007, The dawning of democracy, 1800-1870, Helicon, Dublin,
  • Jane Ohlmeyer (ed): 2018, The Cambridge History of Ireland, volume 2, 1550-1730, Cambridge,
  • James Kelly (ed.): 2018, The Cambridge History of Ireland, volume 3, 1730-1880, Cambridge,
Other Resources

None

<< Back to Module List