Irish people in Great Britain
Irish people in Great Britain or British Irish are immigrants from the island of Ireland living in Great Britain as well as their British-born descendants.
Irish migration to Great Britain has occurred from the earliest recorded history to the present. There has been a continuous movement of people between the islands of Ireland and Great Britain due to their proximity. This tide has ebbed and flowed in response to politics, economics and social conditions of both places.
Today, millions of residents of Great Britain are either from Ireland or are entitled to an Irish passport due to having a parent or grandparent who was born in Ireland. It is estimated that as many as six million people living in the UK have at least one Irish grandparent.
The Irish diaspora refers to Irish people and their descendants who live outside Ireland. This article refers to those who reside in Great Britain, the largest island and principal territory of the United Kingdom.
Migration eras
Medieval
After the end of Roman rule in Britain, significant Irish settlement of western Britain took place.The Déisi recorded as having founded the Gwynedd and Dyfed colonies, with contemporary Ogham inscriptions identifying the genealogies of the colonists, and later echoed in the 8th century, Old Irish work, The Expulsion of the Déisi.
Similarly, the traditional view is that Gaelic language and culture was brought to Scotland, probably in the 4th century, by settlers from Ireland, who founded the Gaelic kingdom of Dál Riata on Scotland's west coast. This is based mostly on medieval writings from the 9th and 10th centuries. However, recently some archeologists have argued against this view, saying that there is no archeological or placename evidence for a migration or a takeover by a small group of elites. Due to the growth of Dál Riata, in both size and influence, Scotland became almost wholly Gaelic-speaking. However, in the Lowlands – which had been the northernmost part of the Kingdom of Northumbria, the Northumbrian language remained dominant, and formed the basis of the Scots language. While Scots gradually became more and more widespread, Gaelic remained the dominant language of the Highlands into the 19th century.
Before and during the Gregorian mission of 596 AD, Irish Christians such as Columba, Buriana, Diuma, Ceollach, Saint Machar, Saint Cathan, Saint Blane, Jaruman, Wyllow, Kessog, St Govan, Donnán of Eigg, Foillan and Saint Fursey began the conversion of the English and Pictish peoples. Modwenna and others were significant in the following century.
Some English monarchs, such as Oswiu of Northumbria, Aldfrith and Harold Godwinson were either raised in or sought refuge in Ireland, as did Welsh rulers such as Gruffudd ap Cynan. Alfred the Great may have spent some of his childhood in Ireland.
In the year 902 Norsemen who had been forced out of Ireland were given permission by the English to settle in Wirral, in the north west of England. An Irish historical record known as "The Three Fragments" refers to a distinct group of settlers living among these Vikings as "Irishmen". Further evidence of this Irish migration to Wirral comes from the name of the village of Irby in Wirral, which means "settlement of the Irish", and St Bridget's church, which is known to have been founded by "Vikings from Ireland". The Irish of the 10th century may have settled as far afield as Northumbria and Lincolnshire, as place names such as Irby upon Humber, Ireleth and Irton mention the Irish as an ethnic group, while Goidelic personal names appear in some northern English place-names, including Duggleby, Fixby and Melmerby, and in a Viking-age Runic inscription from County Durham.
The island of Ireland was itself claimed as an Ecclesiastical fief, via the forged, mid 8th century, Donation of Constantine, with the feudal Lordship of Ireland later leased to Henry II of England and his heirs, by Pope Alexander III's, 1171 grant, resulting in the presence and settlement of Irish traders and seamen in English and Welsh ports, as well as the establishment of The Pale, on the island, the Irish settlers being subject to a poll tax, from 1440; in 1542, Henry VIII, following his excommunication, would have the Irish Parliament create the Kingdom, with himself elected as King. Subsequently through offering English titles, and ecclesiastical lands, in a surrender and regrant process, would offer Irish clan chiefs, property and political power, in England, as well as Ireland. In 1555, Pope Paul IV, would confirm the existence of the Irish Kingdom, and that it was to be held in personal union with the Kingdom of England, via a Papal bull. A personal Union that would later include the Kingdom of Scotland, and between 1707 and 1800, the politically united Kingdom of Great Britain. The Irish Parliament and Kingdom would be politically united with Great Britain as the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, between 1801 and 1922, through the Acts of Union 1800. Today, Ireland is divided between the independent Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland, a constituent of the United Kingdom.
Irish people who made Britain their home in the later medieval era included Aoife MacMurrough, Princess of Leinster, the poet Muireadhach Albanach, the lawyer William of Drogheada, Máel Muire Ó Lachtáin, Malachias Hibernicus, Gilbert Ó Tigernaig, Diarmait MacCairbre and Germyn Lynch, all of whom made successful lives in the various kingdoms of Britain.
16th to 18th centuries
Historically, Irish immigrants to the United Kingdom in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries were considered over-represented amongst those appearing in court. However, research suggests that policing strategy may have put immigrants at a disadvantage by targeting only the most public forms of crime, while locals were more likely able to engage in the types of crimes that could be conducted behind locked doors. An analysis of historical courtroom records suggests that despite higher rates of arrest, immigrants were not systematically disadvantaged by the British court system in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.Some notable people born in Ireland who settled in Great Britain between the 16th and 19th centuries:
- Richard Burke, 4th Earl of Clanricarde, died 1635
- Robert Boyle, FRS, died 1691
- Laetitia Pilkington, died 1750
- Richard Brinsley Sheridan
- George Monro, 1700–57
- Patrick Brontë, 1777–1861
- Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington
- Thomas Moore, died 1852
- Bram Stoker, author of Dracula
- Oliver Goldsmith, author of The Deserted Village
- Edmund Burke, politician, reformer, writer
- Mary Burns
- Robert Tressell, author of The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists
19th century
"Ireland constantly sends her own surplus to the English labour market, and thus forces down wages and lowers the material and moral position of the English working class... This antagonism is the secret of the impotence of the English working class, despite its organisation. It is the secret by which the capitalist class maintains its power. And the latter is quite aware of this."
Ireland's population fell from more than 8 million to just 6.5 million between 1841 and 1851. A century later it had dropped to 4.3 million. By the late 19th century, emigration was heaviest from Ireland's most rural southern and western counties. Cork, Kerry, Galway, Mayo, Sligo, Tipperary and Limerick alone provided nearly half of Ireland's emigrants. Some of this movement was temporary, made up of seasonal harvest labourers working in Britain and returning home for winter and spring.
Some notable people born in Ireland who settled in Great Britain in the 19th century:
- Michael William Balfe, opera composer
- Peter Boyle, footballer and manager
- Edward Ernest Bowen, footballer, cricketer and educator
- Louis Brennan, mechanical engineer who invented the Brennan Torpedo
- Mary Burns, activist and partner of revolutionary socialist Friedrich Engels
- Lawrence Bulger, rugby union player and doctor
- Simon Byrne, bare-knuckle boxer
- Alex Craig, footballer
- John Doherty, trade unionist
- John Henry Foley, sculptor
- Mary Josephine Hannan, first female medical doctor in Wales
- Mary Jane Kelly, suspected final victim of Jack the Ripper
- Arthur Leared, physician
- John McKenna, athlete, businessman and first manager of Liverpool F.C.
- Daniel Maclise, painter
- The Manchester Martyrs, Irish republicans William Philip Allen, Michael Larkin, and Michael O'Brien hanged in Manchester
- James Mullin, medical doctor, journalist and Irish republican activist
- James Bronterre O'Brien, Chartist leader, activist and journalist
- Tim O'Brien, baronet and cricketer
- T. P. O'Connor, Irish nationalist Member of Parliament for Liverpool Scotland
- Bram Stoker, theatre manager
- Oscar Wilde, playwright, novelist and poet