Acts of Union 1800

The Acts of Union 1800 (sometimes incorrectly referred to as a single 'Act of Union 1801') were parallel acts of the Parliament of Great Britain and the Parliament of Ireland which united the Kingdom of Great Britain and the Kingdom of Ireland (previously in personal union) to create the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. The acts came into force on 1 January 1801, and the merged Parliament of the United Kingdom had its first meeting on 22 January 1801.

Union with Ireland Act 1800
Parliament of Great Britain
Long titleAn Act for the Union of Great Britain and Ireland
Citation39 & 40 Geo. 3 c. 67
Dates
Royal assent2 July 1800
Commencement1 January 1801
Other legislation
Relates toGovernment of Ireland Act 1920
Irish Free State Constitution Act 1922
Irish Free State (Consequential Provisions) Act 1922
Ireland Act 1949
Northern Ireland Constitution Act 1973
Northern Ireland Act 1998
Status
Republic of IrelandRepealed by the Statute Law Revision Act, 1983
Northern IrelandStill in force with amendments
Revised text of statute as amended
Parliament of Ireland
Long titleAn Act for the Union of Great Britain and Ireland
Citation40 Geo. 3 c.38
Introduced byJohn Toler[1]
Dates
Royal assent1 August 1800
Commencement1 January 1801
Repealed24 November 1962
Other legislation
Repealed byStatute Law Revision (Pre-Union Irish Statutes) Act, 1962
Relates toGovernment of Ireland Act 1920
Irish Free State Constitution Act 1922
Constitution of Ireland
Republic of Ireland Act 1948
Status
Republic of IrelandRepealed by the Statute Law Revision (Pre-Union Irish Statutes) Act, 1962
Northern IrelandStill in force with amendments
Revised text of statute as amended

Both acts remain in force, with amendments and some Articles repealed, in the United Kingdom,[2] but have been repealed in their entirety in the Republic of Ireland[3] to whatever extent they might have been law in the new nation at all.

Name

Two acts were passed in 1800 with the same long title: An Act for the Union of Great Britain and Ireland. The short title of the act of the British Parliament is Union with Ireland Act 1800, assigned by the Short Titles Act 1896. The short title of the act of the Irish Parliament is Act of Union (Ireland) 1800, assigned by a 1951 act of the Parliament of Northern Ireland, and hence not effective in the Republic of Ireland, where it was referred to by its long title when repealed in 1962.

Background

Before these Acts, Ireland had been in personal union with England since 1541, when the Irish Parliament had passed the Crown of Ireland Act 1542, proclaiming King Henry VIII of England to be King of Ireland. Since the 12th century, the King of England had been technical overlord of the Lordship of Ireland, a papal possession. Both the Kingdoms of Ireland and England later came into personal union with that of Scotland upon the Union of the Crowns in 1603.

In 1707, the Kingdom of England and the Kingdom of Scotland were united into a single kingdom: the Kingdom of Great Britain. Upon that union, each House of the Parliament of Ireland passed a congratulatory address to Queen Anne, praying that, "May God put it in your royal heart to add greater strength and lustre to your crown, by a still more comprehensive Union".[4] The Irish Parliament was both before then subject to a certain restrictions that made it subordinate to the Parliament of England and after then, to the Parliament of Great Britain; however, Ireland gained effective legislative independence from Great Britain through the Constitution of 1782.

By this time access to institutional power in Ireland was restricted to a small minority: the Anglo-Irish of the Protestant Ascendancy. Frustration at the lack of reform among the Catholic majority eventually led, along with other reasons, to a rebellion in 1798, involving a French invasion of Ireland and the seeking of complete independence from Great Britain. This rebellion was crushed with much bloodshed, and the motion for union was motivated at least in part by the belief that the rebellion was exacerbated as much by brutally reactionary loyalists as by United Irishmen (anti-unionists).

Furthermore, Catholic emancipation was being discussed in Great Britain, and fears that a newly enfranchised Catholic majority would drastically change the character of the Irish government and parliament also contributed to a desire from London to merge the Parliaments.

According to historian James Stafford, an Enlightenement critique of Empire in Ireland laid the intellectual foundations for the Acts of Union. He writes that Enlightenment thinkers connected "the exclusion of the Irish Kingdom from free participation in imperial and European trade with the exclusion of its Catholic subjects, under the terms of the ‘Penal Laws’, from the benefits of property and political representation." These critiques were used to justify a parliamentary union between Britain and Ireland.[5]

Name Flag Population
Population
(%)
Area
(km²)
Area
(%)
Pop. density
(per km²)
Kingdom of Great Britain 10,500,000 65% 230,977 73% 45.46
Kingdom of Ireland 5,500,000 35% 84,421 27% 65.15
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 16,000,000 100% 315,093 100% 50.78

Passage

Complementary acts had to be passed in the Parliament of Great Britain and in the Parliament of Ireland.

The Parliament of Ireland had recently gained a large measure of legislative independence under the Constitution of 1782. Many members of the Irish Parliament jealously guarded that autonomy (notably Henry Grattan), and a motion for union was legally rejected in 1799. Only Anglicans were permitted to become members of the Parliament of Ireland though the great majority of the Irish population were Roman Catholic, with many Presbyterians in Ulster. In 1793 Roman Catholics regained the right to vote if they owned or rented property worth £2 annually. Wealthy Catholics were strongly in favour of union in the hope for rapid religious emancipation and the right to sit as MPs, which came to pass only well after the religiously divisive Napoleonic Wars, namely under the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829.

From the perspective of Great Britain's elites, the union was desirable because of the uncertainty that followed the French Revolution of 1789 and the Irish Rebellion of 1798. If Ireland adopted Catholic emancipation willingly or not, a Roman Catholic Parliament could break away from Britain and ally with the French, but the same measure within the United Kingdom would exclude that possibility. Also, in creating a regency during King George III's "madness", the Irish and British Parliaments gave the Prince Regent different powers. These considerations led Great Britain to decide to attempt the merger of both kingdoms and Parliaments.

The final passage of the Act in the Irish Commons turned on an about 16% relative majority, garnering 58% of the votes, and similar in the Irish Lords, in part per contemporary accounts through bribery with the awarding of peerages and honours to critics to get votes.[6] The first attempt had been defeated in the Irish House of Commons by 109 votes to 104, but the second vote in 1800 passed by 158 to 115.[6]

Provisions

The Acts of Union were two complementary Acts, namely:

  • The Union with Ireland Act 1800 (39 & 40 Geo. 3 c. 67),[7] an Act of the Parliament of Great Britain, and
  • The Act of Union (Ireland) 1800 (40 Geo. 3 c. 38),[8] an Act of the Parliament of Ireland.

They were passed on 2 July 1800 and 1 August 1800 respectively, and came into force on 1 January 1801. They ratified eight articles which had been previously agreed by the British and Irish parliaments:

  • Articles I–IV dealt with the political aspects of the Union. It created a united parliament.
    • In the House of Lords, the existing members of the Parliament of Great Britain were joined by, as Lords Spiritual, four bishops of the Church of Ireland, rotating among the dioceses in each session and as Lords Temporal 28 representative peers elected for life by the Peerage of Ireland.
    • The House of Commons was to include the pre-union representation from Great Britain and 100 members from Ireland.
  • Article V united the established Church of England and Church of Ireland into "one Protestant Episcopal Church, to be called, The United Church of England and Ireland"; but also confirmed the independence of the Church of Scotland.
  • Article VI created a customs union, with the exception that customs duties on certain British and Irish goods passing between the two countries would remain for 10 years (a consequence of having trade depressed by the ongoing war with revolutionary France). The High Court of Northern Ireland ruled that parts of this Article as it applied to the UK were "impliedly repealed" by the passage of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2020.[9][lower-alpha 1]
  • Article VII stated that Ireland would have to contribute two-seventeenths towards the expenditure of the United Kingdom. The figure was a ratio of Irish to British foreign trade.
  • Article VIII formalised the legal and judicial aspects of the Union.

Part of the attraction of the Union for many Irish Catholics was the promise of Catholic Emancipation, allowing Roman Catholic MPs, who had not been allowed in the Irish Parliament. This was however blocked by King George III who argued that emancipating Roman Catholics would breach his Coronation Oath, and was not realised until 1829.

The traditionally separate Irish Army, which had been funded by the Irish Parliament, was merged into the larger British Army.

The first parliament

In the first Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, the members of the House of Commons were not elected afresh. By royal proclamation authorised by the Act, all the members of the last House of Commons from Great Britain took seats in the new House, and from Ireland 100 members were chosen from the last Irish House of Commons: two members from each of the 32 counties and from the two largest boroughs, and one from each of the next 31 boroughs (chosen by lot) and from Dublin University. The other 84 Irish parliamentary boroughs were disfranchised; all were pocket boroughs, whose patrons received £15,000 compensation for the loss of what was considered their property.

Flags

Change in the Union Flag
Earlier Flag of Great Britain,
prior to the union with Ireland
The second Union Flag,
incorporating the Irish Saint Patrick's Saltire

The Union Flag, created as a consequence of the union of the Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland in 1800, still remains the flag of the United Kingdom. Called the Union Flag, it combined the flags of St George's Cross (which was deemed to include Wales) and the St Andrew's Saltire of Scotland with the St Patrick's Saltire to represent Ireland (it now represents Northern Ireland). At the same time, the moribund English claims to the French throne were given up, so the fleur-de-lis were removed from the Royal Standard of the United Kingdom.

References

  1. "Bill 4098: For the union of Great Britain and Ireland". Irish Legislation Database. Belfast: Queen's University. Archived from the original on 25 February 2015. Retrieved 28 April 2015.
  2. From legislation.gov.uk:
  3. From Irish Statute Book:
  4. Journals of the Irish Commons, vol. iii. p. 421
  5. Stafford, James (2022), "The Enlightenment Critique of Empire in Ireland, c. 1750–1776", The Case of Ireland: Commerce, Empire and the European Order, 1750–1848, Cambridge University Press, pp. 23–58, ISBN 978-1-009-03345-9
  6. Alan J. Ward, The Irish Constitutional Tradition p.28.
  7. "Union with Ireland Act 1800". No. (39 & 40 Geo. 3 c. 67) of 2 July 1800. Retrieved 6 September 2015. Archived 6 July 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  8. "Act of Union (Ireland) 1800". No. (40 Geo. 3 c. 38) of 1 August 1800. Retrieved 6 September 2015. Archived 17 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  9. "Brexit: NI Protocol is lawful, High Court rules". BBC News. 30 June 2021. Archived from the original on 30 June 2021. Retrieved 2 July 2021.
  10. Erwin, Alan (29 November 2021). "NI Protocol conflicts with Acts of Union, court told during legal challenge from unionists". Belfast Telegraph.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)

Sources

Primary
Secondary
  • Ward, Alan J. The Irish Constitutional Tradition: Responsible Government and Modern Ireland 1782–1992. Irish Academic Press, 1994.
  • Lalor, Brian (ed). The Encyclopaedia of Ireland. Gill & Macmillan, Dublin, Ireland, 2003. ISBN 978-0-7171-3000-9, p7

Further reading

  • Kelly, James. "The origins of the act of union: an examination of unionist opinion in Britain and Ireland, 1650-1800." Irish Historical Studies 25.99 (1987): 236–263.
  • Keogh, Dáire, and Kevin Whelan, eds. Acts of Union: The causes, contexts, and consequences of the Act of Union (Four Courts Press 2001).
  • McDowell, R. B. Ireland in the Age of Imperialism and Revolution, 1760-1801 (1991) pp 678–704.

Footnotes

  1. The Northern Ireland High Court ruling is currently under appeal [10]
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