John Patrick Montaño
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Cultivation, constructed environments, and cultural conflict
Plantations and the inner empire
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Tudor and Stuart officials in Ireland formulated a number of strategies for ordering, settling, and civilising Ireland. At the heart of nearly each one was the assumption that introducing agriculture and a cultivated landscape was the essential first step towards achieving their goal. Amidst the confiscations and Plantations there was a consistent effort made to transform the landscape and to create a contrived environment that emphasised human control over nature. The alteration of Irish land and the built environment in this period reveals an ideology of colonialism that can be read in the landscape and also the material culture that resulted. The need to replace one culture with another, to supplant a natural environment with an engineered one, an uncultivated landscape with a civilised, rational one, was to provide a focus, a battleground, even a language for the conflict associated with the policy of Plantation. Indeed, land was often at the centre of the violence in Ireland. This chapter will consider the constructed environment from fences, bridges, barns, houses, and forts as both signifiers of civility and as targeted markers of a colonial strategy characterised by dispossession and alterations to the land and material culture of Ireland.

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Inner empire

Architecture and Imperialism in the British Isles, 1550–1950

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