The 1798 Rising
The Society of United Irishmen was founded in Belfast in 1791. Its
inspiration was a young Dublin lawyer, Theobald Wolfe Tone, who was invited to
Ulster after publishing a pamphlet entitled "An argument on behalf of the
Catholics of Ireland". Northern Presbyterians also suffered from religious
discrimination, though less severely, and had absorbed republican ideas from
the American and French revolutions. With the formation of a Dublin society,
pressure for reform grew, and relief acts were passed in 1792 and 1793.
However, Tone sought revolution rather than reform, and hoped for French help
in severing the link with Great Britain. After Britain and France went to war
in 1793, the United Irishmen came under increasing pressure from the
government. Tone chose exile in America in preference to being prosecuted for
treason, and the United Irishmen evolved into a secret society bound by
revolutionary oaths.
Returning to Europe in 1796, Tone persuaded the French to invade
Ireland, but bad weather prevented a landing. Despite this setback, the United
Irishmen continued to recruit members, particularly among disaffected Catholic
peasants. Meanwhile, the government had passed an act providing for harsh
measures against those who held illegal arms or administered illegal oaths. An
army under General Lake conducted an oppressive campaign to disarm Ulster, seen
as the most dangerous province. The government had many informers among the
United Irishmen, and in March 1798 most of the Leinster leaders were arrested
in Dublin. The only leader of the United Inshmen with military experience, Lord
Edward Fitzgerald, was captured on 19 May, four days before the date fixed for
the rising.
Apart from some short-lived but bloody skirmishes in towns and
villages west of Dublin, the rising was confined to the northern counties of
Antrim and Down, and to County Wexford. The Wexford rising, which began on 26
May, was a spontaneous and frightened response to the cruel measures of
magistrates searching for arms and conspirators, but the rebels in turn
committed acts of great savagery.