Between 1169 and around 1240, large parts of Ireland
were occupied by members of an Anglo-Norman upper class, which had already
advanced into Wales and
which was still engaged in acquiring land in Scotland. In their wake came
peasants, craftsmen, and traders, to settle mainly in the lowlands of the south
and east. English law and forms of government were also transplanted, as the
Plantagenet kings asserted their authority, turning Ireland into a lordship where they
could reward those around them with lands and rights, and from which they
expected financial returns and support in their wars. No part of the island was
unaffected by the military and political activities of the Anglo-Normans, who
upset existing power-structures and faced Irish rulers with complex pressures
and choices. This book examines the processes of conquest and colonization,
against the background of economic expansion and seigneurial enterprise
apparent elsewhere in Britain
and Europe. It also explores the nature and
extent of colonial retreat, and the political and cultural adjustments that
were evident amid the less favorable conditions of the 14th century. The book,
originally published in 1981, has been revised and expanded for the present
edition and also contains a guide to more recent work.