Poverty in Ireland
Jonathan Swift
Child labour
Ireland
Mercantilism
Low wages
Absentee landlords
Papist
Catholic
Protestant
Beggars in the Irish streets.
A type of Christian religion which was dominant in Ireland in Swift's time.
These were people who owned farmland in Ireland, but never visited there. They charged such large rents that they were starving the poor tenant farmers in Ireland.
A practice which is thought of as terrible in our time, but was considered responsible in Swift's day. It was a way for the children of the poor to be useful to society.
Literally, a follower of the Pope; a derogatory name for Catholics in Swift's time.
An island which, in Jonathan Swift's time had been controlled by the English for almost 500 years.
A type of Christian religion which split off from Catholicism in the 1500s. In Swift's time, Protestants were in power in England.
A situation caused by land reforms which allowed the land-owners to use farm land more efficiently, thus requiring fewer people working on the farms. They ended up in the cities, begging and starving.
An economic belief that the purpose of good government is to protect trade, and that doing so is much more important than the rights of workers and poor people.
Something that was considered a very good idea in Swift's time, and beneficial to the economy. The opposite of this, it was thought, would make workers lazy.
A condition which occurred primarily because of English ownership of Irish lands.
A writer born in Ireland in 1667, known primarily for his satirical narrative Gulliver's Travels.