The county of Cork, in the south west of Ireland, was one of the most fertile and populous in the province of Munster. Three major rivers (the Lee, Bandon and Blackwater) watered the county, and where they met the Atlantic they formed three harbours, where Cork City and the towns of Kinsale and Youghal were situated. These ports enjoyed commercial prosperity in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, exporting fish, timber, cloth, beef, iron and other local commodities. County Cork was also the main area of Protestant plantation in the wake of the Desmond rebellion under Elizabeth I, when men such as Sir Walter Raleigh† were granted vast acreages in the north and south of the county. The rebellion of the remaining Munster Catholics during the Nine Years’ War destroyed the first plantation between 1598 and 1601, and the plantation as it stood in 1641 was essentially a Jacobean creation.
Yet before 1641 the Protestant settlers in County Cork, as elsewhere, were far from united. Various feuds had grown up during the previous decades, fuelled by the rapacious activities of ambitious men such as the 1st earl of Cork (Sir Richard Boyle), and exacerbated further by the harsh measures introduced by Lord Deputy Wentworth (Sir Thomas Wentworth†) after 1633. The ramifications could be far-reaching. By the end of the decade, for example, there was much bad blood between the earl of Cork and the Lord President, Sir William St Leger. This feud was passed down to Cork’s son, Lord Broghill (Roger Boyle*), and St Leger’s son-in-law, Lord Inchiquin; and throughout the 1640s divisions between the two factions seriously hampered attempts by the Munster Protestants to unite against the Catholic rebels. In 1646 and 1647 the rift became a chasm, as each side turned for support to English parliamentary factions. The defection of Inchiquin to the royalist camp in 1648 caused further fragmentation among the Old Protestants. Morale was already at a low ebb when Oliver Cromwell* arrived in Ireland in 1649, with Broghill in tow. Broghill was instrumental in delivering the County Cork towns into Parliament’s hands without bloodshed, and thereafter he enjoyed good relations with the new lord lieutenant. The combination of national political influence and local landed power allowed the Boyles to dominate county affairs, and this promoted a new unity among the Old Protestants. Former rivals of the Boyles, such as Vincent Gookin* and William Jephson*, who had also sided the Cromwellian regime in the early 1650s, were elected for Cork boroughs in 1654 and 1656 on the Boyle interest. The Boyle interest was very much in evidence in the local assessment commissions in the mid-1650s, and by 1658 the commission of the peace was mostly dominated by Old Protestants, many of whom were Boyle clients.
Following Charles Fleetwood’s* proposals of June 1654, County Cork was allowed to return one knight of the shire to the first protectorate Parliament.
Right of election: qualified landholders.
Number of Electors: at least 25 in 1654
