Dublin was the most important economic centre in Ireland, as well as being the seat of government and the home of the law courts, two cathedrals and Ireland’s only university. In the first four decades of the seventeenth century Dublin’s population grew four-fold, reaching perhaps 20,000 by the outbreak of the Irish rebellion in 1641. At the same time, the city’s trade was booming, raising 41 per cent of the national customs revenue in 1634-40.
The outbreak of the Irish rebellion in October 1641 drew the government and the city authorities still closer together. Dublin was crucial as a government stronghold and a rich source of loans which became vital to the survival of the Protestant interest. In the early 1640s Dublin hosted five regiments of foot and as many as seven troops of horse – over 6,000 men in all.
Michael Jones was an Old Protestant by birth, and his approach to ruling Dublin was relatively benign. He was willing to work with senior aldermen, and by September 1647 it was said that ‘all is done as Colonel Jones, the Recorder Bysse and Thomas Tallis advise’; former royalists were tolerated unless suspected of disloyalty; and although the Prayer Book had been officially banned, the Church of Ireland ministers continued to serve without molestation.
Jones’s victory over Ormond at Rathmines in August 1649, and the arrival of the army of Oliver Cromwell* shortly afterwards, brought Dublin’s deprivations to end, but the presence of large numbers of soldiers caused new difficulties, not least an outbreak of plague in the following year, which, at its height, was killing 1,300 people every week. In 1651 Dublin was described as ‘exceedingly depopulated’ with as many as half the houses lying in ruins, and even in the mid-1650s the assessment levied on the city, amounting £690 a month, was far less than might have been expected.
The strength of the Independent clique was demonstrated by the election of Daniel Hutchinson as MP for Dublin on 2 August 1654.
The power of the Dublin Independents had broken down by 1658, when Winter and others rejected Henry Cromwell’s calls for religious unity. The elections for the 1659 Parliament marked a radical change of direction, with the return of the closet royalist, Arthur Annesley, subverting the usual convention of electing a member of the corporation. Annesley, who had leased property in the borough since 1657, seems to have been a popular, as well as a politic, choice: in December 1658, shortly after his return, the ‘commons’ of Dublin petitioned the corporation to pay £100 to cover Annesley’s costs at Westminster, and this was agreed by the corporation.
Right of election: mayor, aldermen and citizens.
