The four counties of Carlow, Kilkenny, Queen’s and Wexford formed the south-east corner of Ireland, but their similarity was geographical rather than social or political in character. Each county represented a different stage in the history of English colonization in Ireland. County Wexford was the first part of Ireland to be conquered by Strongbow and the Anglo-Norman invaders of the twelfth century, and in the early seventeenth century remained divided between ‘the posterity of the ancient gentlemen, that were conquerors’ – the Old English Roches, Sinnotts, Fitzhenrys, Esmonds – and ‘the original people’, the Gaelic Irish Kavanaghs and Kinselaghs.
The experience of the four counties during the Irish rebellion of the 1640s also differed. The revolt in Queen’s County seems to have been spontaneous, provoked by the government’s continued refusal to allow the O’Moores and their allies any chance of regaining their ancestral lands.
The conquest of Ireland placed the four counties under military rule. From 1651-2 the region was divided into precincts, with military governors: Daniel Axtell* at Kilkenny, Thomas Sadleir* at Wexford and Henry Pretty at Carlow. Individual officers made substantial gains under the Cromwellian land settlement. In County Wexford the lands of the Esmonds and Sinnotts were granted to General George Monck* in 1654, and the county also satisfied the debentures of the Cromwellian soldiers, including those from the regiment of Edmund Ludlowe II*.
The importance of the soldiery in the land settlement was reflected in the returns for the protectorate Parliaments, when the four counties were combined to return two MPs in elections held at Carlow town.
The collapse of the protectorate in May 1659 brought the more radical army officers back into power in Ireland as well as England, and in December the Old Protestant officers seized Dublin in a sudden coup. The action in Dublin was co-ordinated with similar moves in the south east, where Colonel Edmund Temple seized Carlow from Colonel Pretty; Wexford, commanded by Colonel Solomon Richards, tried to remain neutral; while the commander of Kilkenny was ‘frighted out of his government’ by the Old Protestant officers.
Right of election: qualified landholders
Carlow, Kilkenny, Queen’s and Wexford counties combined to return two Members, 1654-9
Number of voters: at least 16 in 1654
