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| ==Links== | | ==Links== |
| *[https://www.irishpalatines.org Irish Palatine Association] | | *[https://www.irishpalatines.org Irish Palatine Association] |
− | *[https:// www.pfalzgeschichte.de/english Institute for Palatinate History and Folklife Studies] | + | *[https://www.pfalzgeschichte.de/english Institute for Palatinate History and Folklife Studies] |
Version vom 13. Mai 2014, 20:11 Uhr
First representation of the Palatines‘ emigration in 1709. Source: Memorabilia A°.MDCCIX, in Denckwürdige Kriegs- und Friedens-Begebenheiten des 18ten Jahrhunderts … in Jährlichen Kupffer-Blättern. Vorgestellt durch Christoph Weigeln, Kupferstechern und Kunsthändlern in Nürnberg. Anno 1722. © Institut für pfälzische Geschichte und Volkskunde
In the early 18th century, thousands of German Protestants fled as refugees from the Lower Palatinate and hundreds settled in Ireland.
In May 1709, many desperate inhabitants of Palatinate, Hesse and Baden were forced off their land by the vicious wars between France and a confederacy that included England; bad harvests and a terrible winter didn’t help either. They were shipped initially to London. Over 800 families, comprising more than 3000 people, were sent on to Ireland between September 1709 and January 1710. Most left again within a few years, for England or America, but 150 families settled in Rathkeale, County Limerick and thrived in the production of hemp, flax and cattle.
Home of Richard Shier, Rienroe, Adare, Co. Limerick © Irish Palatine Association
A second successful settlement of Palatine families took hold near Gorey in Co. Wexford around the same period. The distinctive Palatine way of life endured in these areas until well into the 19th century. Many adopted Methodism: one Irish Palatine, Barbara Heck is known as “the mother of American Methodism”. Evidence of their eventual absorption into Irish life is the geographical spread of their distinctive names such as Switzer, Wyse, Ruttle, Teskey and Shouldice. One of the best-known Irish traditional love songs is called The Palatine’s Daughter.
Fintan O’Toole
The Irish Palatine Heritage Centre in Rathkeale, Co. Limerick © Irish Palatine Association