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* RM, Great Famine (Ireland) → Great Irish Famine (or Irish Potato Famine), '''No consensus for move''', 5 April 2019, ]
* RM, Great Famine (Ireland) → The Great Hunger, '''No consensus for move''', 2 March 2010, ]
* RM, Great Famine (Ireland) → Irish Potato Famine, '''No consensus for move''', 4 July 2008, ]
* RM, The Great Hunger → Great Famine (Ireland), '''Move following lengthy consensus discussion''', 1 July 2008‎, ]
* RM, Irish Potato Famine → The Great Hunger, '''Move following discussion''', 30 May 2008, ]
* ''(At least and ] between late 2007 and mid 2008)''
* RM, Great Irish Famine → The Great Hunger, '''Move following discussion''', 20 December 2007‎, ]
* ''(Multiple other ] and prior to December 2007)''
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== No Historians take Genocide Seriously ==
* RM, Great Famine (Ireland) → Great Irish Famine (or Irish Potato Famine), '''No consensus for move''', 5 April 2019, ]
I was reading an article that reexamined the intentionality of the famine by the british authorities and it made me think about this wikipedia article, which makes it seem like no scholars consider the Irish Famine a genocide. I won't pretend I am not biased after reading this article, so looking for feedback on these thoughts. I am thinking at the very least we can add some qualifying words to make the debate seem less conclusive in one direction with no active scholarly discussion. https://brill.com/display/book/9781904710820/BP000013.xml#:~:text=By%201849%2C%20the%20forcible%20displacement,genocide%20against%20the%20Irish%20people. ] (]) 05:23, 14 October 2023 (UTC)
* RM, Great Famine (Ireland) → The Great Hunger, '''No consensus for move''', 2 March 2010, ]
: We can certainly debate how the article might best reflect the scholarly discussions. It is quite clear that *few* but not *no* historians see genocide as a key factor, but how this is presented can be explored - but here, before editing the body, as this is a very controversial matter. We can disregard the point that genocide was not a defined crime at the time, as the meaning of the term is clear, and genocides certainly occurred over thousands of years. So the question is whether British government actions rose to the needed level - in particular, was there intent to kill massive numbers of people. Sources may be offered, but I've read many books touching on or including this topic, and to me, the evidence just does not seem to be there - many officials did not like the Irish, despised poor people in any part of the UK, disapproved of large families, etc., and there was an imbalance of population to resources more severe on the island of Ireland vs. the island of Britain. And their behaviour was, especially by modern standards, despicable and heartless, the failure to even make a gesture towards redirecting exports wrongheaded, stupid and partly lethal, and the results awful with few equals as to percentage of population impacted by a single disaster - and there were years to do better, so many missed opportunities. But did someone somewhere sit down and plot to spread blight, or to take advantage if a blight came...? this is not evidenced anywhere I have seen. But let the debate continue... ] (]) 09:43, 14 October 2023 (UTC)
* RM, Great Famine (Ireland) → Irish Potato Famine, '''No consensus for move''', 4 July 2008, ]
: To clarify a point - the exports are described as "partly lethal" because it is a reported fact that some of what was exported was not in much demand in Ireland, in the same way that a country surrounded by fish-rich seas did not gain significant cover from, say, a massive fishing drive. But it is equally factual that some of the exports could usefully have been held, and past governments had done so in times of want - and some could have been exchanged for more useful supplies, rather than the near-useless maize that was imported, as per the text. Part of the problem is that European governments in that period were small organisations, and lacked technical expertise in matters seen as relevant to private enterprise - agriculture-rich Ireland had no relevant government department until the early 20th century, for example. ] (]) 09:55, 14 October 2023 (UTC)
* RM, The Great Hunger → Great Famine (Ireland), '''Move following lengthy consensus discussion''', 1 July 2008‎, ]
::The article in question appears to have been written by this person. If so no further discussion is needed. Not an historian.
* RM, Irish Potato Famine → The Great Hunger, '''Move following discussion''', 30 May 2008, ]
::https://www.linkedin.com/in/neysa-king ] (]) 03:58, 25 October 2023 (UTC)
* ''(At least and ] between late 2007 and mid 2008)''
:::They have a degree in history and it is a published peer reviewed source though. ] (]) 18:23, 26 October 2023 (UTC)
* RM, Great Irish Famine → The Great Hunger, '''Move following discussion''', 20 December 2007‎, ]
::A reading of the great famine wikipedia talks about government officials treating the famine lightly or as providence due to its furthering of governmental goals. Is not the neglect and furtherance of stealing of irish wealth a continued stated english policy, and enough to call this genocide. They may have made excuses in their minds and not called for death explicitly, but it is clear implicitly the policy of the government facilitates the famine, and is thus, I would argue, genocide. ] (]) 18:30, 26 October 2023 (UTC)
* ''(Multiple other ] and prior to December 2007)''
:::Then you are a fool. Ignorance and indifference does not equal malevolence. There has to be an intent to destroy, of which there is no evidence. ] (]) 20:40, 29 November 2023 (UTC)
}}
::::Speak in terms where we can actually improve the article with a scholarly leg to stand on, or go away. ]] 20:45, 29 November 2023 (UTC)
:I empathize, but Misplaced Pages is expressly limited in that it follows sources. Also, personally, the question of whether xyz terrible artificial event particularly constitutes genocide seems to me to be a distinction without a difference, or a thought-terminating exercise: the word means something, but it does not mean everything, and I do not understand how the 'seriousness' a given topic is treated can be boiled down to whether a very specific word is usually used to describe it, especially a word created in a modern context being projected backwards onto historical events (which of course, is what history is) ]] 18:37, 26 October 2023 (UTC)

== The Popery Act ==

Currently the article states that “The Popery Act (Penal Law) of 1704 required that a tenant's land be divided equally between his sons upon his death.”

It didn’t. It required Catholic land owners to split their inheritance between their Catholic sons if they didn’t have a Protestant son.

If I correct the statement it’s then making an erroneous argument about the land splitting that went on.

I’ll delete it. ] (]) 22:33, 8 January 2024 (UTC)

== Imported Grain Used As Livestock Feed ==

These edits added the claim.

https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?diff=887787383


https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?diff=1170685821
== Reference to laissez-faire capitalism ==


This claim seems to be completely unsupported by the given sources or the literature. ] (]) 03:11, 9 January 2024 (UTC)
It's highly irresponsible to cite laissez-faire capitalism as a cause of the irish famine. There was nothing laissez-faire capitalist about ireland in 1849 at all. You could just as inaccurately try blaming it on socialism by saying it was caused by a government regulated control of what people grow ] (]) 23:37, 30 December 2021 (UTC)
* No, it's entirely valid. Feeding the Irish Poor was seen as Government Intervention by the members and employees of the British Government, so meaningful food relief programs were shut down. Also the government did not mandate that potatoes be grown.--] (]) 07:28, 17 January 2022 (UTC)
*:Suggest changing "From 1846, the impact of the blight was exacerbated by the British Whig government's economic policy of laissez-faire capitalism." to "Economists disagree about whether laissez-faire or protectionist economic policies under the British Whig government were to blame for the declining situation after 1848." Reason: renowned economists from Milton Friedman to Thomas Sowell disagree that laissez-faire policies were to blame. Misplaced Pages should impartially reflect the disagreement rather than choosing a side. ] (]) 15:52, 3 June 2022 (UTC)
:::Historians agree that the British Whig government's laissez-faire policies exacerbated the famine's lethality, whereas as the previous Tory government's intervention had some benefits. The libertarian economists who contradict this are non-experts who are covered by ]. It would be like introducing Maoist interpretation of the Great Leap Forward into that article. There should be no change in this regard. ] (]) 06:25, 14 September 2022 (UTC)
::::Laissez-faire often translates to the ]. Taking no action to correct visible problems, because you do not feel responsible for the situation or because you expect someone else to act instead. It is a recipe for disaster. ] (]) 09:02, 15 September 2022 (UTC)
The Poor Law tax was introduced in Ireland in 1838, the late 1840s this tax went up and op - especially after the Russell government passed legislation forcing areas of Ireland that were not dependent on the potato to pay for areas (for bankrupt Poor Law Unions) that were were dependent on the potato. A policy of higher and higher taxation, and the "roads to nowhere" and other schemes of Sir Charles Trevelyan, can not honestly be described as "laissez faire".] (]) 13:06, 13 January 2023 (UTC)


== "genocide" ==
== Journalist who writes about cooking and drug taking used as a source for Irish history ==


In the genocide section, there is a statement claiming that a non-scholarly "assessment" by two law professors who argued that the Irish Famine was a genocide in order to reshape a history curriculum in New Jersey has been "'''supported by various later genocide scholars'''," and it then links to one chapter, in one book, by one scholar, Neysa King. Considering this same source has been used to include a section on the Irish Famine in the main article for genocide, there seems to be a deliberate effort to elevate a theory that's got little scholarly backing (and, as we will soon learn, even this is a generous description of how this theory's been received by professional historians).
Later today when the WP:1RR expires I will delete this edit


When this issue was previously raised on this page, user 'SeoR' made the following statement which I think is a good basis to start a discussion:
https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Great_Famine_(Ireland)&diff=1121561130&oldid=1120462309


''"It is quite clear '''that *few* but not *no* historians see genocide as a key factor''', but how this is presented can be explored.."''''
] is not an historian and should not be used as a source for historical facts.


So, expanding on this point, let's revisit two of the rules we're expected to honor when we edit this encyclopedia:
] (]) 09:15, 14 November 2022 (UTC)


* An acknowledgement that Misplaced Pages is a '''mainstream encyclopedia''', and not a laboratory for testing novel ideas.
:Okay, but is this a fact or not? Should we just have a different citation included instead of removing the info completely? ] (]) 11:44, 14 November 2022 (UTC)
::Not really - the ] began in the 1550s and the largest, the ] in c 1606, all decades before Cromwell, and the settlers were at least as often Scottish as English (then two different countries). Phrased as is, it should stay out. ] (]) 15:10, 14 November 2022 (UTC)
::To be fair, ] has been a prof for several years, and was always more an author, often on gardening, than a typical journalist. And his interest in food is more on eating and its history than on "cooking" - not many recipes. But he is not a historian; his degrees are in Eng lit. ] (]) 17:16, 14 November 2022 (UTC)
:Removed - the issue is better covered elsewhere in the article. ] (]) 17:25, 14 November 2022 (UTC)


* That it is not enough to demonstrate that '''some minority ''' of scholars hold a view, but rather that the minority view is significant.
== Jeremy Rifkin and Beyond Beef ==


Now let's look at how the source in question opens the chapter:
This edit https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Great_Famine_%28Ireland%29&diff=prev&oldid=132033484


''"Today, '''Irish and British historians categorically reject''' the notion that British actions during the Great Irish Potato Famine (1845-1849) amounted to genocide."''
Inserted a quote from ''Beyond Beef'' by ]


So, the first sentence in this chapter acknowledges that the theory is not just rejected by academics, but "categorically" so.
Multiple issues.
# He's not a historian. His work in other areas has been criticised ] as shoddy and "anti-intellectual propaganda masquerading as scholarship".
# This book appears to be a polemic about the eating of beef.
# It claims that "Eventually, cows took over much of Ireland,..." Really? Perhaps '''after''' the famine with the repeal of the Corn Laws and the higher wages to labourers.
# This article for the British Agricultural History Society https://www.bahs.org.uk/AGHR/ARTICLES/38n2a5.pdf disputes the claim. CORMAC O GRADA "Between the Union and the famine, the Corn Laws benefited Irish landlords and farmers, and encouraged tillage. The proportion of output due to grain and potatoes was probably as high in 1840-5 as it ever had been." O Grada then discusses differing views and the lack of evidence and then finishes with "The famine quickly convinced proprietors and farmers that the days of tillage were over. Both Corn Law repeal and the rise in real wages in the wake of the famine forced a switch away from grain." Which sounds like the opposite of Rifkin's claims.


Another source I'd add is Mark McGowan's piece in the journal Genocide Studies International:
I'm going to delete it.


''"The fact that '''virtually all historians of Ireland''' have reached a verdict that eschews position, be they Irish-born scholars from Britain, North America or Australasia, has weakened the traditional populist account."''
] (]) 22:21, 14 November 2022 (UTC)


So, language like "categorically reject" and "virtually all historians" tells us exactly how the information should be presented: as a fringe perspective that's only mentioned insofar as we are telling readers it's a theory that's been widely rejected by the mainstream of Irish academic history.
== Charity section quotes from O’Brien and Mitchel ==


Discuss. ] (]) 21:34, 28 July 2024 (UTC)
Both quotes were added in a single commit.
*The King source is a conference proceedings book; the article is short and doesn't cite much, and the presentation was by someone who may have gotten a Master's degree but does not work (and publish) in academia. ] (]) 22:04, 28 July 2024 (UTC)
**Which raises even more questions.. ] (]) 00:30, 29 July 2024 (UTC)
***Sure, but that's not necessarily for here. One question I have is who added that. Another is what all this says about Brill, and that's even sadder. ] (]) 15:05, 29 July 2024 (UTC)
***:Probably the same person who went into the article on ] and added the same content into a Great Famine section which shouldn't even be there. This is very simple: the view that the GF was a genocide is fringe and should never be mentioned on here except to say that it's a fringe pov pushed mainly by people who don't have the relevant background in economic, social or political history for the period in question. The endless iterations of John Mitchel's polemic about "food exports" is case in point. ] (]) 19:47, 29 July 2024 (UTC)


== Overlong lead ==
https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Great_Famine_%28Ireland%29&diff=prev&oldid=169227551
I agree that the lead is far too long but the recently reverted quote from a future PM actually supported the prior, unreferenced sentence - "Additionally, the famine indirectly resulted in tens of thousands of households being evicted, exacerbated by a provision forbidding access to workhouse aid while in possession of more than one-quarter acre of land." The subject of the reverted quote is found in several statistics in the Eviction section.
Because this very strong quote was made near the beginning of the disaster and was made by the future Prime Minister I thought its placement in the lead section was appropriate. I believe the quote belongs somewhere in this very long article, either in the Lead or the Eviction section.] (]) 14:19, 20 October 2024 (UTC)
:Then put it in the Evictions section, since the objection was to the length of the lead and to the inclusion of material in the lead that is not in the article body. ] (]) 15:24, 20 October 2024 (UTC)
::Go to talk prior to revert. ] (]) 22:43, 20 October 2024 (UTC)
:::I don't understand why you've written this comment because we've both followed the ] and neither of us has broken the 1 revert per 24 hours editing restriction on this article. It is also obvious that I'm not going to revert an edit that I have already agreed to. It is also obvious that I'm not going to revert an edit that occurred 6 hours before you made this comment at a time when I was clearly active on wikipedia. Consequently, it looks like an unnecessarily offensive and aggressive demand that is designed to insult and provoke. I will therefore not obey it and I will revert whenever and wherever it is reasonable and justifiable to do so. ] (]) 17:00, 21 October 2024 (UTC)


== Genocide section ==
I will be removing them for the following reasons.
#Neither provides answers to what happened or why it happened.
#The O'Brien quote is from well before the blight struck (therefore irrelevant) and the Michel quote appears to be a polemic. I doubt that either reflects the views of the Irish labourers who starved.
#The article is already too long and needs added information - deleting these will make space.
#The article as is forces the reader to read the views of two politicians before they get to the 'meat' of the article.


Please note that the editor Cdjp1 has added controversial content to the genocide section today. This issue is currently in dispute resolution and these additions should probably be reverted until it's resolved. ] (]) 23:22, 11 November 2024 (UTC)
] (]) 23:16, 16 November 2022 (UTC)


:This is a mischaracterisation of how you have framed your arguments in the Genocides in History (before World War 1) talk page and the DR discussion. You have maintained your issue is the great famine's inclusion in that article, and you even suggested that any information from the scholars present in that article should instead appear in the relevant section in this article. -- ] (]) 14:00, 12 November 2024 (UTC)
== Man-made famine? ==
::What I had tried to say was, any discussion of genocide theories belongs in this article in the relevant section, but that the Great Famine should not be listed in an article about pre-WW1 genocides considering scholars don't believe it was a genocide. I also said that this article covers the genocide controversy rather well (and never said I thought the section needed to be expanded). I also don't think scholars who have backgrounds in famines in other countries and continents are authoritative on this subject. All scholars that study famines agree that every famine is political -that hunger can happen naturally but when it rises to the level of famine there's politics involved. But that also highlights why the most reliable sources on the Irish Famine are historians with some expertise in British/Irish political history. As far as Robbie McVeigh goes -he only ever writes about Ireland from one colonial perspective, and we have to wonder why his opinion is so at odds with the mainstream. ] (]) 19:17, 12 November 2024 (UTC)
In the short descriptions of the ] and the ], the famines are described as "man-made", yet in this article, the short description does not use that adjective. But this article does seem to suggest that, at least in some part, the famine was man-made. What are the thoughts of the editors here on the short description here having the "man-made" descriptor added, or the introduction having a line similar to ] that says "Some scholars characterise the famine as anthropogenic (man-made), asserting that wartime colonial policies exacerbated the crisis. Others argue that the famine was the result of natural causes." It seems like that would be a good summary of how scholars debate to what extent the Great Famine in Ireland was exacerbated (or mitigated) by the British government. Please share your thoughts. ] (]) 23:33, 9 February 2023 (UTC)
: We don't decide the question of whether the famine was any particular thing, we are encyclopedists and can only work from sources. To include such a descriptor, we would need a substantial supporting body of knowledge. The Holodomor and other Soviet famines were caused very directly by deliberate and / or insane actions (some based on spurious "biological" theories, some about political ideas / class and industry reorganisation concepts). Now, there is no doubt that the famine in Ireland was caused by natural events (the spread of a disease), and while there is equally no doubt that its effects were grounded on a dangerous level of accumulated crop dependence, and grossly exacerbated and prolonged by policies we would now call "heartless" or worse - on the face of it, "man-made" looks a stretch. "Man-exacerbated", perhaps, but is there a scholarly source for that? ] (]) 00:17, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
::Agreed, except that calling it "man-made" would be wrong and misleading. I think the Bengal line you quote is rather dubious too. Think of the recent earthquake in Turkey & Syria. Clearly a natural disaster, but many deaths will result from inadequate rescue & relief work afterwards. That doesn't mean it should be called "man-made". In fact the loss of life from the great majority of really big natural disaters is increased by "inadequate" government intervention afterwards. ] (]) 02:00, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
::Have you read the article? It makes it clear that the British government played a large role in the famine. You also mention that the Holodomor was "caused very directly by deliberate and / or insane actions (some based on spurious "biological" theories, some about political ideas / class and industry reorganisation concepts)" This fits the Irish famine perfectly. Many British government officials and intellectuals at the time believed in Malthus's ideas and thought that Ireland was overpopulated, so the famine killing people was bringing balance in their view. This was combined with their belief in the racial inferiority of the Irish people that causes them to produce too many children. That sounds like a spurious "biological" theory to me! This is detailed in the ] section of the article, which could use some expansion. And another part of the article specifically quotes historian Mark Tauger that states that the circumstances of this Great Famine and the Holodomor are similar. ] (]) 18:43, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
:::Short descriptions should be short and simple. They're not the right place for the discussion of spurious theories. ] (]) 19:04, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
::::Who asked for a "discussion of spurious theories"? I'm asking for a short description that is in line with the actual content of the article which discusses how it was man-made. ] (]) 04:31, 11 February 2023 (UTC)
:::::No, it doesn't really. The article is rightly clear that the "proximate" (as it puts it) cause was a plant disease. Yet you want to completely ignore that in the short description? No. ] (]) 04:57, 11 February 2023 (UTC)
::::::The proximate cause is a plant disease... ok but plant diseases happen. Crop failures happen. But those don't necessarily mean '''famine'''. The reason why it became a '''famine''' is because of the British system created where many Irish people were depending on one, single crop, namely the potato. If I eat from a variety of vegetables, a plant disease affecting one of them will negatively impact me, but proportionately. If there's a government policy forcing me to ONLY grow the one crop that is impacted by plant disease, that's when famines happen. Again, I encourage you to read the article, where this is all detailed. Without human (government) intervention, the famine would not have happened, thus, it is man-made, and this is detailed in this article as it currently exists. If you have a problem with the way the current article describes this, feel free to provide sources and suggest changes to be made. My proposal is simply for the short description to be representative of the article. ] (]) 16:14, 11 February 2023 (UTC)
:::::::No. Short descriptions should be short and simple. They're not the place for complex issues or statements that require detailed explanations or countering arguments. ] (]) 16:54, 11 February 2023 (UTC)
::::::::At the start of this section, I pointed out that other articles clearly find it useful to include "man-made" in their short descriptions, so what you just said is clearly false, unless you're of the opinion that "man-made" should be removed from the short descriptions of those other articles too. ] (]) 18:45, 24 February 2023 (UTC)

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No Historians take Genocide Seriously

I was reading an article that reexamined the intentionality of the famine by the british authorities and it made me think about this wikipedia article, which makes it seem like no scholars consider the Irish Famine a genocide. I won't pretend I am not biased after reading this article, so looking for feedback on these thoughts. I am thinking at the very least we can add some qualifying words to make the debate seem less conclusive in one direction with no active scholarly discussion. https://brill.com/display/book/9781904710820/BP000013.xml#:~:text=By%201849%2C%20the%20forcible%20displacement,genocide%20against%20the%20Irish%20people. 2600:1700:5650:3EB0:45E4:C2CA:7216:ACDB (talk) 05:23, 14 October 2023 (UTC)

We can certainly debate how the article might best reflect the scholarly discussions. It is quite clear that *few* but not *no* historians see genocide as a key factor, but how this is presented can be explored - but here, before editing the body, as this is a very controversial matter. We can disregard the point that genocide was not a defined crime at the time, as the meaning of the term is clear, and genocides certainly occurred over thousands of years. So the question is whether British government actions rose to the needed level - in particular, was there intent to kill massive numbers of people. Sources may be offered, but I've read many books touching on or including this topic, and to me, the evidence just does not seem to be there - many officials did not like the Irish, despised poor people in any part of the UK, disapproved of large families, etc., and there was an imbalance of population to resources more severe on the island of Ireland vs. the island of Britain. And their behaviour was, especially by modern standards, despicable and heartless, the failure to even make a gesture towards redirecting exports wrongheaded, stupid and partly lethal, and the results awful with few equals as to percentage of population impacted by a single disaster - and there were years to do better, so many missed opportunities. But did someone somewhere sit down and plot to spread blight, or to take advantage if a blight came...? this is not evidenced anywhere I have seen. But let the debate continue... SeoR (talk) 09:43, 14 October 2023 (UTC)
To clarify a point - the exports are described as "partly lethal" because it is a reported fact that some of what was exported was not in much demand in Ireland, in the same way that a country surrounded by fish-rich seas did not gain significant cover from, say, a massive fishing drive. But it is equally factual that some of the exports could usefully have been held, and past governments had done so in times of want - and some could have been exchanged for more useful supplies, rather than the near-useless maize that was imported, as per the text. Part of the problem is that European governments in that period were small organisations, and lacked technical expertise in matters seen as relevant to private enterprise - agriculture-rich Ireland had no relevant government department until the early 20th century, for example. SeoR (talk) 09:55, 14 October 2023 (UTC)
The article in question appears to have been written by this person. If so no further discussion is needed. Not an historian.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/neysa-king Cheezypeaz (talk) 03:58, 25 October 2023 (UTC)
They have a degree in history and it is a published peer reviewed source though. 204.14.36.137 (talk) 18:23, 26 October 2023 (UTC)
A reading of the great famine wikipedia talks about government officials treating the famine lightly or as providence due to its furthering of governmental goals. Is not the neglect and furtherance of stealing of irish wealth a continued stated english policy, and enough to call this genocide. They may have made excuses in their minds and not called for death explicitly, but it is clear implicitly the policy of the government facilitates the famine, and is thus, I would argue, genocide. 204.14.36.137 (talk) 18:30, 26 October 2023 (UTC)
Then you are a fool. Ignorance and indifference does not equal malevolence. There has to be an intent to destroy, of which there is no evidence. 84.65.168.106 (talk) 20:40, 29 November 2023 (UTC)
Speak in terms where we can actually improve the article with a scholarly leg to stand on, or go away. Remsense 20:45, 29 November 2023 (UTC)
I empathize, but Misplaced Pages is expressly limited in that it follows sources. Also, personally, the question of whether xyz terrible artificial event particularly constitutes genocide seems to me to be a distinction without a difference, or a thought-terminating exercise: the word means something, but it does not mean everything, and I do not understand how the 'seriousness' a given topic is treated can be boiled down to whether a very specific word is usually used to describe it, especially a word created in a modern context being projected backwards onto historical events (which of course, is what history is) Remsense 18:37, 26 October 2023 (UTC)

The Popery Act

Currently the article states that “The Popery Act (Penal Law) of 1704 required that a tenant's land be divided equally between his sons upon his death.”

It didn’t. It required Catholic land owners to split their inheritance between their Catholic sons if they didn’t have a Protestant son.

If I correct the statement it’s then making an erroneous argument about the land splitting that went on.

I’ll delete it. Cheezypeaz (talk) 22:33, 8 January 2024 (UTC)

Imported Grain Used As Livestock Feed

These edits added the claim.

https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?diff=887787383

https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?diff=1170685821

This claim seems to be completely unsupported by the given sources or the literature. Cheezypeaz (talk) 03:11, 9 January 2024 (UTC)

"genocide"

In the genocide section, there is a statement claiming that a non-scholarly "assessment" by two law professors who argued that the Irish Famine was a genocide in order to reshape a history curriculum in New Jersey has been "supported by various later genocide scholars," and it then links to one chapter, in one book, by one scholar, Neysa King. Considering this same source has been used to include a section on the Irish Famine in the main article for genocide, there seems to be a deliberate effort to elevate a theory that's got little scholarly backing (and, as we will soon learn, even this is a generous description of how this theory's been received by professional historians).

When this issue was previously raised on this page, user 'SeoR' made the following statement which I think is a good basis to start a discussion:

"It is quite clear that *few* but not *no* historians see genocide as a key factor', but how this is presented can be explored.."'

So, expanding on this point, let's revisit two of the rules we're expected to honor when we edit this encyclopedia:

  • An acknowledgement that Misplaced Pages is a mainstream encyclopedia, and not a laboratory for testing novel ideas.
  • That it is not enough to demonstrate that some minority of scholars hold a view, but rather that the minority view is significant.

Now let's look at how the source in question opens the chapter:

"Today, Irish and British historians categorically reject the notion that British actions during the Great Irish Potato Famine (1845-1849) amounted to genocide."

So, the first sentence in this chapter acknowledges that the theory is not just rejected by academics, but "categorically" so.

Another source I'd add is Mark McGowan's piece in the journal Genocide Studies International:

"The fact that virtually all historians of Ireland have reached a verdict that eschews position, be they Irish-born scholars from Britain, North America or Australasia, has weakened the traditional populist account."

So, language like "categorically reject" and "virtually all historians" tells us exactly how the information should be presented: as a fringe perspective that's only mentioned insofar as we are telling readers it's a theory that's been widely rejected by the mainstream of Irish academic history.

Discuss. Jonathan f1 (talk) 21:34, 28 July 2024 (UTC)

  • The King source is a conference proceedings book; the article is short and doesn't cite much, and the presentation was by someone who may have gotten a Master's degree but does not work (and publish) in academia. Drmies (talk) 22:04, 28 July 2024 (UTC)
    • Which raises even more questions.. Jonathan f1 (talk) 00:30, 29 July 2024 (UTC)
      • Sure, but that's not necessarily for here. One question I have is who added that. Another is what all this says about Brill, and that's even sadder. Drmies (talk) 15:05, 29 July 2024 (UTC)
        Probably the same person who went into the article on historical genocides and added the same content into a Great Famine section which shouldn't even be there. This is very simple: the view that the GF was a genocide is fringe and should never be mentioned on here except to say that it's a fringe pov pushed mainly by people who don't have the relevant background in economic, social or political history for the period in question. The endless iterations of John Mitchel's polemic about "food exports" is case in point. Jonathan f1 (talk) 19:47, 29 July 2024 (UTC)

Overlong lead

I agree that the lead is far too long but the recently reverted quote from a future PM actually supported the prior, unreferenced sentence - "Additionally, the famine indirectly resulted in tens of thousands of households being evicted, exacerbated by a provision forbidding access to workhouse aid while in possession of more than one-quarter acre of land." The subject of the reverted quote is found in several statistics in the Eviction section. Because this very strong quote was made near the beginning of the disaster and was made by the future Prime Minister I thought its placement in the lead section was appropriate. I believe the quote belongs somewhere in this very long article, either in the Lead or the Eviction section.Palisades1 (talk) 14:19, 20 October 2024 (UTC)

Then put it in the Evictions section, since the objection was to the length of the lead and to the inclusion of material in the lead that is not in the article body. DrKay (talk) 15:24, 20 October 2024 (UTC)
Go to talk prior to revert. Palisades1 (talk) 22:43, 20 October 2024 (UTC)
I don't understand why you've written this comment because we've both followed the Misplaced Pages:Bold, revert, discuss cycle and neither of us has broken the 1 revert per 24 hours editing restriction on this article. It is also obvious that I'm not going to revert an edit that I have already agreed to. It is also obvious that I'm not going to revert an edit that occurred 6 hours before you made this comment at a time when I was clearly active on wikipedia. Consequently, it looks like an unnecessarily offensive and aggressive demand that is designed to insult and provoke. I will therefore not obey it and I will revert whenever and wherever it is reasonable and justifiable to do so. DrKay (talk) 17:00, 21 October 2024 (UTC)

Genocide section

Please note that the editor Cdjp1 has added controversial content to the genocide section today. This issue is currently in dispute resolution and these additions should probably be reverted until it's resolved. Jonathan f1 (talk) 23:22, 11 November 2024 (UTC)

This is a mischaracterisation of how you have framed your arguments in the Genocides in History (before World War 1) talk page and the DR discussion. You have maintained your issue is the great famine's inclusion in that article, and you even suggested that any information from the scholars present in that article should instead appear in the relevant section in this article. -- Cdjp1 (talk) 14:00, 12 November 2024 (UTC)
What I had tried to say was, any discussion of genocide theories belongs in this article in the relevant section, but that the Great Famine should not be listed in an article about pre-WW1 genocides considering scholars don't believe it was a genocide. I also said that this article covers the genocide controversy rather well (and never said I thought the section needed to be expanded). I also don't think scholars who have backgrounds in famines in other countries and continents are authoritative on this subject. All scholars that study famines agree that every famine is political -that hunger can happen naturally but when it rises to the level of famine there's politics involved. But that also highlights why the most reliable sources on the Irish Famine are historians with some expertise in British/Irish political history. As far as Robbie McVeigh goes -he only ever writes about Ireland from one colonial perspective, and we have to wonder why his opinion is so at odds with the mainstream. Jonathan f1 (talk) 19:17, 12 November 2024 (UTC)
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