2min chapter

In Our Time cover image

The Great Irish Famine

In Our Time

CHAPTER

The Irish Are the Lowest of the Low

This is part of a mid-Victorian attitude, that the Irish are definitely the lowest of the low. Trevalion visited Ireland himself before the famine in 1843 for about six weeks and doesn't have very good things to say. It's an elite view, an establishment view. There was the sense that the Irish were lazy, they were feckless, they were violent,. They were unreliable, and that somehow they needed to be civilised. Then some, like Charles Wood and Sir Charles Levenin, saw the famine as a means of civilising, a reorganising society.

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