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1704 in Ireland
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Events from the year 1704 in Ireland.
Incumbent
Events
- March 4 – Penal laws passed by the Parliament of Ireland to suppress the Catholic Church:
- Popery Act enforces various restrictions on Catholics, in particular inheritance by gavelkind for Catholics and male primogeniture for Protestants, which tends to prevent an increase in Catholic landholding.[1]
- Registration Act requires all existing Catholic priests to register in their local magistrates' court by July 20, to pay two £50 surety bonds for good behavior, and to stay in the county where they registered, with a financial inducement to convert to the Church of Ireland.[2]
- October 26 – Richard Levinge, member of the Irish House of Commons, is created 1st Levinge Baronet, of High Park in the County of Westmeath.[3]
- Thomas Taylor, member of the Irish House of Commons, is created 1st Taylor Baronet, of Kells in the County of Meath.
- A House of Industry opens in Dublin to accommodate the destitute.[4]
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Arts and literature
- George Farquhar co-writes the play The Stage Coach.[5]
- Jonathan Swift publishes his first major satires, A Tale of a Tub and The Battle of the Books, in London.[6]
Births
- William Handcock, politician (d. 1741)
Deaths
- January 1 – Dominic Burke Roman Catholic Bishop of Elphin.
- February 20 – Thomas FitzWilliam, 4th Viscount FitzWilliam, statesman (b. c.1640)
- c. February – Sir Thomas Butler, 3rd Baronet, politician.
- August – Francis Taaffe, 3rd Earl of Carlingford, courtier and soldier.
- November – Henry Nugent, soldier.
References
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