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Life [ top ] Notes Maureen Wall, Catholic Ireland in the 18th c., ed. Gerard OBrien (1989), Nicholas, Lord Taaffe, a catholic nobleman who had attained eminence in the service of the Holy Roman emperor, and whose exalted position gave him access to the court circles in London, where he frequently pleaded the cause of his catholic fellow-countrymen, went to London that year to make personal application on behalf of the Catholics [with the special object of] opposing quarterage legislation. To his activities and to the “benevolent intervention of Lord Townshend” OConor attributes the defeat of the measure. More likely it is indicative of the government policy of the day. any attempt to shut the majority out of full participation in commercial pursuits would run contrary to the principles of toleration and enlightenment stated by George III at the outset of his reign. [68] SEE n.79 (p.177 infra), quoting Dublin Mercury, 23 Jan. 1768: Viscount Taaffe waited on their majesties in St Jamess, being just returned from Germany. Further, In 1768, Viscount Taaffe and prominent members of the Catholic Committee were in consultation with the Earl Bishop of Derry on the wording of a test oath; the Earl had the formulary printed, with four Gallican propositions of 1682 included to which the French clergy subscribed. Copies of the formulary were sent - probably by Dr. Thomas Burke, bishop of Ossory - to the papal nuncio Monsignor Ghilini at Brussels, who threatened public censures ... [111] [For a full account of this affair, see Thomas Burke, Rx supra.]. Further, OConors Observations on affairs in Ireland [making] the case as usual for relaxation of the popery laws ... appeared under the name of Viscount Taaffe. [120] Finally, Taaffes own Observations on affairs in Ireland (1766) appearing at this date, castigates the suggestion that the Munster troubles were stirred up as part of a French or a Jacobite conspiracy. [188, n.31]. Joseph Th. Leerssen, Mere Irish & Fior-Ghael: Studies in the Idea of Irish Nationality, Its Development and Literary Expression Prior To The Nineteenth Century (John Benjamins Pub. Co., Amsterdam & Philadelphia, 1986): OConor published an isolated pamphlet anonymously between 1761 and 1771 called A vindication of Lord Taaffes civil principals, written in defence of the Observations on affairs in Ireland from the settlement in 1691, to the present time, published in 1766 by Viscount Taaffe, living in Austria. That work was based on materials gathered for Taaffe by OConor (cf. OConor to Taaffe, 14 June 1766, Letters vol. 1, 200-1) [Leerssen 484; also ftn. 397].
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