Letters from an Old Orangeman
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These 'Letters from an Old Orangeman' are not just a personal memoir or a one-sided history, but a carefully argued political treatise on the necessity of mobilising and organising the 'reactionary democracy' in an age of popular politics.
This book returns to print a long-forgotten series of articles in defense of the Orange Order, a Protestant counterrevolutionary group in Ireland.
In the autumn of 1835, as the Orange Order faced a parliamentary inquiry and the imminent prospect of being banned, an Old Orangeman, signing himself "Montanus," wrote a series of articles defending the Orange brethren and telling their story. Almost forgotten since their first publication, these articles together form a unique and intelligent view from inside the Order in its first cycle. "Montanus" discusses the Orangemen's self-organization by the Protestant peasantry of County Armagh in 1795, their struggle against the United Irishmen, dissensions over the Act of Union, feuding with the Catholic nationalist Ribbon Society, extraordinary influence on the government of Ireland, and their last-ditch opposition to Daniel O'Connell's campaign for Catholic Emancipation.
Old Orangeman was a product of eighteenth-century Enlightened thought and became an eloquent warning voice against the perils of toleration and liberalism. He had been associated with the Order from its birth. He knew both its leading men and their deadly enemies, including Theobald Wolfe Tone. Most striking, perhaps, is Old Orangeman's carefully argued justification of the Order as a timely and irreplaceable bulwark against the rising tide of democracy and radicalism.
These Letters from an Old Orangeman are not just a personal memoir or a one-sided history, but a carefully argued political treatise on the necessity of mobilizing and organizing the "reactionary democracy" in an age of popular politics. Their republication now is an important contribution not only to the history of sectarian discord in Ulster and Ireland. It supplies an important source for the study of popular conservatism and the psychology of counter-revolution in the United Kingdom and beyond.
"Montanus" feared that he, who had "rocked the cradle" of the Institution, might now be fated to "follow its hearse." His letters instead provide an unrivalled insight into one of Ireland's most tenacious and consequential survivals.
Series: Classics of Irish History
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INFORMATION
ISBN: 9781068502323
Publisher: University College Dublin Press
Format: Paperback / softback
Date Published: 15 October 2025
Country: Ireland
Imprint: University College Dublin Press
DIMENSIONS
Width: 120.0mm
Height: 185.0mm
Weight: 0g
Pages: 150
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About the Author
Marc Mulholland is Professor of Modern History at the University of Oxford. His publications include Bourgeois Liberty and the Politics of Fear: From Absolutism to Neo-Conservatism (2012) and At the Rising of the Moon: The Peasantry and Ireland from the Tudor Conquest to the Fall of Landlordism (2025).
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