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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: PIG-POL |
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PLANTATION (Lat. plantare, to plant) , literally the placing of plants in the ground, hence a place planted or a collection of growing things, &c., particularly used of ground planted with young trees. The term was early applied, in a figurative sense, to the settlement of people, and particularly to the colonization of North America in the early part of the 17th century and to the settlement of Scotch and English in the forfeited lands in Ireland (see below). The practice of sending convicted criminals to serve on the plantations in the colonies became common in the 17th century (see DEPORTATION). These plantations were chiefly in the cotton
The negroes on the plantations of the Southern States of North America sang their songs and hymns and danced to tunes which were traditional, and are frequently known as " Plantation Songs." It has been claimed Songs tlon for some of them that they represent the folk songs brought by the first slaves from Africa; but the more generally accepted view is that they were those European hymn and song tunes which the negroes picked up from the revivalist preachers or from the Europeans around them, and adapted to their own strongly marked rhythms, which are certainly of African origin. The earliest song which became familiar to those outside the Southern States was " Jim Crow ," sung by Dan Rice, and introduced to England about 1836. The " Jubilee Singers," a troupe from Fisk University, Nashville, Tennessee, toured the United States and Europe in 1871; but the great popularity of the negro songs and dances, and the traditional instruments, the bones and tambourine (the banjo was not originally used by the genuine negro), was due to the so-called " negro minstrel " troupes, of which the best known in England were Christy's, whence the generic name of Christy Minstrels, and later of the Moore and Burgess troupe at St James's Hall
The best collection of genuine " plantation songs " and their words is Slave Songs of the United States (New York
C. L. Edwards, Bahama Songs and Stories (Boston, 1895); J. B. T. Marsh, The Story of the Jubilee Singers (Boston, 1895) ; and articles by G. W. Cable on " The Creole Slave Dance " and " Creole Slave Songs," in the Century, February and April 1886. Plantation of Ulster.The Irish rebellion, which had disturbed Ulster during the closing years of Elizabeth's reign, was followed under James I. by further trouble, due partly to the inability of the English government to understand the system of land ownership prevalent in Ireland. At this time the chief offenders against the authority of England were the earls of Tyrconnell and Tyrone, but in September 1607 these once powerful nobles fled from the country. The English lawyers declared that the extensive estates which they held, not in their personal capacity, but as the heads respectively of the tribes of O'Neill and O'Donnell, had become the property of the English crown; and the problem which now confronted James I. and his advisers was what to do with the land, which was much too large to be cultivated properly by the scanty population living thereon. The idea of a plantation or colonization of Ulster, which was put forward as an answer to this question, is due mainly to Sir Arthur Chichester, the Irish lord deputy; its object was to secure the better cultivation of the land and to strengthen the English influence in Ulster by granting estates to English and Scottish settlers. Chichester proposed that the native inhabitants should be allowed to occupy as much land as they could cultivate, for he said, " that many of the natives in each county claim freehold in the lands they possess, and albeit these demands are not justifiable by law, yet it is hard and almost impossible to displant them." Even if this advice were carried out on a generous scale, the deputy considered that there would be abundance of land to offer to colonists, and also to reward the class of men known as servitors, those who had served the English king in Ireland. He submitted his ideas to Sir James Ley and Sir John Davies
The forfeited lands lay in six counties, Tyrone, Donegal, Armagh, Fermanagh, Cavan and Coleraine (Londonderry), and the scheme for the plantation having been drawn
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scheme .The work progressed very slowly and much of the building was not even begun within the required time. Then in 1611 James I., who had from the first taken a lively interest
An important part of the plantation was the settlement of the county of Coleraine by the corporation of the city of London. Receiving a grant of practically the whole of the county the corporation undertook to spend 20,000, and within two years to build 200 houses in Derry and Too in Coleraine. This was the most successful part of the settlement, and to it Londonderry owes its present name.The expulsion of the Irish from the land in which by law and custom they had a certain proprietary and hereditary right, although not carried out on the scale originally contemplated, naturally aroused great indignation among them. Attacks on the settlers were followed by reprisals, and the plantation may fairly be regarded as one of the causes which led to the terrible massacre in Ulster in 1641. During Elizabeth's reign a scheme for the plantation of Munster was considered, and under Charles I. there was a suggestion for the plantation of Connaught, but eventually both were abandoned. The " Orders and Conditions of Plantation " are printed in Walter Harris's Hibernica (Dublin, 177o) ; and in George Hill's Historical Account of the Plantation in Ulster,16o8z62o(Belfast,1877). See also S. R. Gardiner, History of England (1899), vol. i.; and R. Bagwell, Ireland under the Stuarts (1909), vol. i. End of Article: PLANTATION (Lat. plantare, to plant) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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