The Act includes a list of a 104 men who were excluded from pardon for life and estate. This list includes members of the nobility, the landed gentry, army officers, and clergy. It includes royalists as well as supporters of the Confederation. The first ten people on this list are: •
James Butler, 12th Earl of Ormond •
James Touchet, 3rd Earl of Castlehaven •
Ulick Bourke, 5th Earl of Clanricarde •
Christopher Plunket, 2nd Earl of Fingal •
James Dillon, 3rd Earl of Roscommon •
Richard Nugent, 2nd Earl of Westmeath •
Murrough O'Brien, Baron of Inchiquin, •
Donough MacCarty, 2nd Viscount Muskerry, •
Theobald Taaffe, 1st Viscount Taaffe of Corren, •
Richard Butler, 3rd Viscount Mountgarret. The list does not recognise many of the titles created by
Charles I and Charles II, such as James Butler's Marquessate of Ormond, created on 30 August 1633 The Act made a distinction between the rebels of 1641 – who were deemed
unlawful combatants – as against those who had fought in the regular armies of
Confederate Ireland, who were treated as legitimate combatants provided that they had surrendered before the end of 1652. The 1641 rebels and the above-mentioned Royalist leaders were excluded from the pardon given to soldiers who had surrendered: they were to be executed when captured.
Roman Catholic clergy were also excluded from the pardon, as the Cromwellians held them responsible for fomenting the
Irish Rebellion of 1641. 's victory, huge areas of land were confiscated from the
Gaelic nobility and the
Irish Catholics were banished to the lands of
Connacht. The remaining leaders of the Irish army lost the vast majority of their estates, causing Catholic land ownership to fall to just 8% across the island. To have been merely a bystander was itself a crime, and anyone who had resided in Ireland any time from 1 October 1649, to 1 March 1650 and had not "manifested their constant good affection to the interest of the Commonwealth of England" lost three-quarters of their land. The Commissioners in Ireland had power to give them, in lieu thereof, other (poorer) lands in
Connacht or
County Clare in proportion of value and were authorised "to transplant such persons from the respective places of their usual habitation or residence, into such other places within that nation, as shall be judged most consistent with public safety." This was interpreted by the English Parliamentarian authorities in Ireland who ordered all Irish land owners to leave for those lands before 1 May 1654 or be executed. However, in practice, most Catholic landowners stayed on their land as
tenants and the numbers of those either transplanted or executed was small. Protestant Royalists, on the other hand, could avoid land confiscations if they had surrendered by May 1650 and had paid fines to the Parliamentarian government. The Commonwealth initially had harsh plans to remove the formerly-Scottish Presbyterians from north-east Ulster – as they had fought with the Royalists in the later stages of the war. However, this was reversed in 1654, and it was ruled that the plantation would apply to Catholics only. ==To Hell or to Connaught==