A Court of Claims, headed by Sir
Richard Raynsford, was set up to investigate who was eligible for recovery of their lands. Unfortunately, the Commissioners found that too many Catholics were "innocent" and a further
Act of Explanation 1665 (
17 & 18 Chas. 2. c. 2 (I)) was needed to find a workable solution. The act stated that Cromwellian settlers (with some named exceptions) had to give up one-third of the lands they had received after 1652 to compensate innocent Catholics. This was a very complicated process, as most of the new owners had bought their land from the Cromwellian grantees, and so numerous contracts had to be unwound. Many of these buyers were not settlers but people who had already been living in Ireland before 1641. By this measure, what has been described as a "favoured minority" of Irish Catholics – mostly
Old English Royalists – recovered all or most of their pre-war estates. Examples of this include Ormonde and his relatives, and supporters like
Richard Bellings or
Randal MacDonnell, 1st Marquess of Antrim. The people who had been militant
Irish Confederates during the wars – who had rejected an alliance with the Royalists, or sought better terms from
Charles I in return for an alliance – got little or nothing from the settlement. Many of them regarded it as a betrayal by the Stuart monarchy, which they all had fought for at some point in the Civil Wars. The Catholic poet
Dáibhí Ó Bruadair concluded that the Restoration was "Purgatory" for Irish Catholics, while the former Confederate and Catholic Bishop
Nicholas French wrote a pamphlet about Charles II titled,
The Unkind Deserter of Loyal men and true Friends. In 1600, Catholics had owned 90 per cent of land in Ireland, by 1641, this was 41 per cent (the fall due largely to the rise of the
Plantation of Ulster) but by the time of the accession of James II in 1685, after the
Cromwellian Settlement, the proportion of Irish land owned by Catholics had fallen to 22 per cent; after the restrictive
Treaty of Limerick (1691), that number had been reduced to 14 per cent, and by 1800, after more restrictive anti-Catholic
Penal Laws, the number fell further to just 5 per cent. However, many of the 95% in 1800 had been Catholic and changed religion to keep their lands, such as the
Barons of Dunsany. Many Protestants in Ireland felt that the Restoration Settlements were far too lenient towards those Irish Catholics who had rebelled against the sovereignty of King Charles in 1641 and had been justly punished for it by the loss of their property and power. They had bought their new properties at market rates, competing against other bidders, and expected that
privity of contract would apply as usual. As in England and Scotland, the Irish Restoration of 1660 had occurred without bloodshed because of their approval. Historian
Jane Ohlmeyer argued that the matter of religion was not as important as one's rank in the 1660s. Richer and grander families tended to be supported by King Charles, regardless of religion. Some Protestant landed families were crypto-Catholics. Other grantees included the King's brother
James, Duke of York, who was awarded 130,000 acres in Ireland and became a Catholic. The final awards of land were not concluded by King Charles until about 1670. == Effect on the Williamite Settlement ==