After the collapse of the
1798 United Irish rebellion and the passing of the
Act of Union in 1801, the
Orange Order was stronger than ever before, but began to decline and fell into disrepute towards the middle of the century. Despite this,
Daniel O'Connell had trouble arranging rallies in
Ulster for his
Repeal Association, which sought repeal of the Act of Union. Having successfully arranged supportive "monster meetings" in the rest of Ireland, his visit to Belfast in 1841 was marked by stonings, hostile and supportive crowds, and threats of riots. Long before the 1885 Bill it was already clear that a significant number of Irish people wanted to maintain the Union, particularly those resident in Ulster who were not Roman Catholics. Anglicans of the established
Church of Ireland and the other Protestant groups such as
Presbyterians had had different legal rights and priorities, and mutual disagreements, until the disestablishment of the Church of Ireland by the
Irish Church Act 1869. While the Act was passed to reflect the small percentage of Church of Ireland members in the Irish population, and to increase the
self-esteem of Irish Roman Catholics, the resulting level playing field allowed the different Protestant groups to act as political equals for the first time. From 1882
Charles Stewart Parnell turned his attention from Irish
land reform to pursuing
Home Rule. As his
National League grew, so did the Irish Protestants' fear of Home Rule. When
Gladstone made known his conversion to Home Rule in 1885 and introduced the
First Home Rule Bill, the Orange Order experienced a dramatic revival, became highly respectable, and a very powerful political organisation working for the maintenance of the Union. Ironically some leaders of the Irish Nationalist movement such as
Isaac Butt and Charles Stewart Parnell were not Roman Catholics, but the majority of their supporters were. While southern Ireland was clamouring for repeal of the Union with Britain, Ulster came round to the view that Union with Britain suited her better than any form of self-government for Ireland. For one thing, she saw that the Union was to her economic advantage since she was far more industrialised than the agricultural south, and her future clearly depended on the continuance of friendly trade with Britain. Due to the industrial revolution,
Belfast had grown bigger than
Dublin. Ulstermen were proud of their achievements and would have seen them as proof of the
Weberian theory of the "
Protestant work ethic". Religious faith combined with business acumen to raise in Ulster a fixed opposition to Home Rule, which was later expressed in the popular slogan,
Home Rule means Rome Rule. The Ulster unionist subjective sense of separate identity, articulated in religious idiom, dominated Ulster unionist hostility to home rule. That home rule meant Rome Rule was, for the average Ulster Protestant, conclusive condemnation of any tampering with the union. Rome Rule conjured the nightmare of a native rising for a settler community. Economic factors merely reinforced racial pride. Her Protestant majority became fearful of one day finding herself dominated by a Roman Catholic Parliament in Dublin: • They saw Catholic priests playing a big role in the pro-Home Rule
IPP branches. • Would Home Rule, they wondered, become
Rome Rule, with Catholic bishops telling Catholic MPs how to vote? • Might Irish Protestants not thereby lose their civil and religious liberty? This was the background against which the English
Conservative Party played the "Orange Card."
Lord Randolph Churchill played it with gusto. In 1886, the year of Gladstone's first Home Rule Bill, Churchill crossed to Belfast to make an inflammatory anti-Home Rule speech in the
Ulster Hall, and a little later, coined the memorable phrase, "Ulster will fight, and Ulster will be right
". In
The Nun of Kenmare: An Autobiography (1889), Cusack complained that she had been vilified by her fellow churchmen behind her back: "The practice of the
Inquisition still holds in the Roman church, as I have found again and again, and as this book will show. You are condemned unheard." The
Ne Temere papal decree of 1907 required non-Catholics married to a Catholic to agree to educate their children as Catholics, and often the non-Catholic was required to convert before the marriage.
Ne Temere was tolerated by the UK parliament as it had little impact in Britain; Irish Protestants felt that it would have a much greater impact in a future Catholic-dominated Home Rule Ireland. In 1911 debates, both views were considered, and notably, those against
Ne Temere were unionists and those tolerating it were not. From 1898 the
"Index", or list of books forbidden to Catholics, was modified by Pope Leo XIII. Along with indecent works it still included
forbidden authors such as
Jonathan Swift and
Daniel Defoe, and the scientists
John Locke and
Galileo, that most Europeans would by then have found unobjectionable. ==Socialist theorists on Rome Rule==