"West Britain" was used with reference to the
Acts of Union 1800 which united the
Kingdom of Great Britain and the
Kingdom of Ireland into the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. Similarly "
North Britain" for
Scotland used after the 1603
Union of the Crowns and the
Acts of Union 1707 connected it to the
Kingdom of England ("
South Britain"). In 1800 Thomas Grady, a Limerick
unionist, published a collection of
light verse named
The West Briton, while an anti-union cartoon depicted an official offering bribes and proclaiming "God save the King & his Majesty's subjects of west Britain that is to be!" In 1801 the Latin description of
George III on the
Great Seal of the Realm was changed from "Of Great Britain, France and Ireland King" to "Of the Britains King", ending
the claim to the French throne and describing Great Britain and Ireland as "the Britains".
Irish unionist MP
Thomas Spring Rice (later Lord Monteagle of Brandon) said on 23 April 1834 in the
House of Commons in opposing
Daniel O'Connell's motion for
Repeal of the Union, "I should prefer the name of West Britain to that of Ireland". Rice was derided by
Henry Grattan later in the same debate: "He tells us, that he belongs to England, and designates himself as a West Briton." Daniel O'Connell himself used the phrase at a pro-Repeal speech in Dublin in February 1836: Here, O'Connell was hoping that Ireland would soon become as prosperous as "
North Britain" had become after 1707, but supposed that if the Union did not deliver this, then some type of Irish home rule was essential. The Dublin administration as performed during the 1830s was intermediate between these two possibilities. The term "West Briton" became used next pejoratively during the
land struggle of the 1880s.
D. P. Moran, who founded the publication
The Leader in 1900, used the term frequently to describe those who he did not consider sufficiently Irish. It was synonymous with those he described as "Sourfaces", who had mourned the death of the
Queen Victoria in 1901. It included virtually all
Church of Ireland Protestants and those Catholics who did not measure up to his definition of "Irish Irelanders". Ernest Augustus Boyd's 1924 collection
Portraits: real and imaginary included "A West Briton", which gave a table of West-Briton responses to certain words: :: According to Boyd, "The West Briton is the near Englishman ... an unfriendly caricature, the
reductio ad absurdum of the least attractive English characteristics. ... The best that can be said ... is that the species is slowly becoming extinct. ... nationalism has become respectable". The opposite of the "West Briton" Boyd called the "synthetic Gael". After the independence of the
Irish Free State, "West British" was applied mainly to
anglophile Roman Catholics, the small number of
Catholic unionists, as
Protestants were expected to be naturally
unionists. This was not automatic, since there were, and are, also
Anglo-Irish Protestants favouring
Irish republicanism (see
Protestant Irish nationalism). ==Contemporary usage==