Byrne's Dictionary of Irish Local History (65 page)

yeoman
. 1: A prosperous tenant 2: A prosperous tenant who held land in freehold.

Yeomanry Corps.
An almost exclusively Protestant military force of voluntary part-timers established in 1796 (37 Geo. III, c. 2) by the
lord lieutenant
, Earl Camden, to shore up the inadequacies of the politically and religiously unreliable
militia
and to replace the regulars who had been drafted abroad to meet the French threat. Heavily infiltrated by Orangemen, the yeomanry corps had a propensity to engage in sectarian outrages and earned a reputation for brutality and indiscipline during the 1798 rebellion. In 1830, after a ten-year lapse, the yeomanry corps was revived to meet the challenges of the
tithe
war but its re-emergence inflamed rather than eased tensions and it was disbanded in 1834. (Blackstock,
An ascendancy army
; Morton, ‘The rise', pp. 58–64.)

yoke
. A short cross-beam upon which a
purlin
rests. It was fixed to the roof trusses just below the apex.
See
cruck.

Young, Arthur
(1741–1820). An influential English agriculturalist and writer, Young's own excursions into farming and estate management proved, paradoxically, unprofitable. He toured Ireland in 1776 and from 1777 was employed as agent to Lord Kingsborough in Co. Cork for two years. His
A tour in Ireland
, a two-volume travel book containing a wide-ranging commentary on contemporary Irish agriculture, was published in 1780. Young used official sources as well as personal observations and records compiled as he progressed through 29 counties of Ireland. In some instances his vision of Ireland is fanciful but he was scathing of the evils of landlordism and advocated the creation of new employment opportunities to counter the losses which attended the spread of pasture. (Young,
A tour in Ireland
.)

Young Ireland
(1842–48). Founded in the early 1840s by Thomas Davis, John Blake Dillon and Charles Gavan Duffy, Young Ireland was a mainly middle-class, non-sectarian, repeal movement which proposed a nationality embracing all creeds, classes and races within Ireland. Young Irelanders aimed to create internal union and external independence. The chief vehicle for the dissemination of Young Ireland ideals was the
Nation
newspaper. Initially the Young Irelanders were members of the
National Repeal Association
but they became disenchanted with Daniel O'Connell's attitude to federalism (a local legislature dealing with domestic affairs but subordinate to Westminster), his stance on the
Queen's Colleges
bill and his renunciation of the use of force. They seceded in 1846 to establish the Irish Confederation when O'Connell required members of the Repeal Association to eschew the use of physical force. Sparked by news of the French revolution in February 1848 the Young Irelanders launched into the single engagement ‘battle of Ballingary' (‘the battle of Widow McCormack's cabbage patch') in July, a fiasco that resulted in the transportation or flight abroad of the movement's leaders. Although the movement had little popular or clerical support, was poorly structured and fizzled out miserably, Young Ireland bequeathed a legacy of romantic nationalism to later generations. (Davis,
The Young Ireland
.)

Young Ulster
. A secret organisation, founded by Frederick Crawford in 1892 to oppose home rule for Ireland, which enjoyed a brief existence before being swallowed up by larger anti-home rule bodies. Membership was open only to those who possessed a gun and 100 rounds of ammunition. In 1913 Crawford became a founder member of the Ulster Volunteer Force.

Z

Zoilomastix
. (1625–6) An attack by layman and soldier Philip O'Sullivan Beare on the writings of
Giraldus Cambrensis
and
Richard Stanihurst
on Ireland, Zoilomastix also contains important biographical detail of an ecclesiastical nature. The original is preserved in the University Library, Upsala, Sweden. (O'Donnell,
Selections
.)

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