David Heffernan is an R. J. Hunter Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Queen's University, Belfast
‘From 1485 to 1603, Ireland drew from the Tudor court myriad schemes embodied in ""reform"" treatises, but this comprehensive examination challenges previous assumptions of Tudor inconsistency. Heffernan (Queen's Univ., Belfast) believes that intentions to extend the Pale (English territory in Ireland) and royal authority at the expense of the Irish lords marked the treatises; however, the means by which this would be accomplished was heavily debated. The acts of Edward Poynings signaled the end of a lengthy period of the crown’s neglect, but the Henrician policy of ""surrender and regrant"" in the wake of the unsuccessful Kildare Rebellion (1534–35) provided the stamp for future ""reform"" treatises. As Heffernan explains, the possession of the Tudor charter provided no security. Regional conquest and the extension of the Pale proceeded by fits and leaps. By mid-century, the forging of a network of garrisons and the implementation of the plantation system allowed further immigration from England, much of it Protestant, which challenged the authority and culture of the Gaelicized constituents of the Pale. The resultant Desmond Rebellions (1569–73; 1579–83), followed by the scorched-earth suppression, led to a plethora of treatises implicating militarization, but little change in policy. Subjugation and settlement remained the Tudor intent.’ S. L. Smith, California State University, Fullerton, Choice Summing Up: Recommended. Advanced undergraduates through faculty and professionals -- .