Landlords, Private Charity and Poor Law Historiography Quiz

Description

Great Irish Famine Exam (Week 5 - Relief in Practice: Landlords, Poor Law and Charity) Quiz on Landlords, Private Charity and Poor Law Historiography Quiz, created by Charlotte Peacock on 09/01/2017.
Charlotte Peacock
Quiz by Charlotte Peacock, updated more than 1 year ago
Charlotte Peacock
Created by Charlotte Peacock over 7 years ago
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Resource summary

Question 1

Question
Who wrote the saying: 'Irish property must pay for Irish poverty'
Answer
  • Cormac O Grada
  • Robert Peel
  • James Donnelly
  • Forey

Question 2

Question
Who walked around rural Ireland and helped poor people's lives - an example of private charity
Answer
  • Asenath Nicholson
  • Elizabeth Smith
  • The Quakers
  • Queen Victoria

Question 3

Question
[blank_start]Asenath Nicholson[blank_end] uses strong rhetoric and imagery to appeal to others to provide private charity, such as describing the suffering as '[blank_start]suffering[blank_end]' and [blank_start]'skeletal'[blank_end]
Answer
  • 'skeletal'
  • suffering
  • Asenath Nicholson

Question 4

Question
Who promoted the laissez-faire idea that if Ireland were to sustain their population they needed to revamp their economy and not just rely on the English economyy
Answer
  • Robert Peel
  • Sir John Russell
  • Charles Trevelyan
  • James Donnelly
  • Elizabeth Smith
  • The Times

Question 5

Question
Which historian is good for understanding British Public Attitudes?
Answer
  • Donnelly
  • O Grada
  • Treveleyan
  • Gray

Question 6

Question
Which newspaper/media referred to Irish oppressive landlords as reducing tenants to 'serfdom'?
Answer
  • Donnelly
  • The Illustrated London News
  • The Mirror
  • The Times
  • Punch Magazine

Question 7

Question
Which media production wrote that the 'squalid destitute' Irish many 'disgraced Christendom'
Answer
  • The Times
  • The Illustrated London News
  • The Mirror
  • The Daily Express

Question 8

Question
[blank_start]The Journals of Elizabeth Smith[blank_end] are useful for understanding the views of a [blank_start]racist[blank_end] British Protestant Irish Landlord - referring to her tenants and the Irish more broadly as 'other' - grotesque 'miserable [blank_start]creatures[blank_end]' - dehumanising and [blank_start]animalistic[blank_end].
Answer
  • The Journals of Elizabeth Smith
  • Asenath Nicholson
  • The Times extracts
  • racist
  • Well off
  • Philanthropic
  • creatures
  • poor
  • people
  • serfs
  • animalistic
  • other
  • catholic

Question 9

Question
What newspaper wrote that the English saw it as their duty to 'educate and elevate Ireland' by 'teaching the people how to educate and elevate themselves'
Answer
  • The Times
  • The Mirror
  • The Ireland
  • The Illustrated London News

Question 10

Question
Which three does Donnelly attribute as the British government's biggest failures
Answer
  • Refusal to stop grain exports
  • Not preventing the evictions of half a million people
  • Poor Laws
  • Blaming the landlords for all the problems
  • Laissez-fair approach

Question 11

Question
A great deal remains to be uncovered about the British public opinion, especially the middle classes
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 12

Question
What does Peter Gray argue?
Answer
  • The importance of providentialism for shaping British attitudes and desire to help Ireland
  • That the Irish economy could be easily restructured after the famine, reshaping agriculture
  • That the famine was a short-term evil for a long term improvement
  • That the media heavily shaped and reflected public attitudes

Question 13

Question
The National Fast Day highlighted how pivotal the public's attitudes were in government decisions regarding the Famine and relief
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 14

Question
Who argues that from 1846 and 1847 the British public experienced 'compassion fatigue' towards Irish relief
Answer
  • Melissa Fegan
  • James Donnelly
  • O Grada
  • Gray

Question 15

Question
'Donor fatigue' is a better description of British activities towards the Irish question, because it is hard to measure people's compassion - particularly when there is more to be done to uncover people's attitudes and feelings from this period
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 16

Question
All landlords were violent
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 17

Question
[blank_start]James Du Pre[blank_end] with estates in Tyrone reduced his tenants rents by 10 and [blank_start]50[blank_end] %, and offered tenants reduced rates for coal and Meal
Answer
  • James Du Pre
  • 50

Question 18

Question
In what town did Arthur Kennedy, British colonial administrator, report that 15 000 people were evicted by their landlords in one year alone
Answer
  • Cork
  • Tyrone
  • Skibereen
  • Kilrush

Question 19

Question
What was the name of the landlord who still went bankrupt and didn't evict any of his tenants during the famine?
Answer
  • James du Pre
  • Lord Gort of Calway
  • William Thackery
  • Arthur Kennedy
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