Enemies of the State
| By: | Fergus Whelan |
| Publisher: | Wordwell |
| Published: | May 2026 |
| Pages: | 256 |
| Categories: | History, Humanities, Non-Fiction |
| Language: | English |
| Available as: | Paperback |
| On sale at: |
Richard Musgrave, The Rebellion of 1798 and the Making of Sectarian Irish History. Enemies of the State offers a rigorous reassessment of one of the most enduring and contentious interpretations of the Irish Rebellion of 1798. At its centre stands Sir Richard Musgrave, whose Memoirs of the Irish Rebellion shaped loyalist and sectarian understandings of the uprising for generations. Musgrave portrayed the rebellion as a Catholic conspiracy driven by clerical treachery and popular fanaticism. This book dismantles that narrative through a close, forensic study of three figures he vilified: James Harold and Peter O’Neill, Catholic priests transported without trial, and Felix Rourke, a working-class United Irishman executed for treason in 1803. Drawing on an impressive range of archival sources, contemporary testimony, and later historiography, Fergus Whelan reconstructs the lives of these men to expose the mechanics of accusation, repression, and historical myth-making. He shows how Musgrave’s polemic—rooted in conspiracy thinking and sectarian fear—obscured the realities of state violence, coercion, and the Catholic hierarchy’s largely loyalist stance during the crisis of the 1790s. In doing so, the book situates Musgrave within a wider culture of counter-revolutionary ideology that influenced British and Irish governance well into the nineteenth century. More than a collective biography, Enemies of the State is a study in the politics of memory. It explores how competing narratives—loyalist, nationalist, and clerical—have continually reshaped the meaning of 1798, revealing how historical reputations are constructed, contested, and inherited. By restoring complexity to figures long reduced to caricature, this book offers a fresh perspective on rebellion, repression, and remembrance in modern Irish history.