Throughout the nineteenth century rural Ireland launched many campaigns, some armed and violent, against landlordism and those landlords absent living in Britain and England in particular. Absentee Landlords made huge amounts of money out of lands they owned in Ireland charging high rents from tenants to live on these estates. The struggle to end the system which facilitated ‘Absentee Landlords’ resulted in various Land Acts between 1870 and 1923 which supposedly broke the landlord system. However it appears the Duke of Devonshire, Peregrine Cavendish, and his son William Cavendish, the Earl of Burlington, owners of Lismore Estates in the Knockmealdown Mountains in County Waterford are practicing absentee landlordism and making a fortune in 2026. It is beyond belief these British parasitical aristocrats can do this in a country who supposedly achieved independence in 1922. It is evident the anti-treaty side were, in principle, correct in the Irish Civil War and the bullshit fed to the population by the fledgeling government side in order to gain their acceptance of said treaty did not contain the whole truth!
The Duke of Devonshire and his son live cosy lives in England doing next to fuck all in productive work. They cream off huge profits from their interests, estates, in Ireland and have decided within their wisdom to increase the rents of sheep farmers who lease 8,000 acres of land from €5 per hectare in 1924 to €50 per hectare by 2029. This represents an increase of 900% on farmers who cannot afford to pay. Lismore Estates will not provide a “letter of evidence” to prove land is being leased. Without such a letter no farm payments will be made and will not be while the dispute continues. It is these requirements on farmers to provide a “commonage evidence letter” which are proving problematic for the farmers which Lismore Estates and their owner, the Duke of Devonshire, are more than aware of and are weaponising.
It has been said the Devonshire’s have been historically good landlords providing money for their tenants during the ‘famine’ of 1845-51. The Cavendish family are and were part of the establishment who through their actions and British Government policies were greatly responsible for the ’famine’ in Ireland. If the Cavendish’s did give money, granted possibly more than others, could it have been conscience money? Guilt for being part of an establishment they refused to condemn as it provided them with a cushy living but, by the same token, felt a certain responsibility for their tenants? If they really wanted to do something they, and others, would have spoken out against the British rich exporting food from Ireland, other than gammy spuds, to be fed upon the tables of the rich and powerful of Britain. It was this removal of beef, dairy, and wheat produce thus leaving the Irish with only a rotten potato crop to live on which was greatly responsible for the ‘famine’ in Ireland which did not occur in other countries hit by potato blight.



















