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New Map Animates Devastation of the Great Hunger

By Dave Lewis, Editorial Assistant
June / July 2018

May 9, 2018 by 3 Comments

Dr. Alan Ferinhough, a lecturer and economic historian at Queen’s University Belfast, recently created an animation of the evolution of Ireland’s population density from 1841 to 2012 showing how the population still hasn’t recovered from the effects of the Great Hunger. In 1841, before the famine struck, the population of Ireland was around 7 million, while today the population is around 5 million.

Here’s the evolution of Irish Population density 1841->2002 on a DED level. You can see the devastating impact of the Famine, the gradual thinning of the rural population and the late-20th c. suburban sprawl #history #ireland #rstats pic.twitter.com/SOwSyHvPIN

— Alan Fernihough (@DiffusePrioR) March 9, 2018


The map is part of the Irish Famine Project, developed by Ferinhough and research assistant Áine Doran with the financial help of U.K.’s Economic and Social Research Council. According to the project website, the map “examines both the contributing factors and outcomes of the famine” and relies on empirical research compiled from contemporary data sources like the 1841 and 1851 censuses as well as the Relief Commissioner’s reports. The project has developed another map on its website in which one can search their civil parish and can see the effects the famine had on the parish in subsections like the percent of population lost, household heads in agriculture, and literacy rates. ♦ Dave Lewis

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Sean Curtain says

    May 15, 2018 at 4:12 pm

    Two of the above maps show Ireland’s population density in 1941. This country would remain a single political entity under Westminster rule for another 80 years after that, as it had been for over 6 centuries prior to 1841.

    Reply
  2. chris says

    July 20, 2018 at 1:51 am

    The estimate of 7 mil population pre-famine must be severely conservative. Many estimates have placed it at 8 mil.

    Reply
  3. Paul Williams says

    October 12, 2021 at 7:28 am

    In 1750 the population was only 3million. Questions to ponder:

    1. What role did the Catholic church play in promoting childbearing as a way to defeat protestantism after 1750?
    2. Did anyone who promoted this strategy ever consider that an infertile island out in the Atlantic Ocean could ever support 8 million mouths (pre-artificial fertilisers)?
    3. How much responsibility for mother earth kicking back in 1841 lies with the Catholic church which promoted this population strategy?

    Reply

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