THE LAW OF SLAVERY AND MANUMISSION
IN ANCIENT IRELAND.
CHAPTER IX.
"Thus saith the Lord, the God of Israel; I made a covenant with
your fathers in the day that I brought them forth out of the land
of Egypt, out of the house of bondmen, saying, At the end of seven
years let ye go every man his brother an Hebrew, which hath been
sold unto thee; and when he hath served thee six years, thou shalt
let him go free." - Jer. 34:13, 14,
F.R.A. Glover: Another
footfall by which the path of the prophet Jeremiah is to be
tracked in his sojourn in Ireland, is to be seen in the Law of
Release of the Slave after seven years of bondage: a law in common
acknowledgment in Ireland even down to the days of St. Patrick.
That illustrious personage having claimed freedom, from his bondage
after seven years of service, according to it, from the master, to
whom he had been sold by the pirates who bad seized him from his
paternal home, on a raid into Brittany; this master refusing like
the Jews in the time of Jeremiah, to fulfil the will of God in this
wise, the saint was compelled to have recourse to gold to obtain
that which the tyrant refused to accord to right and law. But so
the fact comes out: viz., that the law, more Hebraico, s the
Annalist intimates, en passant, set up by the "Prophet to the
Nations," if by him, had abided in full repute, for 800 years, the
Law of the Land; a law which, we may well believe, the Prophet
would have bad it much in his mind to insist upon to his new
people, in the recollection of the woe which its neglect and denial
had wrought upon that elect nation, of whose small remnant he had
been, partly on this very account (Jer. 34), the leader from an
earthly paradise to the wild wastes of Crioch Fuiniab, "the ends of
the earth," - Emerald Isle though they be!
It is said in some of the Lives of St. Patrick, that there was a
law in Ireland, according to which slaves should become free in the
seventh year; and that it was under this law he gained his liberty.
The same writers add, that this was conformable to the practice of
the Hebrews, more Hebraeorum, (Lev. 25:40). See on this point Dr.
Lani, chap iv. From Moore's Ireland, vol. i. p. 219, note.
From:
"England, the Remnant of Judah, and the Israel of Ephraim",
written by F.R.A. Glover, M.A., Chaplain to the Consulate at
Cologne. Published by Rivingtons, London, 1861. Based on research
commenced in 1844.