The capture of Bagnal Harvey and John Henry Colclough,disguised as peasants, Saltee Islands, Wexford, , during the Irish Rebellion of 1798. They were later hanged on Wexford bridge on 28 June 1798


Illustration by George Cruikshank (1792 - 1878) from History of the Irish rebellion published 1887. The rebellion was brutally repressed by The British, who carried out many killings of civilians and collective punishment of entire communities, actions which would probably today be viewed as war crimes. The British however saw themselves as the victims of the traitorous Irish, and newspapers of the day invariably portrayed the Irish as murderous savages, while the British army and their Protestant allies were portrayed as underdogs and victims. George Cruikshank was fiercely patriotic, and his illustrations invariably portrayed the rebels as mobs of subhuman brutes, whilst the British were portrayed as upstanding defenders of law and order. His illustrations should therefore probably -despite their artistic merit- be viewed as British propaganda.


Size: 3429px × 2290px
Photo credit: © Historical Images Archive / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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