Ideas

How Britain caused Ireland's Great Famine

Jan 23, 2026
A reframe of the Great Famine that places the potato within a wider story of colonialism and market failure. Discussion of how crop choice, land tenure and conacre speculation created structural vulnerability. Examination of British relief policies, moralizing views of food, and how emigration, rents and seasonal rhythms shaped survival and collapse.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Myth Of The 14-Pound Potato Diet

  • The myth that Irish people ate 12–14 pounds of potatoes daily is false but symbolically powerful.
  • That myth served colonial narratives blaming Irish biology rather than British policy for poverty.
ANECDOTE

Parish Rector's Grim Discovery

  • Richard Webb sent men to check starving parishioners and discovered bodies half-buried in a cabbage garden.
  • Webb asked bluntly, 'are we living in a portion of the United Kingdom?' to underline the horror.
INSIGHT

Lumper Potato And Genetic Risk

  • The 'lumper' potato became a shorthand for Irish degradation though its reputation was exaggerated.
  • Clonal set-planting lowered genetic diversity, making potato crops more vulnerable to disease.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app