Subsequently, a change in the law required that the tenancy go to only one legitimate son. With the wholecale deaths and largescale emigration of the period, farm sizes had begun to increase, as surviving holdings were merged with neighbouring vacated ones. The prohibition of sub-division ensured that in normal circumstances they would not decrease in size any further.
A secondary effect of the prohibition of sub-division was that other sons, who previously inherited part of the family farm tenancy, instead was forced to seek employment elsewhere. Many emigrated. Many chose a route of entering a religious life, as a Roman Catholic Priest, Nun or Religious Brother, such options becoming available due to a re-organisation of Roman Catholicism in Ireland under Cardinal Cullen in the 1850s and beyond. This influx of young men into the religious life, thanks to the disappearance of sub-division, in part explains the massive growth in clerical numbers in Ireland in the period.
Irish land holdings underwent further massive change in the period 1880s-1930s when a series of Land Acts broke up the previous large estates from which farmers rented property, the farmers through British Government grants and loans being empowered to buy their farms instead of renting them.
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