- Source: Registration Act
- Apartheid
- Kimia hijau
- Delhi
- Kelompok etnik di Afrika Selatan
- Publicis
- Perkawinan sejenis di Selandia Baru
- Office for National Statistics
- Hukum pers
- Pengobatan tradisional Tionghoa
- Undang-Undang Administrasi Hukum Muslim
- SIM Registration Act
- Registration Act
- Superhero fiction
- Smith Act
- Societies Registration Act, 1860
- For the People Act
- National Voter Registration Act of 1993
- Foreign Agents Registration Act
- Land Registration Act 2002
- Population Registration Act, 1950
The Registration Act (2 Anne c. 7 (I); long title An Act for registering the Popish Clergy) was an act of the Parliament of Ireland passed in 1704, which required all "Popish" (Roman Catholic) priests to register at their local magistrates' court, to pay two 50-pound bonds to ensure good behavior, and to stay in the county where they registered.
The act was one of a series of Penal Laws passed after the Williamite War to protect the victorious Protestant Ascendancy from a church seen as loyal to the defeated Jacobites and to foreign powers. Its second section stated that if an Irish Catholic priest was to convert to the established Church of Ireland, he would receive a 20-pound stipend, levied on the residents of the area where he had last practised. Unregistered clergy were to depart Ireland before the 20 July 1704 and any remaining after 24 June 1705 would be deported. Any that returned would be punished as under the Banishment Act 1697 (as high treason). These were sought by freelance "priest hunters".
Amendment and repeal
A 1704 act (4 Anne c. 2 (I)) amended the Registration Act, Banishment Act and Popery Act, to close a loophole whereby they had not applied to priests ordained after the original act first came into force. The 1704 act, originally set to expire after the 1708–09 session of Parliament, was made permanent in that session. The Roman Catholic Relief Act 1782 provided that these acts' provisions could not apply to a priest who had registered and taken an oath of allegiance. Daniel O'Connell drafted a comprehensive Catholic Emancipation bill in the 1820s which would have repealed all these acts; in the event the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 was more limited and the acts were not formally repealed until the Statute Law Revision (Ireland) Act 1878.
References
= Sources
="Bill 523: For registering the Popish clergy". Irish Legislation Database. Queens University Belfast. Retrieved 23 February 2020.
Butler, James Goddard; Ball, William (1765). "The Statutes at Large, Passed in the Parliaments Held in Ireland". Dublin: Printed by Boulter Grierson. Retrieved 23 February 2020.
2 Ann c.7 pp.31–32 – "An Act for registering the Popish clergy" (1703)
4 Ann c.2 pp.71–72 – "An Act to explain and amend an act, intituled, An Act for registring the popish clergy" (1705)
8 Ann c.3 pp.190–216 – "An Act for explaining and amending an act intituled, An Act to prevent the further growth of popery" (1709)