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The
history of Ireland through to independence |
Ireland's history is inseparably
linked to that of its larger neighbor, England, and its fight for independence from English
rule. This struggle for independence lasted for 750 years.
It began during the 12th century with the first Anglo-Norman conquests and
continued right through to the founding of an Irish Free State (Gaelic: Eire)
in 1922. However, only 26 of the 32 Irish counties belong to an independent
Ireland. The six provinces that remain a part of the UK have formed the backdrop
for bloody conflict. This page tracks down the historic roots of the conflicts
in Northern Ireland, which escalated in 1968 and have been referred to as "troubles"
ever since. You will find a text on the troubles
in Northern Ireland during
the 20th century on a special page.
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The
Anglo-Norman conquests... |
In
1171 Henry, with a large army, visited Ireland, received homage from the
principal Norman leaders and from the Irish High King, Rory O’Connor,
and granted charters to the Normans authorizing them, as his subjects,
to take possession of portions of the island. The chief Anglo-Norman
adventurers, however, encountered formidable opposition before they
succeeded in establishing themselves on the lands that they claimed. The
government was entrusted to a viceroy, and the Norman legal system was
introduced into such parts of the island as were reduced to obedience to
England. During the 13th century various Anglo-Norman adventurers
succeeded in firmly establishing themselves in Ireland. The descendants
of the most powerful Anglo-Norman settlers in Ireland gradually became
identified with the native Irish, whose language, habits, and laws they
adopted to an increasing extent. To counteract this, the Anglo-Irish
Parliament passed, in 1366-1367, the Statutes of Kilkenny, decreeing
excommunication and heavy penalties against all those who followed the
custom of, or allied themselves with, the native Irish. This statute,
however, remained inoperative; and although Richard II later in the 14th
century made expeditions into Ireland with large forces, he failed to
achieve any practical result. The power and influence of the natives
increased so much at the time of the Wars of the Roses that the
authority of the English Crown became limited to the area known as the
English Pale, a small coastal district around Dublin and the port of
Drogheda. In the Wars of the Roses, the struggle in England between the
houses of York and Lancaster, Ireland supported the ultimate loser—the
House of York. |
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English
domination... |
This
situation changed when Henry VII became king of England and sent an army
to Ireland under the command of Sir Edward Poxnings. English law was
declared to hold for the Pale. Most important of all was the so-called
Poynings Law, which made the Irish Parliament dependent on the English
king by providing that all proposed legislation should first be
announced to the king and meet with his approval, after which he would
issue the licence to hold Parliament. This law determined the
relationship between the two nations until the Union in 1800.
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Complete
conquest by Henry VIII... |
After Kildare’s death in
1513, the power of the Geraldine family steadily declined, as his
successor, his son Gerald Fitzgerald (known as Garret Óg), spent much
of his time under careful scrutiny at the court of Henry VIII. Rumours
of the earl’s death in 1534 precipitated a revolt by his son Thomas
Fitzgerald, known as Silken Thomas. The rebellion was soon quashed and
Thomas’s execution in 1537 marked the end of the Kildare ascendancy.
It was Henry's policy to conciliate the Irish and to leave them under
their own laws. An English commission held courts throughout the island,
but Irish right was respected, and the country remained peaceful. In the
Parliament of 1541, attended for the first time by native chieftains as
well as by the lords of the Pale, Henry's title of Lord of Ireland,
which had been conferred by the papacy, was changed to King of Ireland. |
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Religious
wars... |
The
religious wars of Elizabeth were attended by rebellions of the Irish
Roman Catholics. James Fitzmaurice Fitzgerald, a member of the great
House of Geraldine that ruled over the larger part of Munster, landed at
Dingle Bay in 1579 with a papal army poised to restore Roman Catholicism
in Ireland. When he was killed soon after, leadership of the revolt
passed to his cousin Gerald Fitzgerald, 14th Earl of Desmond, who was
finally defeated in 1580 after a bloody struggle. The defeat of the
Desmond rebellion paved the way for a plantation scheme in Munster, as
much of their lands were confiscated and allocated to private English
settlers. In spite of the colony’s temporary overturn during the
O’Neill wars of the late 1590s, the plantation established a wealthy
and influential Protestant minority in Munster.
From
1594 to 1603 Ireland was engulfed in the Nine Years’ War, also known
as Tyrone’s Rebellion. During the war the greatest cruelty and
treachery were practised on both sides. In order to destroy Irish
resistance, the English devastated villages, crops, and cattle, putting
many people to death. The greater part of Munster and Ulster was laid
desolate, and more inhabitants died from hunger than from war. |
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"Flight
of the Earls" and the Ulster Plantation... |
During the
reign of James I English law was pronounced the sole law of the land. No
longer able to act independently, the Earl of Tyrone and Rory O'Donnell,
1st Earl of Tyrconnel, with some 100 other chieftains, fled in 1607 to
Rome. After the so-called "Flight of the Earls", the land in
six counties of northern Ulster was confiscated and became the basis for
the subsequent Ulster Plantation. The last vestiges of the independence
of the Irish parliament were destroyed by the creation of 40 boroughs
out of small hamlets, a political manoeuvre that secured a permanent
majority to the English Crown.
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Further
dispossession under from 1649 under Oliver Cromwell... |
In
1649 the English soldier and statesman Oliver Cromwell landed at Dublin,
which the Roman Catholic lords had been unable to take. Seeing
themselves as Protestant avengers of the 1641 uprising as well as
Parliamentarians fighting against the Royalists, the 10,000-strong force
of the New Model Army stormed Drogheda and put its garrison of 2,000 men
to the sword (see Drogheda, Siege of). The attack on Wexford led
to a similar outcome. Cromwell's successors, the English soldiers and
regicides Henry Ireton and Edmund Ludlow, successfully concluded the
war, and a great part of the best land of Munster, Leinster, and Ulster
was confiscated and divided among the soldiers of the Parliamentary
army. The Roman Catholics and Royalist landowners were banished to
Connaught. A portion of the land confiscated at this time was later
restored under Charles II, but at least two thirds of the land in
Ireland remained in the hands of the Protestants. |
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James
II and the Battle of the Boyne... |
The entire Roman Catholic
population sided with James II in the so-called Glorious Revolution of
1688. Thus, in 1689, when James landed at Dublin with his French
officers, Talbot had an Irish army ready to assist him. The Protestant
settlers were driven from their homes and found refuge in the towns of
Enniskillen and Londonderry, which James attempted to capture. He was
hampered by his lack of artillery, however, and the latter was relieved
by sea. His parliament of 1689 restored all lands confiscated since 1641
and passed an act of attainder against the partisans of William III. In
the following year William landed in Ireland and, in July 1690, in the
Battle of the Boyne, he defeated the Irish forces. He failed, however,
to capture the town of Limerick, which was bravely defended. The next
year, William's generals defeated the Irish army at the town of Aughrim,
and Limerick was forced to capitulate. By the terms of the Treaty of
Limerick (1691), Roman Catholics were permitted a certain amount of
religious freedom, and the lands that Roman Catholics had possessed
under Charles II were to be restored to them. |
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Union with Great Britain... |
The
principles of the French Revolution found their most powerful expression
in Ireland in the Society of United Irishmen, led by Wolfe Tone, Napper
Tandy, and Lord Edward Fitzgerald, which instigated the rebellion of
1798. The peasantry rose in Wexford and, although insufficiently armed,
made a brave fight. At one time Dublin was in danger, but the insurgents
were defeated by the regular forces at Vinegar Hill. A French force of
1,100 landed in Killala Bay in Mayo but was too late to render effective
assistance. The British prime minister, William Pitt, the Younger,
thought that the legislative union of Great Britain and Ireland together
with Roman Catholic emancipation was the only remedy for Roman Catholic
rebellion and Protestant tyranny in Ireland. By a lavish use of money
and distribution of patronage, he induced the Irish parliament to pass
the Act of Union, and on January 1, 1801, the union was formally
proclaimed. Owing to the opposition of George III, however, Pitt was
unable to make good his promise of emancipation for Roman Catholics.
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Catholic
emancipation... |
The
political situation was to change dramatically during the 19th century. In 1828 Roman Catholics were
permitted to hold local office, and after the Catholic Emancipation Act
of 1829 they were allowed to sit in Parliament. From 1845 to 1849
rent-racked Ireland suffered a disastrous famine resulting from the
failure of the potato crop. The government, influenced by laissez-faire
ideology, failed to provide adequate relief, and widespread tenant
evictions compounded the problem. It has been estimated that 1 million
died, mostly as a result of diseases caused by severe malnutrition; the
west of the country was worst affected. Concurrently, over 1 million
people emigrated, especially to America and Canada. And it was these emigrants
and the generations to follow that would play a large role in fight to independence. |
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Fight
for home rule... |
From
the 1870s the goal of Home Rule assumed a leading place in Irish
politics. In England, Gladstone attempted to resolve the Irish question
with a Home Rule Bill, which he formally introduced in 1886. Following
the defeat of Gladstone’s second bill, the impetus for Home Rule
faded. Throughout the 1890s and 1900s a new cultural nationalism
emerged. In
1902 the Irish political leader and journalist Arthur Griffith formed
the nucleus of Sinn Fein, which became a political party in 1905.
Griffith’s original aspiration was for Ireland to become an equal
partner with Britain in a dual monarchy, with emphasis on the importance
of economic and cultural self-reliance (the name translating from Irish
roughly as “ourselves alone”). By 1918, however, Sinn Fein had
absorbed a more radical set of nationalist republicans, and had eclipsed
the Irish Parliamentary Party as the most important nationalist party in
the country. |
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The
Easter Rising... |
Soon
after the outbreak of war, the remaining Volunteers together with the
trade-unionist Irish Citizen Army were directed by the IRB in the Easter
Rising that took place in Dublin in 1916. The rising lasted five days
and caused over 200 civilian deaths and enormous destruction of
property. Although it was unpopular at the time, the execution of 15 of
its leaders afterwards engendered widespread sympathy and evoked strong
nationalist feeling throughout the country. In the general election of
November 1918 Sinn Fein, although it had not been directly involved, was
popularly associated with the rising and largely as a result won 73 out
of 80 nationalist seats. Throughout the year efforts by the British
administration to reinforce its authority on the island were met with a
sustained campaign of guerrilla activity by the Volunteers, which, under
the able leadership of Michael Collins, increasingly became known as the
Irish Republican Army. The Anglo-Irish War, or War of Independence,
carried on until July 1921, when a ceasefire was called. After some
preliminary negotiations between De Valera and Lloyd George, Collins and
Griffith headed a delegation to London to discuss the terms of an
Anglo-Irish Treaty, marking the culmination of the Irish Revolution. |
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Foundation
of the Irish Free State... |
In December
1920, the British coalition government under the premiership of David
Lloyd George passed the Government of Ireland Act, which established two
Home Rule parliaments: one for six of the nine counties of Ulster—which
became a separate political division of the United Kingdom—and the
other for the remainder of the island. The new parliament of Northern
Ireland was opened by King George V in June 1921, confirming in effect
the partition of Ireland. In the south, the continuing hostilities
delayed the official implementation of the Act until December 1922. |
[Taken from: Microsoft®
Encarta® 2001
Encyclopedia]
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