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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > British And Irish History > Home Rule
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Home Rule, British And Irish History

Related Category: British And Irish History

By this time Irish labor leaders like James Connolly had been drawn into the struggle, and Irish radicalism : along with impatience and doubts as to Britain's good faith : brought about the Easter Rebellion of 1916. In 1918, S Ireland elected to Parliament only Sinn Fein members pledged to republicanism instead of Home Rule. These members did not go to Westminster; they set up their own Irish assembly, the DAil Eireann, which declared Ireland independent. There followed a period of guerrilla war between the nationalist Irish Republican Army (IRA) and a force of British irregulars known as the Black and Tans.

In 1921 the British government entered into negotiations with the de facto Irish government headed by Eamon De Valera. The Irish Free State, with dominion status, was created by an Anglo-Irish treaty in 1921. Remaining ties with Great Britain were gradually discarded (see Ireland, Republic of). The six counties of Northern Ireland (see Ireland, Northern) remained part of the United Kingdom, their government established under the provisions of the Fourth Home Rule Bill of 1920, which was rendered void in the South by the establishment of the Irish Free State. The continued British presence in Northern Ireland was abhorrent to Irish nationalists, but except for scattered IRA terrorism, the issue was dormant until Protestant repression led to revived militant nationalism among Northern Ireland's Catholics.



The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2009, Columbia University Press.
Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.



Topics that might be of interest to you:

Isaac Butt
James Connolly
Conservative party
Craigavon, James Craig, 1st Viscount
Curragh, the
DAil Eireann
Eamon De Valera
Fenian movement
George V, king of Great Britain and Ireland
William Ewart Gladstone
Great Britain
Ireland
Ireland, Northern
Ireland, Republic of
Irish Land Question
Irish Republican Army
Andrew Bonar Law
Liberal party, former British political party
Thomas Power O£Connor
Oxford and Asquith, Herbert Henry Asquith, 1st earl of
Charles Stewart Parnell
Phoenix Park murders
John Edward Redmond
Sinn FEin

Related Categories:

History > Modern Europe
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