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Home Rule Crisis

Home Rule Crisis. Leaving Cert History Sovereignty and Partition 1912-1949. Home Rule Crisis. Political Crisis in Britain What was the effect of this change? What was the reaction in Ireland? Nationalist Response to the UVF Establishment of Irish Volunteers Home Rule Postponed.

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Home Rule Crisis

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  1. Home Rule Crisis • Leaving Cert History • Sovereignty and Partition 1912-1949

  2. Home Rule Crisis • Political Crisis in Britain • What was the effect of this change? • What was the reaction in Ireland? • Nationalist Response to the UVF • Establishment of Irish Volunteers • Home Rule Postponed

  3. Political Crisis in Britain • In 1909 the British government was plunged into crisis when the House of Lords rejected the Liberal government budget • Two general elections in 1910 led to a stalemate • The Irish Parliamentary Party (IPP) held the balance of power. • The Liberal Party passed a law that removed the veto the House of Lords. • In future the House of Lords could only hold up legislation for two years.

  4. What was the effect of this change? • Every time the British Government attempted to introduce Home Rule for Ireland the House of Lords stopped it. • When the British Government introduced a Bill in 1912 that would grant Home Rule to Ireland, the House of Lords could only delay it for two years.

  5. What was the reaction in Ireland? • The Irish Parliamentary Party were very popular in Ireland. • Unionists felt betrayed by a British government. • Unionists, under the leadership of Edward Carson, established the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) as an armed group to resist Home Rule. • Under pressure from the UVF and the Conservative Party the Government proposed that Ulster would be excluded from Home Rule.

  6. Nationalist Response to the UVF • Establishment of the UVF posed a threat to Nationalists and to Home Rule. • Despite this many Nationalists welcomed the establishment of the UVF. • The Irish Republican Brotherhood argued that it would allow Nationalists to also establish an armed group to fight for Home Rule for the whole island. • Irish Volunteers established

  7. Establishment of Irish Volunteers • Eoin Mac Neill called a meeting in Dublin on 25 November 1913 to establish the Irish Volunteers. • The IRB had already begun military training • Organisations like the GAA and the Gaelic League were actively supporting the idea • Hundreds attended the meeting in Dublin and meetings followed all over the country • Within weeks thousands had joined the Irish Volunteers and by the middle of 1914 they had over 110,000 members.

  8. Home Rule Postponed • Start of First World War caused postponment of Home Rule until the war was over. • John Redmond called on the Irish Volunteers to join the British Army • Eoin MacNeill opposed Redmond. • The Irish Volunteers split • Over 100,000 supported Redmond who formed the National Volunteers • About 10,000 rejected the call to fight and remained with MacNeill in the Irish Volunteers

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