1 / 6

CONTESTING HISTORY OPPOSING VOICES

CONTESTING HISTORY OPPOSING VOICES. 12: Debating the Treaty. Debating the Treaty. 1916: 3-12 May: Leaders of the Rising executed - 3 Aug.: Casement executed 1916: 22-3 Dec.: first Internees returned to Ireland 1917: Feb.: Roscommon by-election – Count Plunkett returned for Sinn F é in

ulf
Download Presentation

CONTESTING HISTORY OPPOSING VOICES

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CONTESTINGHISTORYOPPOSINGVOICES 12: Debating the Treaty

  2. Debating the Treaty • 1916: 3-12 May: Leaders of the Rising executed - 3 Aug.: Casement executed • 1916: 22-3 Dec.: first Internees returned to Ireland • 1917: Feb.: Roscommon by-election – Count Plunkett returned for Sinn Féin • 1917: May: Longford South by-election – Joseph McGuinness returned for SF • 1917: July: Clare East – Éamon de Valera returned for SF • 1917: Oct.: SF Ard Fheis – de Valera elected president – and also president of the Volunteers • 1918: April: The Military Services Act raised the possibility of conscription in Ireland • 1918: April: Mansion House Conference of nationalist protestors • 1918: April: Anti-conscription pledge signed by nationalists • 1918: May: Arrest of SF leadership

  3. Debating the Treaty • 1918: Nov.: Armistice • 1918: Nov.: Election: SF – 73 seats; Nationalist - 6; Unionist – 26 • 1919: Jan.: Soloheadbeg ambush, Co. Tipperary and first meeting of Dáil Eireann on same day – the beginning of the War of Independence • 1919: June: Local Government (Ireland) Act • 1919: June: Dáil Eireann founds first ‘arbitration courts’ • 1919: July: SF and IRA proscribed • 1919: Sept.: Dáil Eireann proscribed • 1920: Jan.: SF victorious in local elections • 1920: Feb.: first Black and Tans recruited for Ireland - Government of Ireland bill entered the Commons • 1920: March: Ulster Unionist Council accepted the Government of Ireland bill • 1920: July: Auxiliary police division established • 1920: Nov.: ‘Bloody Sunday’ and the Kilmichael ambush

  4. Debating the Treaty • 1920: Dec.: Auxiliaries burnt parts of Cork • 1920: Dec.: Government of Ireland measure enacted • 1921: May: Opening of Northern Ireland parliament • 1921: July: Truce proclaimed in Ireland • 1921: Aug.: Second Dáil formed • 1921: Oct.: Negotiations launched between representatives of the British government and the Dáil • 1921: 6 Dec.: Anglo-Irish Treaty signed • 1921: 14 Dec.: Debate began in the Dáil on the Treaty • 1922: Jan.: Dáil accepted Treaty – de Valera resigned - Griffith elected president in his place – power handed over by Castle Administration • 1922: March: Anti-Treaty IRA repudiated the authority of the Dáil • 1922: April: Republican forces occupied the Four Courts • 1922: June: electorate endorsed the Treaty in a General election • 1922: June: Free State forces attacked Irregulars in the Four Courts

  5. Debating the Treaty • Further Reading: • Augusteijn, Joost (ed.), The Irish Revolution, 1913-23 (2002). • Fitzpatrick, David (ed.), Revolution? Ireland 1917-1921 (1990). • Laffan, Michael, The Resurrection of Ireland: The Sinn Féin Party, 1916-1923 (1999). • O’Halpin, Eunan, The Decline of the Union (1987).

More Related