Timelines
Northern Ireland - 'The
Troubles' |
|
Northern
Ireland |
Date
|
Event
|
|
400s AD |
Saint
Patrick brought Christianity to Ireland.
Patrick had been born in England but had been taken to Ireland as a
slave. He escaped to France where he studied to become a priest. He
later returned to Ireland and successfully converted the people . |
|
1170 |
First
English involvement in Ireland
Turlogh O'Connor overthrew Dermot MacMurrough King of Leinster,
MacMurrough asked King Henry II of England for help. MacMurrough
rewarded the English soldiers that helped him to regain his kingdom
with land. |
|
1171 |
Earl of
Pembroke - Strongbow - King of Leinster
When MacMurrough died, Strongbow proclaimed himself King of
Leinster. |
|
After 1171 |
Irish Land
seized by English Barons
English Barons seized land in Ireland. |
|
1300s |
All land in
Ireland under English control.
English Barons continued to seize land in Ireland and by the 1300s
they held nearly all land in Ireland. However, loyalty to England had
weakened and many of the former English Barons now considered
themselves Irish rather than English. |
|
1400s |
English
control confined to the Pale
By the end of the fifteenth century English control was confined
to a small area around Dublin. This area was known as the Pale. Those
beyond the Pale were considered barbarians. |
|
1534 |
Henry VIII
decides to take control in Ireland
Ireland was ruled by the Earls of Kildare who were English
noblemen who had settled in Ireland. Henry invaded and tried to take
that control away. |
|
1541 |
Henry VIII
King of Ireland
Henry VIII forced Ireland's government to declare him King of
Ireland. Once declared King, Henry began to introduce new laws that
increased English control of Ireland. Henry also tried, without
success to introduce Protestantism to Ireland. |
|
1500s |
English
Monarchs continue to control Ireland
After Henry VIII's death, his children, Edward VI, Mary I and
Elizabeth I continued to try to increase English control in Ireland.
Mary attempted to do this by using plantation - giving land in Ireland
to settlers loyal to England. She seized land in central Ireland, gave
it to English settlers and renamed the land 'Queens County' and 'Kings
County'. Elizabeth tried to establish Protestantism in Ireland by
outlawing Catholic services and executing some Bishops and Priests.
However, this only had the effect of uniting the Catholics more
strongly against English rule. |
|
Late 1500s |
Ulster
Revolts
Shane O'Neill and Irish chieftain and later his son the Earl of
Kildare led a series of revolts in Ulster protesting against English
rule in Ireland. |
|
early 1600s |
Ulster
Plantation
James I attempted to stop the Ulster revolts by using plantation.
He gave land in Ulster to English and Scottish Protestant settlers and
created a Protestant majority in Ulster. Catholics became worried as
plantation increased fearing that they too would lose their land. |
|
1641 |
Irish Revolt
The Irish rebelled against English rule. The violence of the
rebellion saw the deaths of many. In England it was alleged that the
Catholics had massacred Protestants and many people wanted revenge. |
|
1649 |
Massacre of
Drogheda
Oliver Cromwell took an army to Ireland determined to put an end
to Irish revolts against English rule. He massacred a large number of
Catholics at Drogheda as 'revenge' for the alleged massacre of
Protestants in 1641. Cromwell then gave even more Irish land to
English Protestants and new established anti-Catholic laws which took
away many political rights. |
|
1685 |
James II
King of England
James II became King of England and Scotland. James was a Catholic and
he abolished many of the anti-Catholic laws established in Ireland. |
|
1688 |
Glorious
Revolution
The British invited William of Orange to come take the throne of
England and Scotland. When William arrived in England with his army,
James II fled to Ireland. James II organised an army to help him fight
William and regain the throne. However, many Protestants, especially
those in Ulster supported William of Orange. |
|
1690 |
Battle of
the Boyne
William's army defeated James II at this battle fought on the river
Boyne in the North East of Ireland. Many Ulster Protestants fought
with William and they became known as Orangemen. The event is still
commemorated today. Every 12th July Orangemen march through Ulster to
mark the defeat of Catholic James II at this battle. |
|
1703 |
Protestants
own 90% of the land
Over the past century, thousands of Catholics had been transported
abroad or resettled in new areas and even more land had been seized by
English Protestants. By 1703 90% of the land in Ireland was owned by
English nobles to whom the Catholic peasants had to pay rent. |
|
1695 - 1728 |
Penal Laws
These were a series of laws passed against Catholics in Ireland
including -
- Preventing Catholics
from carrying weapons and owning horses worth more than £5
- Restricting the
rights of Catholics to education
- Restrict their
rights to education.
- Preventing Catholics
from buying land
- Stating that on
death property should be equally divided between all sons rather
than inherited by the eldest.
- Banning Catholics
from serving in the army
- Preventing Catholics
from holding public positions
- Preventing Catholics
from entering the legal profession
- Preventing Catholics
from voting or serving as MPs
|
|
1801 |
Act of Union
This act abolished the Irish parliament and formerly united
Ireland and Great Britain to become the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Ireland |
|
1800s |
Unrest in
Ireland
Following the Act of Union there were a number of revolts in
protest against the growing numbers of poor and homeless people in
Ireland. English landlords had realised that they could earn more from
their land by turning it into grazing land than they were receiving in
rent from the Irish tenant farmers. In order to do this they had to
evict the tenant farmers. Thousands of farmers and their families were
simply thrown out onto the streets and their homes destroyed. |
|
1845 - 1848 |
The Potato
Famine
Potato was the staple diet of the Irish. Although other crops such
as wheat and oats as well as beef, mutton, pork and poultry were in
plentiful supply, these were shipped abroad by the English landowners
for profit, the Irish people mainly lived on potatoes. In 1845 the
potato crop in Ireland was struck by a disease and half the crop
failed. The situation was worse in 1846 and 1847 leaving people
starving. Around a million people emigrated to America and Canada. The
British government did not send money to help the starving people
fearing that they would use it to buy guns to revolt against English
rule. Landowners continued to ship produce abroad. More than 1.5
million people starved to death. Those that survived were filled with
hatred for the British government that had refused to help. |
|
1875 |
Charles
Stewart Parnell elected Irish MP
Charles Stewart Parnell believed in Home Rule (that Ireland should
be ruled by an Irish parliament and separately from Britain) and
managed to convince the British Prime Minister William Gladstone to
introduce a bill in Parliament. |
|
1886 |
First Home
Rule Bill
This bill proposed that
- A separate
parliament and government should be set up in Dublin.
- This parliament
would control all Irish affairs except defense issues, foreign
relations, trade and issues relating to customs and excise.
Westminster would deal with these issues.
- Westminster would no
longer have any Irish MP's in it.
However, many Irishmen
felt that Home Rule did not go far enough. They were worried that
there would be no Irish MPs in Westminster to defend Irish interests.
Protestants in Ireland, especially those in Ulster, were worried that
the Parliament would be mainly made up of Catholics.
The Bill was defeated. |
|
1893 |
Second Home
Rule Bill
Gladstone again tried to introduce Home Rule for Ireland but was
again defeated. |
|
1905 |
Sinn Fein
Formed
The political party Sinn Fein, meaning 'we ourselves' was
formed. Their aim - to free Ireland from British rule and gain
independence for the whole of Ireland. |
|
1912 |
Third Home
Rule Bill
The proposals for Home Rule in Ireland were approved by
Parliament. Home Rule was to become law in 1914. |
|
1912 |
Ulster
Volunteer Force (UVF) formed
The Protestants in Ulster made it known that they would resist any
attempt to introduce Home Rule in Ireland. |
|
1912 - 1920 |
New Plans
for Home Rule with Partition
It was clear that the Ulster Protestants would not accept Home
Rule so in order to avoid violence, the British government came up
with a new solution. Home Rule with
Partition. Home Rule would be introduced in the South but six
predominantly Protestant counties in the north would stay a part of
the United Kingdom. This solution is largely the cause of the problems
in Ireland that exist to this day. Nationalist remain committed to the
idea of a united free Ireland, while Protestants are unwilling to
accept anything less than partition. |
|
1914 |
Irish
Volunteers formed
To show their support from Home Rule,
many Catholics joined the British army to fight Germany. However, as
it emerged that the UVF would try to block Home Rule militant groups
formed from these volunteers to counter the UVF. They became known as
the Irish volunteers. |
|
24th April
1916 |
The Easter
Rising
About a thousand rebels from the Irish Volunteers decided to take
advantage of the fact that Britain was losing the war against Germany
and proclaim an Irish Republic. Led by Patrick Pearse and James
Connoly they seized Dublin's General Post Office on Easter Monday.
British forces poured into Dublin including gunboats that fired on the
rebels from the river Liffey. The fighting lasted five days and caused
more than 400 deaths and 2,500 injuries. The rebels were forced to
surrender. Those who had taken part in the Easter Rising became known
as the Irish Republican Army. |
|
May 1916 |
Easter
Rising Rebels executed
Seventy rebels were sentenced to death by the British forces.
Fifteen executions were carried out, the remainder, including Michael
Collins, were imprisoned. The executions led to a rise in support for
Sinn Féin. |
|
1920 |
Partition
The Government of Ireland Act
introduced partition to Ireland. Two parliaments were introduced, one
in Dublin to serve twenty-six counties and one in Belfast to serve six
northern counties. The twenty-six counties were known as the Irish
Free State and were given a measure of independence. The government of
these counties was known as the Provisional Government. The six
northern counties were to remain part of the United Kingdom but they
would have their own parliament, the Stormont. A Council of Ireland
was set up to oversee measures common to both parts. Unionists (those
who want to remain a part of the United Kingdom) support Partition but
Republicanists (those who want all of Ireland to be a separate
independent republic) oppose partition. |
|
1922 |
Irish Free
State Treaty
This treaty between Britain and Ireland, legalised Partition.
Violence, especially in the six northern counties escalated as
Catholics showed their opposition to Partition. |
|
1922 |
Civil War
In early 1922 British forces began to leave Ireland. Their
stations were handed over to the Irish Volunteers. However, the
Volunteers were split between those that supported Partition and those
that did not. Those that did became known as Free State soldiers while
those that did not were known as Irregulars. Tension between the two
groups escalated into violence which lasted for just over a year and
left hundreds dead including Michael Collins leader of the Free State
soldiers. The violence was eventually put down by the Provisional
Government and 1100 rebels were interned (imprisoned without trial). |
|
1948 |
Creation of
Republic of Ireland
The Irish Free State was granted full independence from Britain.
However, the six northern counties remained part of the United
Kingdom. |
|
1967 |
Northern
Ireland Civil Rights Association (NICRA) Formed
The Northern Ireland Government was dominated by the Unionist
party and as a part of the United Kingdom anti-Catholic laws that had
been passed in the nineteenth century were still in force. The NICRA
was largely based on the US Civil Rights Movement that fought for
equality for black Americans and wanted to see the anti-Catholic
measures abolished and equality for Catholics in Northern Ireland. |
|
1968 |
Civil Rights
Protests
The first Civil Rights protest march took place in March. The
second took place in Derry in October despite it being banned by the
Minister for Home Affairs, William Craig, claiming that the movement
was a front for the IRA. The Royal Ulster Constabulary were sent in to
break up the march. They used excessive force, much of which was
televised and broadcast worldwide. The tactics of the RUC left
Catholics fearful and untrusting of them. The British government could
no longer take a back seat and forced the Stormont to make reforms,
however, the changes were minimal and in no way met the demands of the
Civil Rights Movement. |
|
1969 |
IRA Split
The IRA splits into two wings - the Marxist-oriented Official IRA
and the more hard-line Provisionals. |
|
1969 |
Catholic
demands were no nearer being met and with the approach of the two main
Unionist marches (the march of the Orangemen on July 12th and the
march on August 12th to commemorate the siege of Derry in 1689 when
apprentice boys closed the gates on King James) tension between
Catholics and Protestants was high. |
|
August 12th
- 15th1969 |
Battle of
Bogside
As the Apprentice Boys marched past Catholic Bogside there were
clashes which forced the intervention of the RUC. However, the rioting
escalated and the police were stoned and petrol-bombed. The NICRA
called on Catholics to take the pressure off Catholics in Bogside by
mounting demonstrations in Belfast. Consequently there was rioting in
Belfast as well and the RUC were unable to cope. The Northern Ireland
government had no choice but to call for British troops to be sent in
to put down the riots. The first British troops arrived on the 15th
August. In the Bogside area of Derry barricades were put up and
neither the RUC nor British troops were permitted access to the
Catholic area. In order to avoid further bloodshed the British troops
allowed the 'no go' areas to stand. |
|
August 9th
1971 |
Internment
Introduced
The Civil Rights Movement continued to protest despite a ban being
placed on all marches and the IRA continued to make attacks on British
troops resulting in the death of a British soldier. In the face of
increasing calls for internment for IRA members, it is introduced on
9th August 1971 and around 350 people were immediately arrested and
interned. The following 48 hours saw violence and protests against
internment that left 17 dead including 10 civilians. |
|
1971 |
Protests
Against Internment
Throughout the remainder of the year protests against internment
continued. The protests included violence, withholding of council
rents, strikes and resignations by officials. |
|
30th January 1972 |
Bloody
Sunday
A march organised by the NICRA against Internment and the ban on
marches took place in Derry. In order to ensure that the march was
peaceful the IRA had promised to stay away. British soldiers had put
up barricades to prevent the marchers entering the city centre square.
A section of the marchers and some observers confronted soldiers
manning the barricade. British paratroopers opened fire killing 14 and
injuring 13 others. |
|
1972 |
Direct Rule
imposed
Following Bloody Sunday there was a rise in support for the
Provisional IRA. In February the British Embassy in Dublin was burnt.
It was clear that the British government had to do something to try to
quieten the situation. As a result, in March the Northern Ireland
government was suspended - Northern Ireland was to be directly ruled
from Westminster. One of the first actions by Westminster was to order
the dismantling of the 'no-go' areas set up in 1969. The IRA responded
by using increasing violence. |
|
1974 |
Prevention
of Terrorism Act
With the British becoming increasingly active in Northern Ireland,
the IRA launched a bombing campaign which targeted public areas
both in Ireland and on the British mainland. Bombs exploded in Dublin,
Monaghan, Guildford, Woolwich and Birmingham killing and injuring
civilians. The government responded by introducing the Prevention of
Terrorism Act which allowed suspects to be detained without charge for
up to seven days |
|
1980s |
Hunger
Strikes
In 1976 the British government had removed 'special prisoner
status' for those imprisoned for political acts. The prisoners had
campaigned for 'political prisoner status' since 1976 by using both
the 'blanket protest' refusing to wear prison clothes and donning a
blanket instead and the 'dirty protest' where prisoners refused to
clean their cells and smeared excrement on the walls. When these had
failed prisoners began going on hunger strikes. Bobby Sands was the
first hunger striker in 1981. He and nine others died as a result of
the hunger strike. They were considered martyrs - around 100,000
people attended Bobby Sands' funeral. Although no concessions were won
from the British government, support for the Political wing of the
Provisional IRA increased considerably. |
|
1985 |
Anglo-Irish
Agreement
Leaders of Britain and Ireland met to discuss the situation. The
resulting Anglo-Irish agreement gave Dublin some control over Northern
Ireland affairs. Unionists were outraged and the agreement was never
fully implemented. |
|
1993 |
Downing
Street Declaration
Following talks between the British Prime Minister and the Irish
leader, this declaration was issued. It stated that the people of
Northern Ireland should be free to decide their own future and that
representatives of various groups should meet to discuss a solution.
Sinn Fein was offered a seat provided that IRA violence was ended. As
a result the IRA declared a cease fire in August 1994 and were
followed a month later by a cease fire declaration from Loyalist
groups. |
|
1996 |
Peace Talks
Multi-party peace talks began chaired by US senator George
Mitchell.Mitchell proposed that disarmament should begin but this led
to a stalling of the talks and the IRA broke its cease fire and
violence resumed. |
|
1998 |
Good Friday
Agreement
In 1997 the British government proposed a resumption of peace
talks. Once again Sinn Féin were invited on condition that a six-week
cease fire had been observed. In July 1997 the IRA announced the cease
fire. After months of discussion a settlement is reached on Good
Friday 1998.
Terms in
Brief:
Ireland shall not be one united country without the consent of a
majority in Northern Ireland
The people of Northern Ireland have the right to call themselves
either Irish or British
A multi party assembly will be elected to govern the community.
A north/south council be set up to consider areas of mutual interest
An Anglo-Irish council be set up to consider areas of mutual interest
All people shall have basic human rights, civil rights and equality
Linguistic diversity to be recognised - Irish to be taught in all
schools
Paramilitary groups to be decommissioned within two years
A gradual reduction in the number of security forces deployed in
Northern Ireland
To work towards having an unarmed police force
Political prisoners to be released providing the ceasefire is
maintained
A referendum
showed an overwhelming majority of the people of Ireland supporting
the Good Friday Agreement. |