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Unit 3 Part 5 (Ireland)

The document provides a history of Ireland from the first settlers in 8000BC to modern times. It discusses the early inhabitants who arrived by land bridge from Britain and Europe and transitioned to farming around 4000BC. Christianity arrived in the 5th century AD and replaced pagan religions. Vikings invaded in the 9th century and established settlements. Norman invasion in 1169 marked English rule for seven centuries. Discrimination against Catholics increased tensions. The Great Famine of 1845 caused mass starvation and emigration. Independence movements in the 20th century led to Ireland separating from the UK in 1922, though six counties remained as Northern Ireland. The Troubles from the 1960s-1990s involved violence between nationalists and unionists before a 1998 peace

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
26 views2 pages

Unit 3 Part 5 (Ireland)

The document provides a history of Ireland from the first settlers in 8000BC to modern times. It discusses the early inhabitants who arrived by land bridge from Britain and Europe and transitioned to farming around 4000BC. Christianity arrived in the 5th century AD and replaced pagan religions. Vikings invaded in the 9th century and established settlements. Norman invasion in 1169 marked English rule for seven centuries. Discrimination against Catholics increased tensions. The Great Famine of 1845 caused mass starvation and emigration. Independence movements in the 20th century led to Ireland separating from the UK in 1922, though six counties remained as Northern Ireland. The Troubles from the 1960s-1990s involved violence between nationalists and unionists before a 1998 peace

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UNIT 3- A BRIEF HISTORY OF IRELAND

- 1st settlers in Ireland—8000BC


• When hunter-gatherers came from GB+ Europe (by land bridge)
• Lived by Hunting+ fishing (for 4 thousand years)
• Around 4000BC→ Farm (old lifestyle gradually died out)
- Descendants of original settlers
• Built burial mounds+ impressive monuments
Ex: Newgrange (stone tomb—before 3000BC)
- Early Irish society
• Organized into kingdoms rich culture
Learned upper classes
Artisans (metalwork→ iron, bronze, gold)
• Pagan (for thousands of years)→ changed in the early 5th cent AD when
Christian missionaries, including St Patrick arrived.
• Christianity replaced the old pagan religions by the year 600
o Early monks introduced the Roman alphabet (not oral culture
anymore) + Wrote down traditional stories, legends and myths (that
otherwise may have been lost)
- Vikings invaded Ireland (early 9th cent)→ attacks were on for over 100 years
• 1st→ Vikings raided monasteries+ villages
• Eventually→ built settlements on the island (which grew into important
towns)
• Irish cities (by Vikings)→ Dublin, Limerick, Cork, Wexford
• Irish society eventually assimilated the descendants of the Vikings
- Invasion of Norman mercenaries (1169)→ several consequences for the island
• Marked the beginning of more than 7 cent of Norman English rule in
Ireland→control expanded until the beginning of the 13th cent (when the
rulers began to be assimilated into Irish society)
- The Reformation brought this time of relative peace to a brutal end.
• In 1534 military campaign put down Irish chiefs who would not submit to the
English king (Henry VIII—the 1st king to have the title of being king in England+
Ireland)
• People were massacred
• A policy of “plantations” began→ land was confiscated from Catholic Irish
landowners, and given to Protestant settlers from England and Scotland
• During the next cent and a half (17th cent)→ Catholic Ireland was conquered+
religion became a source of division and strife (a role it held until recent times)

18th -19th cent

- Many laws were passed that discriminated against Catholics


- Native Gaelic language→ banned in schools
- 1778→ only 5% of the land owned by Catholics
- 1801→ Irish parliament abolish+ Ireland became part of the UK of “GB and Ireland”
- Poverty→widespread
• Potatoes=most important food→ 1845 “the potato blight”/ “The Great Famine”:
potato crop destroyed by a disease+ English rulers not helping to the situation
• About a million people died of starvation or disease+ 1 million emigrated to escape
• The population of Ireland fell from 8million (1841) to 6million (1852) + continued
to decline more slowly until the 2nd half of the 20th cent

20th cent

- Efforts→ gain home rule+ improve the condition of people


- Movements for land reform+ movements to make Gaelic the official language
- Strong Protestant opposition to these demands
- 1900→ civil war loomed
- 1914→ the Home Rule act was passed (would give Ireland some autonomy)—
suspended with the start of the 1st World War
- April 24th ,1916→ uprising on Eastern Day: failed beyond Dublin+ leaders arrested and
executed— (brutal treatment tipped public opinion in favor of independence)
- Irish War of Independence began in 1919 until 1921
- 1922→ southern 26 counties of Ireland separated themselves from the UK—new
country=Irish Free State
- Gaelic restored as the official national language (+English)
- 1948→ ties with England were cut—country became known as Republic of Ireland
- 6 counties in the north of Ireland= Northern Ireland→ remained part of the UK (still
today)
- The Troubles (late 1960’s-1998)
• A sectarian conflict in N. Ireland in which Nationalists (Catholics who wanted
N. Ireland to unite the Rep of Ireland) and Unionists (Protestants, loyal to the
UK) are confronted
• Unrest exploded violently in the late 1960s and did not end until 1998, when a
peace agreement was signed (the Good Friday)
• 1969→ British troops were sent to N. Ireland
• The brutality of British troops was controversial and a landmark during the
decade was the Bloody Sunday (1972): British shot 26 civilians who did not
carry arms when they were just protesting against arrest without trial
• During this decades, conflict between 2 sides: Loyalist paramilitaries+ the
British army / Republican paramilitaries such as the IRA (Irish Republic Army—
controversial because of the terrorist attacks committed in Ireland+ the UK)
• 1998→ end of The Troubles with the Good Friday Agreement+ dissolution of
the IRA
• The agreement tries to reach a peaceful agreement but violence is still in the
streets. It is not until 2007 that the British troops decides to leave N. Ireland to
restore peace
- Economically→ things slowly began to grow after the establishment of the Irish
Republic (late 1950s) + population began to increase since the potato blight
- 1973→ Ireland joined the EEC (European Economic Community—current European
Union)—membership did much to improve Irish economy (with direct aid and
increasing foreign investment)
- 1990s→ Irish economy boomed and Ireland called “The Celtic Tiger”
- After of centuries of poverty and suffering, Ireland is now a prosperous, modern
country

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