Zusammenfassung der Ressource
CHAPTER 8 The Anglo-Irish Settlement
- WWI
- Supported by both Ulster Unionists and the INP
- In response a Home Rule Act
was to be enacted for the end of
the year
- Irish economy prospered
and 150,000 Irish men
were in active service
- But the legnth of the war and British govs insesitivity (Ulster volunteer force
but not Irish Volunteers had a special division)
- Result: REVOLUTIONARY NATIONALISM
- The Easter Rebellion 1916
- Irish Nationalists - Fundementally the
Fenians - had been opposed war and tried to
prevent recruitment
- 1914 the volunteer movement split - those loyal
to Redmond (& war) formed 'National
Volunteers'
- Others under Eoin MacNeill formed the
'Irish Volunteers'
- Despite MacNeill's rejection of a premature uprising a small group of
fellow commanders(Clarke, PEARCE,
CONNOLLY) planned an uprising for Easter
- Pearce was looking for a "glorious revolution" whereas Connolly believed that
rebellion could be successful if there was support from the Irish masses
- Arms were obtained from Casement from Germany. The plans were very secret
- it was to be carried out under the guise of field manuevres
- On Easter monday they seized Dublin and declared
Ireland a Republic, establishing a provinical government
with Pearce as the head
- Result: Revolutionary Nationalism influenced by Cultural Nationalism
- Aims: IRISH REPUBLIC
- Reasons for failure
- #1 Rebellion was confined to Dublin, where there
was little support anyway
- #2 The Provincial units (under instruction from
MacNeill) did not join in the uprising
- #3 They recieved no outside help, a German Arms ship
was intercepted and Casement was arrested
- #4 The rebels were outnumbered by
soliders and armed police
- Aftermath
- Pearce surrendered
unconditionally; leaving
450 rebels and civillians
killed and 2000 injured,
- It was not a 'national rising' as a minority of a minority
group, it was condemned by the Catholic Church,
Redmond and moderate Nationalists
- British Government Response
- Asquieth handed over problem to army -> Marital
Law proclaimed and draconian policy of wholesale
arrests made
- Improsionment and Internment followed
by executions - 15 were executed,
including Connolly and Casement
- Eamon De Valera had death sentence commuted to imprisonment
- The harsness of the British response
revitalised Irish Nationalsim
- Rebels given 'moral credence' -
Anti war and Anti British sentiments
hardened
- Under pressure from Ireland and America Lloyd George
negotiated a Home Rule solution
- Exclusion of 6 Protestent counties in Ulster (Redmond led to
belive that exclusion was temporary but Carson beleived it to
be permenant)
- Redmond's career distroyed as well as his
party thus Constitutional Nationalism
effectively dies
- Sinn Fein's absence came to occupy the dominant force
of irish Nationalism formally held by the IPP
- Sinn Fein
- Founded by Arthur Griffith as a militant
but non-violent organisation became commited to Irish Republic
- Gained Influence after the Easter Rising because of the
creation of martyrs, spread of revolutionary ideas and Unionist
veto on Home Rule
- Won two by-election seats usually Redmondite
- Under pressure from America England released
prisioners which provided new revolutionary
recruits for Sinn Fein
- Llyod George called an Irish Convention in July 1917 to create and
Irish Settlement but his real focus was on winning the war
- Went on till May 1918 but was afailure as
Sinn Fein boycotted the convention and the
Ulster Unionists remained firm
- The IPP failed and popularity declined
- In July 1917 de Valera is elected MP for East Clare whcih
extended and strengthened support and organsiation
- In October 1917 de Valera was elected President
and Head of the Irish volunteers
- This combined the leadership of both the political and
militant wings of the Irish Revolutionary movement
- Conscription Crisis
- As a result of the heavy casualties in WWI Britain
contemplated introducing Irish conscription. The Act was
pushed through despite warnings
- Dillion (leader of IPP) walked out of
Westminster and went to Dublin, where they
formed an alliance with Sinn Fein
- Together they organsied a nationwide campaign
against conscription - one day strike and support from
Catholic Church
- Government gave way but the damage
had already been done to the Union
- 1918 General Election
- Radicalisation of opinion in Southern Ireland
helped the Republican cause
- in April 1918 Grifith returned to East Cavan by
an overwhelming majority
- Authorities responded by arresting Republican leaders (with the
excuse of their involvment in a 'German plot'
- This antagonised public opinion and helped Sinn Fein
demonstrated in the general election in December 1918
- Sinn Fein virtually destroyed the IPP - Sinn Fein (73 seats), IPP
(6 seats), Unionists (26 seats)
- The Dail Eireann
- As a result of the 1918 election Sinn
Fein could claim the will of the Irish
people
- Their MPs did not take their seats in Westminster
- Instead they returned to Sublin on 21st January 1919 to
consttute themeselves as the parliament of the Irish
Republic
- The Dail issued a declaration of Independence, demanding English
withdrawal from Ireland and a provincial government was set up under de
Valera
- British government released prisoners but the Dail has
already established its own courts and collected taxes
- The Dail was backed by the Irish Republican Army (IRA) - formally the Irish volunteers - under Michael Collins
- Michael Collins organised an intelligence system and held
domestic posts in the Irish provincial government
- Deadlock
- British govenment demanded allegiance based
on mandate and established treaty rights
- Irish Provincial goverment rested on the mood
of Irish people in establishing a nationhood
- In 1919 two policemen were
killed by the IRA in County
Tipperary. This was seen as the
opening shots of war for Irish
independence.
- Meanwhile the British government was working on a new constituional initiative
- The Anglo-Irish Treaty
- It became clar that neither side would win the war -
IRA were short of men and materials. England not
prepared for an war with Catholic Ireland
- Lloyd George aware of the unpopularity of war in Ireland,
espicially towards the methods persued by the Black-and-Tans
- Also understood that the IRA and Sinn Feins were a formidable
group whos demands for independence were backed up by the
majority of Irish people
- In 1920 Lloyd George ateempted to bring
peace but early moves failed - this was
however a phychological victory for Sinn
Fein
- Partition had cleared the way for the treaty -
following Sinn Fein's refusual to attend parliament
noone was governing Southern Ireland
- King George V appealled to Irish peace - de Valera and Collins
faced peace more as a result of the hard military facts
- The republican leaders also acknowledged that Lloyd George was considering
'dominion status' which for a British priminister was good
- Truce agreed on 11th July 1921
- Th treaty discussion was legnthy and comlicated. 'Dominion
Satus' meant full control of domestic affairs, membership of British
Empire and alliegence
- Hardline Republican's of the Dail Eireann did not want the oath of
alliegence but de Valera was willing to comprimise and sent a
delegation to London
- The Irish Delegation led by Griffith and
Collins, de Valera remained in Dublin
causing confusion and tension amognst
leaders
- On the one hand the delegates were plenipotentiaries and on the other they
had to submit draft treaties to de Valera
- This played into the hands of the experienced British
side - Lloyd George, Churchill, Austin Chamberlin
and Birkenhead
- Three main discussions taking place
- #1 British security and defence (settled easily,
three naval bases in Ireland was agreed)
- #2 Ulster (Irish leaders did not want partition but they weren't prepared to
challenge the new state - N. Ireland given right to opt out of treaty)
- Lloyd George persuaded the Irish
delegates to accept the idea of a Boundry
Commission (pure bluff)
- #3 The powers of the new state (argument was symbolic as
opposed to political, agreed to 'Dominion status' but oath of
alliegence was watered down)
- Lloyd George gives the Republicans an ultimatum -
unless Sinn Fein representatives accepted the treaty
there would be war in three days (Mon 5th Dec)
- Fearful of the consequences of rejection the
delegates signed the treaty on 6th December
1921. Lloyd George was probably bluffing
- Results of the Treaty
- In Britain the treaty was popular and it passed through
parliament comfortably
- In Ireland it brought not unity but dicord and conflict.
Irish cabinant was divided on whether to accept.
- Collins belived these were the best
terms. De Valera opposed it and
resigned as President, replaced by
Griffith
- The Dail accepted it narrowly - 64 votes to 57 on 7th Jan 1922
- The terms of the Treaty were carried out immediately - provincial
gov handed over to Collins, British Army withdraws handing over
to IRA
- Elections in June 1922 gave Collins and the pro-treaty group a
convincing majority
- Despite this the anti-treaty faction continued the 'troubles' which were
bloodier than the Anglo-Irish war
- Violence spread to N Ireland and some Conservatives regretted
accepting the treaty however in the Spring of 1923 the rebels accepted
the new regime
- The Constitution for the Irish Free State
- By the end of 1922 the Irish government (headed by William
Cosgrove following deaths of Griffiths and Collins) promulgated a
formal Constituion
- Appouved by Dail and British government. N Irleand exercised its right to opt out
- Irish free state and N Ireland established
- Assessment of the Treaty
- Flaws and Ambiguities
- The constitutional settlement was the product of
no definite plan
- It rested on no clear cut principles
- It did not conform to the origional ideals of any of the
participants
- However it ended the Anglo-Irish War and
inaugurated Ireland giving them some peace
and stablity
- There was a greater degree of liberty than
envisioned by O'Connell, Parnell or Redmond
and offered the opportunity for peaceful unity
- British safety was not comprimised
- All that remained of the Act of Union was the
symbolic office of Governer-General and
membership of the British Empire
- Long-term results
- Eventually the Treaty whcih rejected the sovereignty of the irish Free State were
rejected by the Irish Prime Minister de Valera
- In 1949 following announcment of neutrality
during WWII, Eire cut the last remaining ties
with Britain and Commonwealth and became a
free state
- Clement Attlee accepted irelands status as a republic but passed the Ireland Act -
which protected N Ireland
- The Government of Ireland Act 1920
- The general election in Britainled to an overwhelming victory for Lloyd
George's govenerment with the Irish question still needing addressing
- Involvement in the war had led to a new
emphasis on national self-determination
(Treaty of Versailles)
- Home Rule was now strong prospect -
as long as it recognised Ulster's rights
and Irleand remained within the
Empire
- Terms of the Act
- Establishement of two separate
Parliaments for Northern Ireland and
Southern Ireland
- Election to the parliaments decided by
proportional representation
- Powers similar to the 1914 Home Rule Act (no control over foreign
policy, defence, external trade, customs or police)
- Supremacy of UK parliament to justify intervention
in Northern Ireland
- Ulster Unionist argument accepted
(6 counties with Protestant majority)
- Both parts of Ieland represented at
Westminster with Council for both to deal
with common problems
- Ulster Unionists supported the Act in light of
the IRA's violence throughout Ireland
- Accepted by the North (James Craig
became Prime Minister)
- Failed in the South
- Sinn Fein relected without contest and the
boycotted the new parliament. Ulster Unionists
ironically became commited Home Ruler's
- In the South the political revolution meant that Home
Rule was no longer a viable option for Nationalists
- The Act was 'essentially constructed to solve the Irish
problem as it stood in 1914 not in 1920'
- The Anglo-Irish War
- At the same time as the Government of Ireland Act
Westminster was trying to cope with the IRA violent
campaign (aimed at police and British soldiers)
- Sinn Fein and the IRA beleived their legitimacy on
behalf of an existing Irish Republic
- British Government had little idea what was going on in
Ireland and so for a long time they refused to recognise
the existence of war
- Under pressure from Conservative backbenchers - Sinn Fein and IRA was outlawed, the
Dail was considered illegal, special powers of arrest introduced
- To maintain law and order the government relied on the police (who were
short staffed and demoralised by attacks against them 176 policemen killed)
- Recrutiment strengthened by the recruitment of toush
ex-soldiers, 'Black-and-Tans,' who were ill-diciplined and
semi-military
- In 1920 the IRA campaign became more
widespread, more calculated and more
brutal, they attacked civillians
- The Black-andTans responded similarly and were condoned
by the British government, this was condemned by British
opinion
- British realised they were at war and
committed troops on a wider scale and
introduced martial law in south - Geurilla
Warfare
- Bloody Sunday
- 21st November 1920 in Dublin. IRA killed 11 English civillians
(believed to be British intelligence)
- Black-and-Tans respond by killing players on a sports ground,
leaving behind 12 dead and 60 injured. In December much of Cork
was burned