Geography
Ireland is
situated in the Atlantic Ocean and separated from Great Britain by the
Irish Sea. Half the size of Arkansas, it occupies the entire island
except for the six counties that make up Northern Ireland. Ireland
resembles a basin—a central plain rimmed with mountains, except in the
Dublin region. The mountains are low, with the highest peak,
Carrantuohill in County Kerry, rising to 3,415 ft (1,041 m). The
principal river is the Shannon, which begins in the north-central area,
flows south and southwest for about 240 mi (386 km), and empties into
the Atlantic.
Government
Republic.
History
In the Stone and Bronze Ages, Ireland was inhabited by Picts in the
north and a people called the Erainn in the south, the same stock,
apparently, as in all the isles before the Anglo-Saxon invasion of
Britain. About the 4th century B.C., tall, red-haired Celts arrived
from Gaul or Galicia. They subdued and assimilated the inhabitants and
established a Gaelic civilization. By the beginning of the Christian
Era, Ireland was divided into five kingdoms—Ulster, Connacht, Leinster,
Meath, and Munster. Saint Patrick introduced Christianity in 432, and
the country developed into a center of Gaelic and Latin learning. Irish
monasteries, the equivalent of universities, attracted intellectuals as
well as the pious and sent out missionaries to many parts of Europe
and, some believe, to North America.
Norse depredations along the coasts, starting in 795, ended in 1014
with Norse defeat at the Battle of Clontarf by forces under Brian Boru.
In the 12th century, the pope gave all of Ireland to the English Crown
as a papal fief. In 1171, Henry II of England was acknowledged “Lord of
Ireland,” but local sectional rule continued for centuries, and English
control over the whole island was not reasonably absolute until the
17th century. In the Battle of the Boyne (1690), the Catholic King
James II and his French supporters were defeated by the Protestant King
William III (of Orange). An era of Protestant political and economic
supremacy began.
By the Act of Union (1801), Great Britain and Ireland became the
“United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.” A steady decline in the
Irish economy followed in the next decades. The population had reached
8.25 million when the great potato famine of 1846–48 took many lives
and drove more than 2 million people to immigrate to North America. In
the meantime, anti-British agitation continued along with demands for
Irish home rule. The advent of World War I delayed the institution of
home rule and resulted in the Easter Rebellion in Dublin (April 24–29,
1916), in which Irish nationalists unsuccessfully attempted to throw
off British rule. Guerrilla warfare against British forces followed
proclamation of a republic by the rebels in 1919. The Irish Free State
was established as a dominion on Dec. 6, 1922, with six northern
counties remaining as part of the United Kingdom. A civil war ensued
between those supporting the Anglo-Irish Treaty that established the
Irish Free State and those repudiating it because it led to the
partitioning of the island. The Irish Republican Army (IRA), led by
Eamon de Valera, fought against the partition but lost. De Valera
joined the government in 1927 and became prime minister in 1932. In
1937 a new constitution changed the nation's name to Éire.
Ireland remained neutral in World War II.
In 1948, de Valera was defeated by John A. Costello, who demanded final
independence from Britain. The Republic of Ireland was proclaimed on
April 18, 1949, and withdrew from the Commonwealth. From the 1960s
onwards, two antagonistic currents dominated Irish politics. One sought
to bind the wounds of the rebellion and civil war. The other was the
effort of the outlawed Irish Republican Army and more moderate groups
to bring Northern Ireland into the republic. The “troubles”—the
violence and terrorist acts between Republicans and Unionists in both
the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland—would plague the island
for the remainder of the century.
Under the First Programme for Economic Expansion (1958–63), economic
protection was dismantled and foreign investment encouraged. This
prosperity brought profound social and cultural changes to what had
been one of the poorest and least technologically advanced countries in
Europe. Ireland joined the European Economic Community (now the EU) in
1973. In the 1990 presidential election, Mary Robinson was elected the
republic's first woman president. The election of a candidate with
socialist and feminist sympathies was regarded as a watershed in Irish
political life, reflecting the changes taking place in Irish society.
Irish voters approved the Maastricht Treaty, which paved the way for
the establishment of the EU, by a large majority in a referendum held
in 1992. In 1993, the Irish and British governments signed a joint
peace initiative (the Downing Street Declaration), in which they
pledged to seek mutually agreeable political structures in Northern
Ireland and between the two islands. A referendum on allowing divorce
under certain conditions—hitherto constitutionally forbidden—was held
in Nov. 1995 and narrowly passed.
In 1998 hope for a solution to the troubles in Northern Ireland seemed
palpable. A landmark settlement, the Good Friday Agreement of April 10,
1998, called for Protestants to share political power with the minority
Catholics, and gave the Republic of Ireland a voice in Northern Irish
affairs. The resounding commitment to the settlement was demonstrated
in a dual referendum on May 22: the North approved the accord by a vote
of 71% to 29%, and in the Irish Republic 94% favored it. After numerous
stops and starts, the new government in Northern Ireland was formed on
Dec. 2, 2000, when the British government formally transferred
governing powers over to the Northern Irish Parliament. But the Good
Friday Accord stipulated that the IRA and other paramilitary groups
disarm; it wasn't until Oct. 2001 that the IRA finally began to comply.
In July 2002 the IRA publicly apologized for killing civilians. In June
2001, Ireland voted against expansion of the EU to include other
countries. Ireland's rejection of the Nice Treaty came as a shock to
the 14 other EU members as well as to the numerous countries aspiring
to EU membership—the vote had to be unanimous among the EU partners to
move ahead with the expansion. Despite a number of recent corruption
and bribery scandals, most of which involved the centrist Fianna
Fáil party of Prime Minister Bertie Ahern, the party won 81 of
166 seats in May 2002. Ahern became the first Irish prime minister in
33 years to be elected to a second successive term.
See also Northern Ireland, under
United Kingdom.
See also Encyclopedia: Ireland.
Central Statistics Office
www.cso.ie/ .