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- <text id=93CT1732>
- <title>
- Ireland--History
- </title>
- <history>
- Compact ALMANAC--CIA Factbook
- Europe
- Ireland
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>CIA World Factbook</source>
- <hdr>
- History
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The Irish people are mainly of Celtic origin. The country's
- only significant minority descends from the Anglo-Normans.
- English is the common language, but Irish (Gaelic) also is an
- official language and is taught in the schools. A national
- literature in Irish is reemerging. Anglo-Irish writers--including Swift, Sheridan, Goldsmith, Burke, Wilde, Joyce,
- Yeats, Shaw, and Beckett--have made a contribution to world
- literature in the past 300 years disproportionate to the
- island's population, influence, and wealth.
- </p>
- <p> What little is known of pre-Christian Ireland comes from a
- few references in Roman writings, Irish poetry and myth, and
- archeology. The earliest inhabitant--people of a mid-stone age
- culture--arrived about 6000 B.C., when the climate had become
- hospitable following the retreat of the polar icecaps. About
- 4,000 years later, tribes from southern Europe arrived and
- established a high Neolithic culture in which gold ornaments
- and huge stone monuments figured prominently. This culture
- apparently prospered, and the island became more densely
- populated. The bronze age people, who arrived during the next
- 1,000 years, produced elaborate gold and bronze ornaments and
- weapons.
- </p>
- <p> The iron age arrived abruptly in the fourth century B.C. with
- the invasion of the Celts, a tall, energetic people who had
- spread across Europe and Great Britain in the preceding
- centuries. The Celts, or Gaels, and their more numerous
- predecessors divided into five kingdoms in which, despite
- constant strife, a rich culture flourished. This society was
- dominated by druids--priests who served as educators,
- physicians, poets, diviners, and keepers of the laws and
- histories.
- </p>
- <p> Tradition maintains that in A.D. 432, St. Patrick and his
- followers arrived on the island and, in the years that followed,
- worked to convert the people to Christianity. Probably a Celt
- himself, St. Patrick preserved the tribal and social patterns
- of the Celts, codifying their laws and only changing those that
- conflicted with Christian practices. He also introduced the
- Roman alphabet, which enabled Irish monks to preserve parts of
- the extensive Celtic oral literature.
- </p>
- <p> Druidism collapsed in the face of the tireless presentation
- of the new faith by St. Patrick and his successors, and Celtic
- scholars soon excelled in the study of Latin learning and
- Christian theology in the monasteries St. Patrick established.
- Missionaries from Ireland spread news of this flowering of
- learning, and scholars from other nations came to Irish
- monasteries to escape the strife then ravaging the rest of
- Europe. The excellence and isolation of these monasteries
- helped preserve Latin learning during the Dark Ages. The arts
- of illumination, metalwork, and sculpture flourished under the
- new system and produced such treasures as the Book of Kells,
- ornate jewelry, and the many carved stone crosses that dot the
- island.
- </p>
- <p> This golden age of culture was interrupted by 200 years of
- intermittent warfare with waves of Viking raiders who plundered
- monasteries and towns even as they made their own contribution
- by establishing Dublin and other seacoast towns. The Vikings
- were defeated eventually, but even though the Irish were free
- from invasion for 150 years, petty clan warfare continued to
- drain their energies and resources.
- </p>
- <p> In the 12th century, Pope Adrian IV granted overlordship of
- the island to Henry II of England, who began a struggle between
- the Irish and the English that was to continue for more than
- 800 years and that has had effects lasting to the present day.
- The Reformation exacerbated the oppression of the Roman
- Catholic Irish, and, in the early 17th century, Scottish and
- English Protestants were sent as colonists to the north of
- Ireland and around Dublin.
- </p>
- <p> From 1800 to 1921, Ireland was an integral part of the United
- Kingdom. Religious freedom was restored in 1829. Severe economic
- depression and mass famine occurred when the potato crop failed
- in the period 1846-48. In 1858 the Irish Republican Brotherhood
- (IRB-also known as the Fenians) was founded as a secret society
- dedicated to armed rebellion against the British. A
- constitutional force for independence, the Home Rule Movement,
- was created in 1874. Under the leadership of Charles Stewart
- Parnell, this party was able to force British governments after
- 1885 to introduce several Home Rule bills, although these were
- never adopted by Parliament. The turn of the century witnessed a
- surge of interest in Irish nationalism, including the founding
- of Sinn Fein as a political wing of the IRB.
- </p>
- <p> The outbreak of war in Europe in 1914 put Home Rule efforts
- into cold storage for the United Kingdom, and in reaction,
- Padraic Pearse and James Connolly led the unsuccessful Easter
- Rising of 1916. The decision to execute several leaders of the
- rebellion alienated public opinion and produced massive support
- for Sinn Fein in the 1918 general election. Under the
- leadership of Eamon De Valera, Sinn Fein constituted itself as
- the first Dail. British attempts to smash Sinn Fein produced
- the Anglo-Irish War of 1919-21, which ended in a truce.
- </p>
- <p> The Anglo-Irish treaty of 1921 established the Irish Free
- State of 26 counties within the British Commonwealth and
- recognized the partition Ireland as a temporary measure. The
- six predominantly Protestant counties of northeast Ulster chose
- to remain a part of the United Kingdom with limited
- self-government. A significant Irish minority repudiated the
- treaty settlement because of its opposition to partition.
- Furthermore, they advanced the concept of "external
- association" with the Commonwealth as an alternative to dominion
- status. This opposition led to a civil war (1922-23), won by the
- pro-treaty forces.
- </p>
- <p> In 1937, the forces initially opposed to the treaty had
- gained control of the government, and a new Irish constitution
- was enacted. The last British military bases were withdrawn,
- and the ports were returned to Irish control. Ireland was
- neutral in World War II. The government formally declared
- Ireland a republic on Easter Monday 1948. However, it does not
- normally use the term "Republic of Ireland," which tacitly
- acknowledges the partition, but refers to the country simply as
- "Ireland."
- </p>
- <p>Current Political Conditions
- </p>
- <p> In the last general election on February 17, 1987, no single
- party won enough seats to form a majority government. However,
- on March 10, 1987, a minority government composed of the single
- largest party, Fianna Fail, took office, headed by Charles J.
- Haughey as prime minister, or Taoiseach (pronounced
- "TEE-shuck"). The two next largest parties in the Dail have so
- far supported the minority government in its economic austerity
- program. The next general election must be held by March 1992.
- President Hillery is now in his second (and final) term of
- office, with an election for a replacement scheduled for 1990.
- </p>
- <p> The Northern Ireland problem remains a key concern. The six
- counties of Northern Ireland, an integral part of the United
- Kingdom, comprise about 900,000 Protestants and 600,000
- Catholics. Since 1968, when conflict again erupted between the
- two groups, the status of Northern Ireland often has been the
- dominant factor in Ireland's relations with its closest
- neighbor.
- </p>
- <p> In May 1983, the Northern Ireland Social Democratic and Labor
- Party joined the three major southern parties in a "New Ireland
- Forum" to make recommendations aimed at a final peaceful
- resolution of the "Irish question." In May 1984, the Forum
- published an agreed nationalist position, reaffirming the aim of
- a united Ireland to be pursued only by democratic means and on
- the basis of agreement.
- </p>
- <p> Intense negotiations beginning in 1984 culminated in the
- signature by Prime Ministers FitzGerald and Thatcher of the
- Anglo-Irish Agreement on November 15, 1985, at Hillsborough,
- Northern Ireland. In the landmark accord, the Irish Government
- gained a formal voice in the governing of Northern Ireland on
- behalf of the Catholic Nationalist community. The accord
- provides for change in the status of Northern Ireland only with
- the consent of a majority there but pledges support by both
- governments if unity is desired by a majority in the future.
- </p>
- <p> The Anglo-Irish Agreement has provided a framework for
- dialogue and a common approach to the issue by neighbors often
- at odds in the past. The accord and the presence of Irish
- Government representatives in the North are powerful symbols
- for both nationalists and unionists. (The latter wishes to
- remain part of the United Kingdom.) Reforms designed to lessen
- the alienation of the nationalist minority community have been
- introduced. The U.S. Congress authorized a 3-year, $120-million
- contribution to the International Fund for Ireland in support of
- the new process aimed at ultimate peace and reconciliation.
- </p>
- <p>Source: U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs,
- September 1988.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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