home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
CNN Newsroom: Global View
/
CNN Newsroom: Global View.iso
/
eur
/
ire
/
ire.pe2
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-05-02
|
9KB
|
183 lines
<text>
<title>
Ireland: History
</title>
<article>
<hdr>
Background Notes: Ireland
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