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Ireland, island, British Isles, the
westernmost and second largest of the group, in the North Atlantic Ocean, and
separated from Great Britain by Saint Georges Channel on the southeast, the
Irish Sea on the east, and the North Channel on the northeast. Politically, the
island is divided into Northern Ireland, a constituent part of
Great Britain,
and the Republic of Ireland, formerly Eire. The island is divided into four
historical provinces-Connaught (Connacht), Leinster, Munster, and Ulster-and
administrative units called counties. The Republic of
Ireland consists of Connaught, Leinster, and Munster provinces, totaling 23 counties, and in the
north, 3 counties of Ulster Province.
Northern Ireland consists of 26 districts,
the remainder of Ulster Province. The area of the island is 84,431 sq km (32,599
sq mi) (Republic of Ireland, 70,283 sq km/27,136 sq mi;
Northern Ireland, 14,148
sq km/5463 sq mi). The population of the island (1981) is 4,925,364, including
the Republic of Ireland (3,443,405).
In a northern and southern direction, the maximum length of
Ireland is 486 km (302 mi); its extreme width is 280 km (174 mi). Malin Head, at
latitude 55°27' north, and Mizen Head, at latitude 51°27' north, are,
respectively, the northernmost and southernmost points on the island;
easternmost and westernmost points are demarcated by longitude 5°25' west and
longitude 10°30' west.
The Land
The eastern coast of
Ireland is comparatively regular and has
few deep indentations; the western coast is fringed by drowned or submerged
valleys, steep cliffs, and hundreds of small islands torn from the mainland mass
by the powerful forces of the Atlantic. Topographically, the surface of the
island may be described as basin-shaped. The chief physiographic features are a
region of lowlands, occupying the central and east central sections, and a
complex system of low mountain ranges, lying between the lowlands and the
periphery of the island. Among the principal ranges are the Mourne Mountains in
the northeast, rising about 610 m (about 2000 ft) above sea level; the mountains
of Donegal in the north, containing Mount Errigal, 752 m (2466 ft); the Sperrin
Mountains in the northwest, containing Sawel Mountain, 683 m (2240 ft); the
Maumturk Mountains in the west, containing Mount Twelve Pins, 730 m (2395 ft);
the Caha Mountains in the southwest, containing Mount Knockboy, 707 m (2321 ft);
the Boggeragh Mountains in the south, rising to more than 640 m (2100 ft); and
the Wicklow Mountains in the east, rising more than 915 m (3000 ft).
Carrantuohill (1041 m/3414 ft above sea level), located in the southwestern
section of the island, is the highest point in Ireland. The central plain, or
lowlands region, has an extreme length of about 160 km (about 100 mi) from east
to west and a maximum width of about 80 km (about 50 mi) from north to south.
Numerous bogs and lakes are found in the plain. The principal rivers of Ireland
are the Erne and the Shannon, which are in reality chains of lakes joined by
stretches of river. The northern portion of the central plain is drained by the
Erne River, and the center of the plain is drained by the Shannon, which empties
into the Atlantic Ocean through a wide, lengthy estuary. Nearly half of the
Shannon, above the estuary, is made up of Allen, Ree, and Derg lakes. All the
principal rivers of Ireland flow from the plain, and an interior canal system
facilitates communications.
The climate of
Ireland is typically insular. Because of the
moderating influence of the prevailing warm, moist winds from the Atlantic
Ocean, the mean winter temperature ranges from 4.4° to 7.2° C (40° to 45° F),
approximately 14° C (25° F) higher than that of other places in the same
latitude in the interior of Europe or on the eastern coast of North America. The
oceanic influence is also very pronounced in summer, the mean summer temperature
of Ireland, 15° to 16.7° C (59° to 62° F), being approximately 4° C (7° F) lower
than that of other places in the same latitudes. The rainfall averages 1016 mm
(40 in) a year.
The flora of Ireland comes largely from
England (it originally came to
England
from the western portions of the European continent.) Sedges, rushes, ferns, and
grass are the principal flora. The Irish fauna does not differ markedly from
that of England or
France. The great Irish deer and the great auk, or garefowl,
were exterminated in prehistoric times; and, since civilization took root in
Ireland, the island has lost its bear, wolf, wildcat, beaver, native cattle, and
other species of animals. Remaining are the small rodents of the woods and
fields and such small birds as belong to the fields, gardens, and shore. No
serpents are found in Ireland, and the only reptile is the lizard.
History
To supplement the following account of the
history of the island of
Ireland, See also Celtic Languages; Gaelic Literature;
Ireland, Church of; Ireland, Republic of; Irish Literature.
The Early Period
According to local legends Ireland was inhabited first by
various tribes, the most important of which were the Nemedians, Fomorians,
Firbolgs, and Tuatha Dé Danann. These tribes are said to have been eventually
subdued by Milesians (Scots). Although Ireland is mentioned under the name of
Ierne in a Greek poem of the 5th century BC and by the names of Hibernia and
Juverna by various classical writers, little is known with certainty of its
inhabitants before the 4th century AD. At that time Irish tribes, called the
Scoti, harried the Roman province of Britain. These expeditions were continued
and extended to the coast of Gaul until the time of the Loigare, or King
MacNeill (reigned 428-63), during whose reign St. Patrick attempted to convert
the natives. Although Christianity had been previously introduced in some parts
of Ireland, Patrick encountered great obstacles, and the new faith was not fully
established in the island until a century after his death (circa 461).
From early times each province of
Ireland appears to have had
its own king; according to legend these kings were subject to the ardri, or
monarch, to whom the central district, called Meath, was allotted, and who
usually resided at Tara, a hill in present-day county Meath. Each clan was
governed by a chief selected from its most important family. The laws were
dispensed by professional jurists called brehons, who were endowed with lands
and who were allowed important privileges.
In the 6th century extensive monasteries were founded in
Ireland, in which religion and learning were zealously cultivated during the
early Middle Ages of Europe. From these establishments numerous missionaries
went forth during the succeeding centuries, while many students of distinction
from England and the Continent visited Ireland to further their education. The
progress of Irish civilization was checked by the incursions of the
Scandinavians, which began toward the close of the 8th century and continued for
more than two centuries. The Vikings established settlements on the east coast
of Ireland and conducted raids in the interior until their signal overthrow at
the Battle of Clontarf, near
Dublin, in 1014, by the Irish king Brian Boru.
The Anglo-Norman Period
The first step toward an Anglo-Norman conquest of
Ireland was
made by King Henry II of
England, who is said to have obtained in 1155 a bull
(official document) from Pope Adrian IV authorizing him to take possession of
the island, on condition of paying to the papal treasury a stipulated annual
revenue. This bull is thought to have been a forgery. In any event, nothing was
done until Dermot MacMurrough, the deposed king of Leinster, sought refuge at
King Henry's court and obtained permission to enlist the services of English
subjects for a recovery of his kingdom. Dermot, returning to Ireland in 1169
with foreign mercenaries and numerous Irish allies, succeeded in recovering part
of his former territories and in capturing
Dublin and other towns on the east
coast. After his death the succession to the kingdom of Leinster was claimed by
his son-in-law Richard Strongbow, 2nd earl of Pembroke. In 1172 Henry, with a
formidable army, visited Ireland, received homage from several minor Irish
chiefs and from the principal Norman leaders, and granted to the latter charters
authorizing them, as his subjects, to take possession of portions of the island.
The chief Anglo-Norman adventurers, however, encountered formidable opposition
before they succeeded in establishing themselves on the lands that they claimed.
The government was entrusted to a viceroy, and the Norman legal system was
introduced into such parts of the island as were reduced to obedience to
England. The youthful Prince John, later John, king of England, was sent by
Henry into Ireland in 1185, but the injudicious conduct of his council excited
disturbances, and he was soon recalled to England. John made a second expedition
to Ireland in 1210 to curb the refractory spirit of his Norman barons, who had
become formidable through alliances with the Irish.
During the 13th century various Anglo-Norman adventurers
succeeded in firmly establishing themselves in
Ireland, either by assisting or
suppressing native clans. The Fitzgerald clan acquired power in Kildare and East
Munster; the Le Botiller, or Butler, in West Munster; and the de Burgh in
Connaught. After the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314, Edward Bruce, the younger
brother of Robert Bruce, king of
Scotland, invaded
Ireland and attempted
unsuccessfully to overthrow the English there. The pope, at the instigation of
England, excommunicated Bruce and his Irish allies. Although Bruce's enterprise
failed, the general result of his invasion was a decline of English power in
Ireland.
The descendants of the most powerful Anglo-Norman settlers in
Ireland gradually became identified with the native Irish, whose language,
habits, and laws they adopted to an increasing extent. To counteract this, the
Anglo-Irish Parliament passed, in 1366, the Statute of Kilkenny, decreeing
excommunication and heavy penalties against all those who followed the custom
of, or allied themselves with, the native Irish. This statute, however, remained
inoperative; and although Richard II, king of England, later in the 14th century
made expeditions into Ireland with large forces, he failed to achieve any
practical result. The power and influence of the natives increased so much at
the time of the War of the Roses that the authority of the English crown became
limited to the area known as the English Pale, a small coastal district around
Dublin and the port of Drogheda. In the War of the Roses, the struggle in
England between the houses of York and Lancaster, Ireland supported the losing
house of York (see Roses, War of the).
The Period of English Supremacy
The participation of the Anglo-Norman nobility from the
coastal Pale in the War of the Roses greatly impaired English strength in
Ireland. When Henry VII became king of
England, he left Gerald Fitzgerald, 8th
earl of Kildare, as viceroy of
Ireland, although Kildare belonged to the Yorkist
party. The assistance rendered by Kildare to the Yorkist pretenders, however,
finally compelled the king to replace him in 1494 with the English soldier and
diplomat Sir Edward Poynings. Poynings represented the purely English interest,
as distinct from the Anglo-Norman interest, which up to that time had prevailed
in Ireland. He at once summoned the Parliament of Drogheda, which enacted
legislation providing for the defense of the Pale and the reduction of the power
of the Anglo-Irish lords. The nobility was forbidden to oppress the inferior
baronage, to make exactions upon the tenantry, or to assemble their armed
retainers; and the Statute of Kilkenny, which compelled the English and Irish to
live apart and prohibited Irish law and customs in the Pale, was confirmed. All
state offices, including the judgeships, were filled by the English king instead
of by the viceroys, and the entire body of English law was declared to hold for
the Pale. Most important of all was the so-called Poynings Law, which made the
Irish Parliament dependent on the English king by providing that all proposed
legislation should first be announced to the king and meet with his approval,
after which he would issue the license to hold Parliament.
Henry VII eventually reestablished Kildare, the most powerful
of the Irish nobles, as viceroy, and under Kildare's rule the Pale grew and
prospered. His family, the Geraldines, rebelled and was overthrown during the
reign of King Henry VIII. When Henry VIII attempted to introduce the Reformation
into Ireland in 1537, the dissolution of the monasteries was begun. Somewhat
later, relics and images were destroyed and the dissolution was completed. The
native chieftains were conciliated by a share of the spoils and received English
titles, their lands being regranted under English tenure. It was Henry's policy
thus to conciliate the Irish and to leave them under their own laws. An English
commission held courts throughout the island, but Irish right was respected, and
the country remained peaceful. In the Parliament of 1541, attended for the first
time by native chieftains as well as by the lords of the Pale, Henry's title of
lord of Ireland, which had been conferred by the papacy, was changed to king of
Ireland.
Increasing Religious Turmoil
The religious changes under King Edward VI and Queen Mary I
had little effect on Ireland. Although Mary was herself a Roman Catholic, she
was the first to begin the colonization of
Ireland by English settlers. The
Irish people of Kings and Queens Company were driven out and their lands given
to English colonists. Queen Elizabeth I at first followed her father's policy of
conciliating the Irish chieftains, but the rebellion of the Ulster chieftain
Shane O'Neill caused her policy to become more severe; an act was passed
dividing all Ireland into counties, and the commissioners of justice were
invested with military powers, which they used in arbitrary fashion. The
religious wars of Elizabeth were attended by rebellions of the Irish Roman
Catholics. James Fitzgerald, 16th earl of Desmond, a member of the great house
of Geraldine, which ruled over the larger part of Munster, was defeated after a
long struggle. The Irish soldier Hugh O'Neill, 3rd baron of Dungannon and 2nd
earl of Tyrone, annihilated an English army on the Blackwater and also defeated
Robert Devereux, 2nd earl of Essex, whom Elizabeth had sent against him. About
1603, however, O'Neill was compelled to submit to the English. During the war
the greatest cruelty and treachery were practiced on both sides. In order to
destroy Irish resistance, the English devastated villages, crops, and cattle,
putting many people to death. The greater part of Munster and Ulster was laid
desolate, and more inhabitants died from hunger than from war.
Under Elizabeth and James I the power of the Anglican state
church was extended over Ireland. The Church of England obtained all that
belonged to the church of the Pale and was invested with the establishment
belonging to the Celtic church as well. An ancient feud existed between these
two Irish churches, and they were intensely hostile to each other. The Church of
the Pale-that is, in and near Dublin-was affected by the Reformation, but the
Celtic church had become increasingly Roman Catholic. Nearly the entire Celtic
population of Ireland and the majority of the inhabitants of the Pale remained
Roman Catholic, and the Anglican church served as a political instrument for the
English rulers in Dublin Castle.
During the reign of James I English law was pronounced the
sole law of the land. No longer able to act independently, the earl of Tyrone
and Rory O'Donnell, 1st earl of Tyrconnel, with some 100 other chieftains, fled
in 1607 to Rome. The land in six counties of northern Ulster was confiscated.
The last vestiges of the independence of the Irish Parliament were destroyed by
the creation of 40 boroughs out of small hamlets, a political maneuver that
secured a permanent majority to the English crown.
The stern but vigorous rule of Thomas Wentworth, 1st earl of
Strafford, viceroy of Charles I, produced order and prosperity in Ireland. By
balancing the number of Roman Catholics and Protestants in Parliament and
holding out to the former the promise of toleration, he succeeded in obtaining
liberal funds for the king in his conflict with the English Parliament. The
native Irish, who had been dispossessed in Ulster and elsewhere, made use of the
English situation to regain their possessions.
Under the leadership of the Irish chieftain Rory O'More, a
conspiracy was formed in 1641 to seize Dublin and expel the English. The Irish
succeeded in driving the English settlers out of Ulster and committed many
outrages. English writers have estimated that at least 30,000 were put to death
by the Irish, but this number is thought to be exaggerated; the Scottish in
Ulster were, as a rule, spared. The insurgents were soon joined by the Roman
Catholic lords of the Pale, and together they chose a supreme council to govern
Ireland. Charles I sent Edward Somerset, earl of Glamorgan, to treat with them,
and the earl went so far as to promise them the predominancy of the Roman
Catholic Church in Ireland as the reward for their assistance to Charles. In
1647 the alliance between the lords of the Pale, who desired nothing beyond
toleration for their religion, and the native Irish, who hoped for the
restoration of the ancient land system, came to an end. In 1648 the Irish
statesman and soldier James Butler, 12th earl of Ormonde, returned as the
viceroy of Charles I and made an alliance with the Roman Catholic lords, thereby
securing Ireland to the Royalist party.
Ireland from 1650 to 1700
In 1649 the English soldier and statesman Oliver Cromwell
landed at Dublin, which the Roman Catholic lords had been unable to take. With
his well-disciplined forces, 10,000 men of the New Model army, he stormed
Drogheda and put its garrison of 2000 men to the sword. A similar Cromwell
victory occurred at Wexford. Cromwell's successors, the English soldiers and
regicides Henry Ireton and Edmund Ludlow, successfully concluded the war, and a
great part of the best land of Munster, Leinster, and Ulster was confiscated and
divided among the soldiers of the parliamentary army. The Roman Catholics and
Royalist landowners were banished to Connaught. A portion of the land
confiscated at this time was later restored under King Charles II, but at least
two-thirds of the land in Ireland remained in the hands of the Protestants. The
viceroyalty of Ormonde, while maintaining the Protestant ascendancy, did much to
restore order and promote industry. King James II, however, reversed the policy
of Charles II. Under James's viceroy in Ireland, Richard Talbot, earl of
Tyrconnel, Roman Catholics were advanced to positions of state and placed in
control of the militia, which Ormonde had previously organized. Consequently the
entire Roman Catholic population sided with James II in the English Revolution
of 1688. Thus, in 1689, when James landed at Dublin with his French officers,
Talbot had an Irish army ready to assist him. The Protestant settlers were
driven from their homes and found refuge in the towns of Enniskillen and
Londonderry, which James attempted to capture. He was hampered by his lack of
artillery, however, and the city was relieved by way of the sea. His Parliament
of 1689 restored all lands confiscated since 1641 and passed an act of attainder
against the partisans of King William III. In the following year William landed
in Ireland and, in July 1690, in the Battle of the Boyne, he defeated the Irish
forces. He failed, however, to capture the town of Limerick, which was bravely
defended. A brilliant tactic of the Irish patriot Patrick Sarsfield destroyed
William's heavy artillery, and he was forced to retire. The next year, William's
generals defeated the Irish army at the town of Aughrim, and Limerick was forced
to capitulate. By the terms of the Treaty of Limerick (1691), Roman Catholics
were permitted a certain amount of religious freedom, and the lands that Roman
Catholics had possessed under Charles II were to be restored to them.
The Parliament of England subsequently forced William to
break the concession of the Treaty of Limerick regarding the restoration of the
land, and the Parliament of Ireland violated the terms granting religious
toleration by enacting the Penal Laws, directed mainly against the Roman
Catholics. Irish commerce and industries were deliberately crushed by the
English. By enactments in 1665 and 1680 the Irish export trade to England in
cattle, milk, butter, and cheese had been forbidden. The trade in woolens, which
had grown up among the Irish Protestants, was likewise crushed by an enactment
of 1699, which prohibited the export of woolen goods from Ireland to any country
whatever. Small amends for these injuries were made by leaving the linen trade
undisturbed. The result of these measures was gradual economic decline. Many
Irish emigrated from the country-the Roman Catholics to Spain and France, the
Protestants to America.
Revolutionary Influences
The American Revolution awakened much sympathy in Ulster,
especially among the Presbyterians, who, being disqualified from holding office,
desired a general emancipation including that of the Roman Catholics. In 1778
the Irish Parliament passed the Relief Act, removing some of the most oppressive
disabilities. Meanwhile the Irish Protestants, under the pretext of defending
the country from the French, who had entered into an alliance with the
Americans, had formed military associations of volunteers, with 80,000 members.
Backed by this force they demanded legislative independence for Ireland, and on
motion of the British statesman and orator Charles James Fox the British
Parliament repealed the Poynings Law and much of the anti-Catholic legislation.
The Irish Parliament, however, was composed entirely of the Protestants of the
established church, who were unwilling to extend the suffrage to Roman
Catholics.
The principles of the French Revolution found their most
powerful expression in Ireland in the Society of United Irishmen, which
organized the rebellion of 1798. The peasantry rose in Wexford and, although
insufficiently armed, made a brave fight. At one time Dublin was in danger, but
the insurgents were defeated by the regular forces at Vinegar Hill. A French
force of 1100 landed in Killala Bay but was too late to render effective
assistance. The British prime minister William Pitt, the Younger, thought that
the legislative union of Great Britain and Ireland together with Roman Catholic
emancipation was the only remedy for Roman Catholic rebellion and Protestant
tyranny in Ireland. By a lavish use of money and distribution of patronage, he
induced the Irish Parliament to pass the Act of Union, and on January 1, 1801,
the union was formally proclaimed. Owing to the opposition of George III,
however, Pitt was unable to make good his promise of emancipation for Roman
Catholics.
The Union
The history of Ireland after the union was principally
concerned with the struggle for Irish civic and religious freedom and for
separation from Great Britain. Hardly had the union been established when
dissatisfaction in Ireland gave rise to the armed outbreak of July 23, 1803,
under the Irish patriot Robert Emmet. The uprising was easily suppressed, and
for some time no further armed revolts occurred. In 1823 the Catholic
Association was founded, which demanded, and finally obtained, complete Roman
Catholic emancipation in Ireland. In 1828 Roman Catholics were permitted to hold
local office, and in 1829 they were allowed to sit in Parliament. The struggle
then turned upon the tithes, which all Irish, Roman Catholics included, were
compelled to pay for the maintenance of the Anglican church in Ireland. Great
cruelties were perpetrated on both sides during the so-called Tithe War, which
was coupled with a renewed emphatic demand for the repeal of the Act of Union.
Various societies were formed to carry on the agitation, and considerable
lawlessness occurred, fostered by the so-called Ribbon Society.
The reform of the British Parliament in 1832 increased the
number of Irish members from 100 to 105. More important, it gave the middle
class more power, weakening the pro-English aristocracy. In 1838 a bill was
passed converting the tithes into rent charges, to be paid by the landlords; as
a result, agitation in connection with the Anglican church ceased to be acute
for a time. From 1845 to 1847 rent-racked Ireland suffered a disastrous famine
resulting from the failure of the potato crop. Again large numbers of people
emigrated, especially to America; it has been estimated that by the end of 1848,
through emigration and deaths resulting from famine, the population of Ireland
decreased by more than 2 million people.
Revolutionary Societies
In the last 35 years of the 19th century many ecclesiastical
and agrarian reforms were effected in the country. Agitation for Home Rule,
however, assumed a leading place in Irish politics. The cause found a champion
of great ability in the Irish nationalist leader Charles Stewart Parnell. At
that time, also, many secret societies were working for the establishment of an
Irish republic. As early as 1867 the more extreme members of these societies,
calling themselves the Invincibles, had started an abortive rebellion in
counties Dublin and Kerry. In 1882 the same revolutionaries were responsible for
the murder of the British chief secretary for Ireland, Lord Frederick Charles
Cavendish, and the undersecretary, Thomas Henry Burke, in protest against the
Coercion Act of 1881, which gave the lord lieutenant of Ireland power to arrest
any person on mere suspicion of treason, intimidation, and the like. The Crimes
Act, which was passed soon after the dual murder, made the provisions of the
Coercion Act more stringent. In England, Prime Minister William Gladstone
attempted to resolve the Irish question by a Home Rule Bill, which he formally
introduced in 1886. The bill would have given the Irish Parliament the right to
appoint the executive of Ireland, although the taxing power was still supposed
to be retained by the British Parliament. Parnell accepted the bill, but it was
greatly opposed in Ulster and in England and did not pass the House of Commons.
Gladstone introduced another Home Rule Bill in 1893, but it failed to pass the
House of Lords.
During the last quarter of the 19th century and the first
decade of the 20th century two new forces developed in Irish life that to a
large degree stood apart from political and religious struggles: the Irish
Agricultural Organization Society, inaugurated in 1894, and the Gaelic League,
founded in 1903. The former aimed to do in the economic field what the latter
attempted to do in the intellectual, that is, to rehabilitate Ireland from
within. In 1902 the Irish political leader and journalist Arthur Griffith
founded the Sinn Fein, which became a political party in 1905. At first an
organization to promote Irish economic welfare and to achieve the complete
independence of Ireland, Sinn Fein became the most important political party in
the country and a leading force in achieving ultimate independence.
For details leading to the formation of the Irish Free State
in 1922, Eire in 1937, and the Republic of
Ireland in 1949, see
Ireland,
Republic of; Northern Ireland.
Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 97 Encyclopedia.
(c) 1993-1996 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

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