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Authors: Neil Hegarty

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1859

Fenian Brotherhood established in New York

1864

Establishment of National Gallery of Ireland

1867

Fenian Rebellion; execution of ‘Manchester Martyrs’; Clerkenwell bombing

1868

William Gladstone becomes prime minister for first time

1869

Disestablishment of Church of Ireland; foundation of Irish Tenant League

1870

Isaac Butt establishes Home Government Association

1875

Charles Stewart Parnell takes his seat in House of Commons

1877

Irish obstructionism in parliament; passing of South African Confederation bill is delayed

1878

Standish O’Grady’s
History of Ireland

1879

National Land League founded; Loonmore eviction halted

1880

Michael Davitt’s ostracism campaign targets Charles Boycott; Parnell begins relationship with Katharine O’Shea

1880–1

First Boer War

1881–2

Gladstone’s land reform bills become law; Parnell imprisoned in Kilmainham Gaol; Phoenix Park assassinations

1884

Foundation of Gaelic Athletic Association

1886

First Home Rule bill; Ulster Unionists rally in opposition; bill thrown out by parliament

1890

Majority of Parnell’s party withdraws support from him; party splits

1891

Death of Parnell in Brighton

1893

Foundation of Gaelic League

1895

Oscar Wilde’s
The Importance of Being Earnest

1899

Outbreak of Second Boer War and formation of Irish Brigade in support of Boers; foundation of Irish Literary Theatre; first publication of
United Irishman

1900

Victoria’s visit to Ireland sparks protests

1901

Death of Victoria and accession of Edward VII

1902

W. B. Yeats and Augusta Gregory’s
Cathleen Ni Houlihan

1904

Irish Literary Theatre becomes Abbey Theatre

1907

Formation of Sinn Féin; J. M. Synge’s
The Playboy of the Western World
staged at Abbey, provoking public unrest

1912

Third Home Rule bill; Ulster Covenant signed

1913

‘Dublin Lock-out’; formation of Ulster Volunteers and Irish Volunteers

1914

Ulster and Irish Volunteers execute gun-running operations; Curragh ‘mutiny’; Buckingham Palace Conference; Home Rule passed by parliament and suspended; outbreak of World War I; James Joyce’s
Dubliners

1916

Easter Rising at Dublin; its leaders executed; battle of the Somme

1917

Éamon de Valera wins Clare by-election for Sinn Féin

1918

End of World War I; global influenza epidemic kills millions; Sinn Féin victory in general election

1919

Meeting of first Dáil; Soloheadbeg ambush

1920

Proposed partition of Ireland; sectarian violence in Ulster; Croke Park killings in Dublin; burning of central Cork

1921

Burning of Dublin’s Custom House; first elections in post-partition Ireland – inaugural meeting of Northern Ireland parliament; Anglo–Irish Treaty

1922

Treaty ratified by Dáil; Michael Collins heads new provisional government; civil war; destruction of Four Courts and Irish national archives; death of Collins; special powers in operation in Northern Ireland; Joyce’s
Ulysses

1923

Civil war ends; formation of Cumann na nGaedheal government; Yeats awarded Nobel Prize for Literature; Censorship of Films Act passed

1925

George Bernard Shaw awarded Nobel Prize for Literature; works begin at Ardnacrusha hydroelectric works

1926

Seán O’Casey’s
The Plough and the Stars
sparks disturbances at Abbey

1927

Fianna Fáil, led by de Valera, enters Dáil

1929

Elizabeth Bowen’s
The Last September
; beginning of Great Depression

1932

Fianna Fáil forms its first government

1933

Formation of Fine Gael

1935

Sale and importation of contraceptives banned in Free State

1937

Constitution ratified by referendum

1938

Treaty Ports returned to Irish control

1939

World War II begins; de Valera declares Irish neutrality

1941

Belfast extensively bombed by German aircraft; air attacks on Dublin

1942

Patrick Kavanagh’s
The Great Hunger

1943

Sea mine explosion in Donegal kills 19 men and boys

1945

De Valera visits German legation at Dublin to commiserate on death of Hitler

1947

Education Act enables free secondary education in Northern Ireland

1948

Establishment of National Health Service in Northern Ireland

1949

Declaration of Irish Republic; Government of Ireland Act cements Northern Ireland’s position in United Kingdom

1951

‘Mother and Child’ scheme fails to be enacted

1955

Republic enters United Nations

1957

The Rose Tattoo
staged by Pike Theatre, Dublin

1960

Edna O’Brien’s
The Country Girls

1961

Republic applies to join EEC; its application rejected

1967

Formation of Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association (NICRA); second EEC application rejected; free secondary education introduced in republic

1968

Civil rights march in Derry ends in violence

1969

Burntollet attack; British troops sent to Northern Ireland

1970

Arms trial in Republic – Charles Haughey sacked from cabinet; formation of SDLP

1971

Ian Paisley establishes DUP; ‘contraceptive train’ travels between Belfast and Dublin

1972

Bloody Sunday in Derry

1973

Republic and UK join EEC; Sunningdale Agreement

1974

Sunningdale collapses; Dublin and Monaghan bombings; Birmingham and Guildford pub bombings

1976

Seamus Heaney’s
North

1979

Charles Haughey becomes taoiseach for first time

1980

Brian Friel’s
Translations

1981

Hunger strikes at Maze prison

1984

Report of New Ireland Forum

1985

Anglo–Irish Agreement

1988

John Hume and Gerry Adams begin secret talks; Remembrance Day bombing at Enniskillen

1990

Mary Robinson elected president of Ireland

1993

Homosexuality decriminalized in Republic

1995

Divorce laws passed in Republic; Heaney wins Nobel Prize for Literature

1998

Bloody Sunday Inquiry established; Omagh bombing; Hume and David Trimble awarded Nobel Peace Prize

2001

Dissolution of RUC; formation of Police Service of Northern Ireland

2008

Bank guarantee scheme in Republic

2009

Publication of Ryan Report into child abuse in Republic

2010

Bloody Sunday Inquiry report published; international financial 'bailout' of Irish economy

Acknowledgements

A great many people have helped in the research and writing of
Story of Ireland
– through discussion, the sharing of ideas and the reading of various drafts. I should like to thank (again) Albert DePetrillo, my editor at BBC Books, for guiding the project sensitively from its inception; project editor Caroline McArthur; and Stephen Douds, Sean McGuire and Linda Sands at BBC Northern Ireland. I am especially grateful to Catherine Toal for vital and generous assistance.

My thanks also to Laurence Browne, Lucy Collins, Gillian Cope, Marie Gethins, Anne Mary Luttrell, Ruth McDonnell, Eina McHugh, John Murphy, Molly O’Duffy, Jane O’Halloran, Caitríona O’Reilly, Ursula Peier, Ann Russell and Maria Scott. I am grateful to the librarians at the National Library of Ireland and the Irish Collection at Dublin City Libraries; and particularly to John McManus at Trinity College Library, Dublin.

Most of all, my thanks to my family: in particular to Charles and Maureen Hegarty and Claire Hegarty; and to John Lovett.

Lines from ‘A Disused Shed in Co. Wexford’, from
Collected Poems
(1999) by Derek Mahon, are reproduced by kind permission of the author and The Gallery Press.

Neil Hegarty, 2011

BBC Books and Ebury Publishing would like to thank Mike Connolly and Fergal Keane, as well as Ailsa Orr, Morag Keating, Darran Marshall, Tom Coulson, Jonathan and Deniece Baker for their help in completing this book.

Notes

Introduction

1.
Louis MacNeice,
Autumn Journal
, Faber and Faber, 1940.

 

 

Prologue

1.
Seamus Heaney, ‘The Biretta’, in
Seeing Things
(London: Faber, 1991), 27.

2.
Tacitus,
Agricola
and
Germania
(Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1992), 74–5.

3.
Ibid., 75.

 

 

Part 1

Chapter 1 – Children of God

1.
Patrick,
Confession
, in Philip Freeman,
St Patrick of Ireland: A Biography
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 2004), 188.

2.
Cited in Dáibhí Ó Cróinín,
Early Medieval Ireland, 400–1200
(London and New York: Longman, 1995), 14.

3.
Patrick,
Confession
, 176.

4.
bid., 180.

5.
Austin Clarke, ‘Pilgrimage’, in W. J. McCormack (ed.),
Selected Poems
(Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1992), 38.

6.
Bernadette Cunningham and Raymond Gillespie, “The most adaptable of saints: the cult of St Patrick in the seventeenth century’, in
Archivum Hibernicum
, Vol. 49 (1995), 82–104.

7.
Quoted in Thomas Cahill,
How the Irish Saved Civilization
(London: Sceptre, 1995), 183.

8.
Acta SS
, Feb. I, 141 (viii, 39), quoted by Donnchadh Ó’Corráin, ‘Ireland
c
.800: aspects of society’, in Dáibhí Ó’Cróinín (ed.),
New History of Ireland I: Prehistoric and Early Ireland
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005), 598.

9.
Paul Durcan, ‘Fat Molly’, in
A Snail in My Prime: New and Selected Poems
(London: Harvill, 1993), 38.

10.
1 Samuel 2: 10.

11.
Adamnán,
Vita Columbae
in Seamus Deane (ed.),
Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing
, Vol. I (Derry: Field Day, 1991), 83.

12.
Genesis 12:1.

13.
Bede,
A History of the English Church and People
, trans. and ed. Leo Sherley-Price (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1955), 195.

14.
Sermons of Columbanus
, Sermon VII: 2, in
CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts
, University College, Cork (ucc.ie/celt).

15.
Bede,
A History of the English Church and People
, 199.

16.
Letters of Columbanus
, Letter II: 1, in
CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts
, University College, Cork (ucc.ie/celt).

17.
Ibid,, Letter II, 7.

18.
Quoted in T. M. Charles-Edwards,
Early Christian Ireland
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000), 357.

 

 

Chapter 2 – Landfall

1.
G. N. Garmonsway (trans. and ed.),
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
(London: J. M. Dent, 1953), 55–6.

2.
Seán MacAirt and Gearoid MacNiocaill (eds),
Annals of Ulster
(Dublin: Institute of Advanced Studies, 1983), 251.

BOOK: The Story of Ireland: A History of the Irish People
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