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Monarchy of Ireland

Monarchical systems of government have existed in Ireland from ancient times. In most of Ireland, this continued until 1949, when it transitioned to being the Republic of Ireland. Northern Ireland, as part of the United Kingdom, remains under a monarchical system of government.

Badge of the Kingdom of Ireland.

The office of High King of Ireland effectively ended with the Norman invasion of Ireland (1169–1171) in which the island was declared a fief of the Holy See under the Lordship of the King of England. In practice, conquered territory was divided amongst various Anglo-Norman noble families who assumed title over both the land and the people with the prior Irish inhabitants being either displaced or subjugated under the previously alien system of serfdom. Though the revolutionary change in the status quo was undeniable, the Anglo-Norman invaders would fail to conquer many of the Gaelic kingdoms of Ireland, which continued to exist, often expanding for centuries after, however none could make any viable claims of High Kingship. This lasted until the Parliament of Ireland conferred the crown of Ireland upon King Henry VIII of England during the English Reformation. Henry initiated the Tudor conquest of Ireland which ended Gaelic political independence from the English monarch who now held the crowns of England and Ireland in a personal union.

The Union of the Crowns in 1603 expanded the personal union to include Scotland. The personal union between England and Scotland became a political union with the enactments of the Acts of Union 1707, which created the Kingdom of Great Britain. The crowns of Great Britain and Ireland remained in personal union until it was also ended by the Acts of Union 1800, which united Ireland and Great Britain into the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland in January 1801.

In December 1922, most of Ireland seceded from the United Kingdom, becoming the Irish Free State; at the same time, the newly created Northern Ireland, which covered most of Ulster, remained part of the United Kingdom. As a dominion within the British Empire, the Free State legally retained the same person as monarch as the United Kingdom-which in 1927 changed its name to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. In 1937, the Free State adopted a new constitution that removed all mention of the monarchy. In April 1949, the former Free State, which covered most of Ireland, declared itself a republic, and withdrew from the Commonwealth of Nations; this left Northern Ireland as the only part of the island that retained a monarchical system.

Gaelic kingdoms edit

Gaelic Ireland consisted of as few as five and as many as nine Primary kingdoms (Cúicide/Cóicide 'fifths') which were often subdivided into many minor smaller kingdoms (Tuatha, 'folkdoms'). The primary kingdoms were Ailech, Airgíalla, Connacht, Leinster, Mide, Osraige, Munster, Thomond and Ulster. Until the end of Gaelic Ireland they continued to fluctuate, expand and contract in size, as well as dissolving entirely or being amalgamated into new entities. The role of High King of Ireland was primarily titular and rarely (if ever) absolute. Gaelic Ireland was not ruled as a unitary state.

 
Map of Ireland (900 AD)

The names of Connacht, Ulster, Leinster and Munster are still in use, now applied to the four modern provinces of Ireland. The following is a list of the main Irish kingdoms and their kings:

Ard Rí co febressa: High Kings with opposition edit

Máire Herbert has noted that "Annal evidence from the late eighth century in Ireland suggests that the larger provincial kingships were already accruing power at the expense of smaller political units. Leading kings appear in public roles at church-state proclamations ... and at royal conferences with their peers." (2000, p. 62). Responding to the assumption of the title ri hErenn uile ("king of all Ireland") by Mael Sechlainn I in 862, she furthermore states that

the ninth-century assumption of the title of "ri Erenn" was a first step towards the definition of a national kingship and a territorially-based Irish realm. Yet change only gained ground after the stranglehold of Uí Néill power-structures was broken in the eleventh century. ... The renaming of a kingship ... engendered a new self-perception which shaped the future definition of a kingdom and of its subjects.

— Herbert, 2000, p. 72

Nevertheless, the achievements of Máel Sechlainn I and his successors were purely personal, and open to destruction upon their deaths. Between 846 and 1022, and again from 1042 to 1166, kings from the leading Irish kingdoms made greater attempts to compel the rest of the island's populace to their rule, with varying degrees of success, until the inauguration of Ruaidri Ua Conchobair (Rory O'Connor) in 1166,

High Kings of Ireland, 800-1198 edit

Ruaidrí, King of Ireland edit

 
Ruaidrí Ua Conchobair

Upon the death of Muirchertach Mac Lochlainn in early 1166, Ruaidrí, King of Connacht, proceeded to Dublin where he was inaugurated King of Ireland without opposition. He was arguably the first undisputed full king of Ireland. He was also the last Gaelic one, as the events of the Norman invasion of 1169–1171 brought about the destruction of the high-kingship, and the direct involvement of the Kings of England in Irish politics.

One of Ruaidrí's first acts as king was the subduing of Leinster, which resulted in the exile of its king, Diarmait Mac Murchada. Ruaidrí then obtained terms and hostages from all the notable kings and lords. He then celebrated the Oenach Tailteann, a recognised prerogative of the High Kings, and made a number of notable charitable gifts and donations. However, his caput remained in his home territory in central Connacht (County Galway). Ireland's recognised capital, Dublin, was ruled by Ascall mac Ragnaill, who had submitted to Ruaidri.

Only with the arrival of MacMurrough's Anglo-Norman benefactors in May 1169 did Ruaidrí's position begin to weaken. A series of disastrous defeats and ill-judged treaties lost him much of Leinster, and encouraged uprisings by rebel lords. By the time of the arrival of Henry II in 1171, Ruaidrí's position as king of Ireland was increasingly untenable.

Ruaidrí at first remained aloof from engagement with King Henry, though many of the lesser kings and lords welcomed his arrival as they wished to see him curb the territorial gains made by his vassals. Through the intercession of Lorcán Ua Tuathail (Laurence O'Toole), the Archbishop of Dublin, Ruaidrí and Henry came to terms with the Treaty of Windsor in 1175. Ruaidrí agreed to recognise Henry as his lord; in return, Ruaidrí was allowed to keep all Ireland as his personal kingdom outside the petty kingdoms of Laigin (Leinster) and Mide as well as the city of Waterford.

Henry was unwilling or unable to enforce the terms of the treaty on his barons in Ireland, who continued to gain territory in Ireland. A low point came in 1177 with a successful raid into the heart of Connacht by a party of Anglo-Normans, led by one of Ruaidrí's sons, Prince Muirchertach. They were expelled, Ruaidhrí ordering the blinding of Muirchertach, but over the next six years his rule was increasingly diminished by internal dynastic conflict and external attacks. Finally, in 1183, he abdicated.

He was twice briefly returned to power in 1185 and 1189, but even within his home kingdom of Connacht he had become politically marginalized. He lived quietly on his estates, died at the monastery of Cong in 1198 and was buried at Clonmacnoise. With the possible exception of the short reign of Brian Ua Néill (Brian O'Neill) in 1258–1260, no other Gaelic king was ever again recognised as king or high king of Ireland.

Lordship of Ireland: 1198–1542 edit

By the time of Ruaidrí's death in 1198, King Henry II of England had invaded Ireland and given the part of it he controlled to his son John as a Lordship when John was just ten years old in 1177. When John succeeded to the English throne in 1199, he remained Lord of Ireland thereby bringing the kingdom of England and the lordship of Ireland into personal union. By the mid-13th century, while the island was nominally ruled by the king of England, from c.1260 the effective area of control began to recede. As various Cambro-Norman noble families died out in the male line, the Gaelic nobility began to reclaim lost territory. Successive English kings did little to stem the tide, instead using Ireland to draw upon men and supplies in the wars in Scotland and France.

By the 1390s the Lordship had effectively shrunk to the Pale (a fortified area around the city of Dublin) with the rest of the island under the control of independent Gaelic-Irish or rebel Cambro-Norman noble families. King Richard II of England made two journeys to Ireland during his reign to rectify the situation; as a direct result of his second visit in 1399 he lost his throne to Henry Bolingbroke. This was the last time that a medieval king of England visited Ireland.

For the duration of the 15th century, royal power in Ireland was weak, the country being dominated by the various clans and dynasties of Gaelic (O'Neill, O'Brien, MacCarthy) or Cambro-Norman (Burke, FitzGerald, Butler) origin.

Lords of Ireland, 1177–1542 edit

The title of Lord of Ireland was abolished by Henry VIII, who was made King of Ireland by the Parliament of Ireland by the Crown of Ireland Act 1542.

Kingdom of Ireland, 1542–1800 edit

Re-creation of title edit

 
Henry VIII claimed the title "King of Ireland" in 1542.

The title "King of Ireland" was created by an act of the Irish Parliament in 1541, replacing the Lordship of Ireland, which had existed since 1171, with the Kingdom of Ireland.

The 1st Duke of Richmond and Somerset, Henry VIII's illegitimate son and Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, had been considered for elevation as the newly created King of Ireland. However, Henry VIII's counsellors feared that creating a separate Kingdom of Ireland, with a ruler other than that of England, would create another threat like the King of Scotland,[1] and Richmond died in 1536.

The Crown of Ireland Act 1542 established a personal union between the English and Irish crowns, providing that whoever was King of England was to be King of Ireland as well, and so its first holder was King Henry VIII of England. Henry's sixth and last wife, Katherine Parr, was the first Queen consort of Ireland following her marriage to King Henry in 1543.[2]

The title of King of Ireland was created after Henry VIII had been excommunicated in 1538, so it was not recognised by European Catholic monarchs. Following the accession of the Catholic Mary I in 1553 and her marriage to Philip II of Spain, in 1554, Pope Paul IV issued the papal bull "Ilius" in 1555, recognising them as Queen and King of Ireland together with her heirs and successors.[3]

For a brief period in the 17th century, during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms from the impeachment and execution of Charles I in 1649 to the Irish Restoration in May 1660, there was no 'King of Ireland'. After the Irish Rebellion of 1641, Irish Catholics, organised in Confederate Ireland, still recognised Charles I, and later Charles II, as legitimate monarchs, in opposition to the claims of the English Parliament, and signed a formal treaty with Charles I in 1648. However, in 1649, the Rump Parliament, victorious in the English Civil War, executed Charles I, and made England a republic, or "Commonwealth". The Parliamentarian general Oliver Cromwell came across the Irish Sea to crush the Irish royalists, temporarily uniting England, Scotland, and Ireland under one government, and styling himself "Lord Protector" of the three kingdoms (see also Cromwellian conquest of Ireland). After Cromwell's death in 1658, his son Richard emerged as the leader of this pan-British Isles republic, but he was not competent to maintain it. The Parliament of England at Westminster voted to restore the monarchy, and in 1660 King Charles II returned from exile in France to become King of England, King of Scotland and King of Ireland.

Union with Great Britain, 1707–1922 edit

The Acts of Union 1707 merged the kingdoms of England and Scotland into the Kingdom of Great Britain, under the sovereignty of the British Crown. The effect was to create a personal union between the Crown of Ireland and the British Crown, instead of the English Crown. Later, from 1 January 1801, an additional merger took place between the two Kingdoms. By the terms of the Acts of Union 1800, the Kingdom of Ireland merged with the Kingdom of Great Britain, thus creating the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. Following the separation of most of Ireland from that kingdom in 1922, the remaining constituent parts were renamed the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland in 1927, five years after the establishment of the Irish Free State.

 
Jacobite pretender, Henry Benedict Stuart. The French Directory suggested to United Irishmen making him King of the Irish in 1798 but were rebuffed. Many Irishmen were Jacobites in the early 18th century.

During the early 18th century, a significant number of Irishmen who had fled Ireland in the aftermath of the Treaty of Limerick continued to remain loyal to the Jacobite Stuart pretenders as Kings of Ireland (particularly the Wild Geese military diaspora in France's Irish Brigade), contrary to the House of Hanover. However, Ireland was host to a large military establishment and thus, unlike Scotland, was not the ground for legitimist-royalist risings in the 18th century, turning instead, mostly to republicanism as dissention with the ascent of the United Irishmen. However, despite their general anti-clericalism and republicanism, the French Directory did suggest to the United Irishmen in 1798 restoring the Jacobite Pretender, Henry Benedict Stuart, as Henry IX, King of the Irish.[4][5] This was on account of General Jean Joseph Amable Humbert landing a force in County Mayo for the Irish Rebellion of 1798 and realising the local population were devoutly Catholic (a significant number of Irish priests supported the Rising and had met with Humbert, although Humbert's Army had been veterans of the anti-clerical campaign in Italy).[5] The French Directory hoped this option would allow the creation of a stable French client state in Ireland, however, Wolfe Tone, the Protestant republican leader, scoffed at the suggestion and it was quashed.[5]

Partition: Irish Free State and Northern Ireland, 1922–1936 edit

 
Leinster House, Dublin, decorated for the visit of King George V and Queen Mary in 1911.
Within a decade it was the seat of the Oireachtas of the Irish Free State.

In early December 1922, most of Ireland (twenty-six of the country's thirty-two counties) left the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. These 'Twenty-Six Counties' now became the Irish Free State, a self-governing dominion within the British Empire. Six of Ireland's north-eastern counties, all within the nine-county Province of Ulster, remained within the United Kingdom as Northern Ireland. As a Dominion, the Free State was a constitutional monarchy with the British monarch as its head of state. The monarch was officially represented in the new Free State by the Governor-General of the Irish Free State.

The King's title in the Irish Free State was exactly the same as it was elsewhere in the British Empire, being from 1922 to 1927: "By the Grace of God, of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and of the British Dominions beyond the Seas King, Defender of the Faith, Emperor of India" and, from 1927 to 1937: "By the Grace of God, of Great Britain, Ireland and the British Dominions beyond the Seas King, Defender of the Faith, Emperor of India". The change in the King's title was effected under an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom called the Royal and Parliamentary Titles Act, 1927, intended to update the name of the United Kingdom as well as the King's title to reflect the fact that most of the island of Ireland had left the United Kingdom. The Act therefore provided that "Parliament shall hereafter be known as and styled the Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland [instead of the Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland]" and "In every Act passed and public document issued after the passing of this Act the expression 'United Kingdom' shall, unless the context otherwise requires, mean Great Britain and Northern Ireland."[6]

According to The Times, the "Imperial Conference proposed that, as a result of the establishment of the Irish Free State, the title of the king should be changed to 'George V, by the Grace of God, of Great Britain, Ireland, and the British Dominions beyond the seas King, Defender of the Faith, Emperor of India.'"[6] The change did not mean that the king had now assumed different styles in the different parts of his Empire. That development did not formally occur until 1953, four years after the new Republic of Ireland had left the Commonwealth.

Despite a lack of change in his title, George V's position as king of that country became separated from his place as King of the United Kingdom (as occurred with all the other British Dominions at the time). The Government of the Irish Free State (also known as His Majesty's Government in the Irish Free State)[7] was confident that the relationship of these independent countries under the Crown would function as a personal union.[8]

Abdication crisis, President of Ireland and Republic of Ireland Act, 1936–1949 edit

The constitutional crisis resulting from the abdication of King Edward VIII in December 1936 was used by Éamon de Valera's government as a catalyst to amend the Constitution of the Irish Free State by eliminating all but one of the King's official duties. This was achieved with the enactment on 11 December of the Constitution (Amendment No. 27) Act, which removed the monarch from the constitution and, on 12 December, the External Relations Act,[9] which provided that the monarch recognised by Britain and the rest of the Commonwealth could represent the Irish Free State "for the purposes of the appointment of diplomatic and consular representatives and the conclusion of international agreements" when authorised to do so by the Irish government. The following year, a new constitution was ratified, changing the name of the Free State to Éire, or "Ireland" in the English language, and establishing the office of President of Ireland. The King's role in Ireland was ambiguous. Whether the Irish head of state was George VI, or the President, was left unclear.[10][11] This ambiguity was eliminated with the enactment of the Republic of Ireland Act 1948, which came into force in April 1949 and declared the state to be a republic.[12] The External Relations Act was repealed, removing the remaining duties of the monarch, and Ireland formally withdrew from the British Commonwealth.[13] The position of the king in the Irish state was finally and formally ended by the Oireachtas with the repeal of the Crown of Ireland Act 1542 by the Statute Law Revision (Pre-Union Irish Statutes) Act 1962.

According to Desmond Oulton (owner of Clontarf Castle), his father John George Oulton had suggested to Éamon de Valera towards the end of the Irish Free State, that Ireland should have its own king again, as it was in the times of Gaelic Ireland.[14] He suggested to him, a member of the O'Brien Clan, descended in the paternal line from Brian Boru, a previous High King of Ireland: the most senior representative at the time was Donough O'Brien, 16th Baron Inchiquin.[14] Oulton said that Donough's nephew Conor O'Brien, 18th Baron Inchiquin, confirmed that De Valera did offer Donough O'Brien the title of Prince-President of the Irish Republic, but this was turned down and so a President of Ireland was instituted instead.[14]

The British monarchy, specifically, continued and continues in Northern Ireland, which remains a part of the sovereign state that is the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. From 1921 until 1973, the British monarch was officially represented in Northern Ireland by the Governor of Northern Ireland.

List of monarchs of Ireland edit

Monarchs of Ireland edit

British monarchs:

 
An Irish groat depicting Philip and Mary

The Wars of the Three Kingdoms (incorporating the Irish Rebellion of 1641, Confederate Ireland, the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland and the Irish Confederate Wars) took place between 1639 and 1653. Charles I was executed in 1649 and his son Charles II was recognised by some Irish lords as King of Ireland. The Interregnum began with England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales ruled by the Council of State, then the Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell (1649–1658) and his son Richard Cromwell (1658–1659). The Restoration in Ireland was effected in 1660 without major opposition, Charles II being declared king on 14 May 1660 by the Irish Convention.

The position of King of Ireland was contested by William III and James II between 1689 and 1691, after the Glorious Revolution of 1688. The Crown and Parliament Recognition Act 1689 made William King of Ireland, and this was reinforced by his victory at the Battle of the Boyne (part of the Williamite War in Ireland).

The Acts of Union 1800, instituted in reaction to the Irish Rebellion of 1798, created the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.

Monarchs of the Irish Free State and Ireland edit

 
The royal arms of Ireland – Badge of Ireland, used during the period of the Kingdom of Ireland on coins, etc.

Following the Ireland Act 1949, only the part of Ireland known as Northern Ireland remained part of a monarchy.

King's title, George V – George VI edit

The king's title in the Irish Free State, when it became a self-governing Dominion of the British Empire, and its constitutional successor from December 1936 to April 1949, was the same as elsewhere in the British Commonwealth,[15] but it was unclear whether the President of Ireland was Head of state of Ireland (1936 to 1949) or the king, George VI.

The changes in the royal style in the 20th century took into account the emergence of independence for the dominions from the Imperial Parliament of the United Kingdom. The kings successively and their advisers and governments in the United Kingdom were fully aware that the republican intent of the representatives of the Irish Free State was in marked contrast to the intent of the governments of certain other dominions, such as Canada.[16] and such differences were manifested in this period in the design and use of flags and other national symbols for the Irish Free State and other dominions.[17]

Proposed Irish monarchy edit

In 1906, Patrick Pearse, writing in the newspaper An Claidheamh Soluis, envisioned the Ireland of 2006 as an independent Irish-speaking kingdom with an "Ard Rí" or "High King" as head of state.[18][19]

During the Easter Rising in Dublin in 1916, some Republican leaders, including Pearse and Joseph Plunkett, contemplated giving the throne of an independent Ireland to Prince Joachim of Prussia.[20][21] While they were not in favour of a monarchy in itself, Pearse and Plunkett thought that if the uprising were successful and Germany won the First World War, they would insist on an independent Ireland being a monarchy with a German prince as king, in the same way as Romania and Bulgaria.[22] The fact that Joachim did not speak English was also considered an advantage, as he might be more disposed to learning and promoting the use of the Irish language.[23] In his memoirs, Desmond FitzGerald wrote:

That would have certain advantages for us. It would mean that a movement for de-anglicisation would flow from the head of the state downwards, for what was English would be foreign to the head of the state. He would naturally turn to those who were more Irish and Gaelic, as to his friends, for the non-nationalist element in our country had shown themselves to be so bitterly anti-German ... For the first generation or so it would be an advantage, in view of our natural weakness, to have a ruler who linked us with a dominant European power, and thereafter, when we were better prepared to stand alone, or when it might be undesirable that our ruler should turn by personal choice to one power rather than be guided by what was most natural and beneficial for our country, the ruler of that time would have become completely Irish.[24]

Ernest Blythe recalls that in January 1915 he heard Plunkett and Thomas MacDonagh express support for the idea at an Irish Volunteers meeting. No objections were made by anyone and Bulmer Hobson was among the attendees. Blythe himself said he found the idea "immensely attractive".[25]

Sinn Féin was established in 1905 by Arthur Griffith as a monarchist party inspired by the Austro-Hungarian Compromise which sought to create an Anglo-Irish dual monarchy.[26] During the party's 1917 Ard Fheis, disputes between monarchists and republicans resulted in an agreement that the question of a republic versus a monarchy would be settled by public referendum after independence was achieved provided that no member of the House of Windsor could become king.[27][28] As a result, the Irish Republic had no head of state during the Irish War of Independence until the Anglo-Irish Treaty negotiations when Éamon de Valera raised his status to President of the Irish Republic in order to grant himself equal status to George V.[citation needed]

In the 1930s, an organisation known as the Irish Monarchist Society, whose members included Francis Stuart and Osmonde Esmonde, plotted to overthrow the Irish Free State and establish an independent Irish Catholic monarchy under a member of the O'Neill dynasty.[29][30]

According to Hugo O'Donnell, 7th Duke of Tetuan, de Valera raised the idea of an Irish monarchy with his great-grandfather Juan O'Donnell.[31]

Raymond Moulton O'Brien, the self-styled "Prince of Thomond", and the United Christian Nationalist Party, of which O'Brien was the leader, wanted to reestablish the monarchy with O'Brien as king.[32]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Scarisbrick, J.J. English Monarchs: Henry VIII. University of California Press.
  2. ^ Parr, Katherine (2011). "Last Will and Testament of Dowager Queen Katherine Parr". In Mueller, Janel (ed.). Katherine Parr: Complete Works and Correspondence. University of Chicago Press. p. 178.
  3. ^ "The papal bull "ILIUS" of 1555 conferring the title of King of Ireland upon Philip II".
  4. ^ Pittock 2006, p. 210.
  5. ^ a b c Aston 2002, p. 222.
  6. ^ a b The Times, 4 March 1927
  7. ^ The Irish Law Times and Solicitor's Journal: Public general statutes, J. Falconer, 1929, p. 66
  8. ^ "Black v Chrétien: Suing a Minister of the Crown for Abuse of Power, Misfeasance in Public Office and Negligence". Murdoch University Electronic Journal of Law. 9 (3). September 2002. Retrieved 2 October 2008.
  9. ^ Executive Authority (External Relations) Act, 1936. Dublin: Irish Statute Book. 12 December 1936. 3.2. Retrieved 6 May 2009.
  10. ^ McMahon, Deirdre (1984). Republicans and Imperialists: Anglo-Irish Relations in the 1930s. p. 181. ISBN 0300030711.
  11. ^ In the words of Mary E. Daly (January 2007). "The Irish Free State/Éire/Republic of Ireland/Ireland: "A Country by Any Other Name"?". Journal of British Studies. 46 (1): 72–90. doi:10.1086/508399. JSTOR 10.1086/508399.: "After the enactment of the 1936 External Relations Act and the 1937 Constitution, Ireland's only remaining link with the crown had been the accreditation of diplomats. The president of Ireland was the head of state. When opposition deputies asked de Valera whether Ireland was a republic—a favorite pastime in the mid-1940s—he tended to resort to dictionary definitions showing that Ireland had all the attributes of a republic."
  12. ^ Section 1 of the Republic of Ireland Act 1948.
  13. ^ Kondō, Atsushi (2001). Citizenship in a Global World: Comparing Citizenship Rights for Aliens. Hampshire: Palgrave. p. 120. ISBN 0-333-80265-9. Ireland reluctantly remained a member of the Commonwealth as Irish citizens remained British Subjects. However, Irish representatives stopped attending Commonwealth meetings in 1937 and Ireland adopted a position of neutrality in World War II. Ireland became a Republic in 1949 and formally left the Commonwealth.
  14. ^ a b c O'Keeffe 2013, pp. 21
  15. ^ Proclamation altering the Style and Titles appertaining to the Crown, London, 13 May 1927.[1]
  16. ^ Heads of government attending the 1926 Imperial Conference included W. T. Cosgrave, then serving as President of the Executive Council (prime minister) from 1922 to 1932. It was recorded that the distinct characteristics and histories of each was recognised by the parties attending the Conference,
  17. ^ See Alistair B. Fraser (1998). "The Flags of Canada". For the chronology of Canadian flags from 1870, at the time of the Irish republican movement, see Appendix III. For explanation of the distinction between national flags and monarchical badges or blazons of arms see Chapter I: "... a nation needs emblems and symbols to preserve traditions and inspire love of country. Of these symbols, the coat of arms and the flag are the chief." Charles Frederick Hamilton, Assistant Comptroller, R.C.M.P (1921) "The function of a flag is to send the simple message of identity. The function of arms is to dignify an individual, or institution, or country by special identifying symbolism and by appropriate reference to ancestry." John Ross Matheson, Canada's Flag: A Search for a Country (Boston G.K. Hall, 1980), p. 7. "Canada's flag serves to identify something Canadian. More specialized in its use, Canada's arms identify national authority and jurisdiction. Leaving aside strictly decorative uses of either, the flag is used wherever one wishes to make the simple statement: Canada or Canadian; the arms only where the authority of the nation is asserted." Alistair B. Fraser, 1998, op.cit.
  18. ^ In My Garden, An Claidheamh Soluis, 4 August 1906
  19. ^ Patrick Pearse Predicts the Future, Dublin Review of Books, Bryan Fanning, 20 May 2013
  20. ^ Memoirs of Desmond FitzGerald, 1913–1916, Desmond FitzGerald; Routledge & K. Paul, 1968, p. 141
  21. ^ Irish nationalism: a history of its roots and ideology, Seán Cronin, Continuum, 1981, p. 255
  22. ^ The Irish Factor, 1899–1919: Ireland's Strategic and Diplomatic Importance for Foreign Powers, Jérôme aan De Wiel, Irish Academic Press, 2008, p. 66
  23. ^ Abject Loyalty: Nationalism and Monarchy in Ireland During the Reign of Queen Victoria, James H. Murphy, CUA Press, 2001, p. 301
  24. ^ "Inside the GPO in 1916: Desmond FitzGerald's eyewitness account". Irish Times. 21 March 2016. Retrieved 2 September 2018.
  25. ^ An Irish Monarchy, The Irish Times, 15 April 1966
  26. ^ Feeney, Brian (2002). Sinn Féin: a Hundred Turbulent Years. Dublin: The O'Brien Press. pp. 32–33.
  27. ^ The new nationalism, 1916-18, F S L Lyons, in A New History of Ireland: Ireland under the Union, II, 1870-1921, William Edward Vaughan, Clarendon Press, 1976, p. 233
  28. ^ Michael Laffan, The Resurrection of Ireland: The Sinn Féin Party, 1916-1923, p. 241
  29. ^ Francis Stuart: A life, Geoffrey Elborn, Raven Arts Press, 1990, p. 101
  30. ^ Kevin Kieley, Francis Stuart: Artist and Outcast, p. 98
  31. ^ Ireland In The 20th Century, Tim Pat Coogan, Random House, p. 175
  32. ^ Aan de Wiel, Jérôme (2007). "The Principality of Thomond and His Royal Highness Raymond Moulton Seághan O'Brien, 1936–1963; Ireland's Greatest Diplomatic Farce" (PDF). North Munster Antiquarian Journal. 47: 95–109. Retrieved 2 September 2018.

Sources edit

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  • Parks, David (1977). Life of all Irish Monarchs before 1200. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 97805214657. {{cite book}}: Check |isbn= value: length (help)
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  • Irish Kings and High Kings, Francis John Byrne, 1973; 3rd reprint, Dublin, 2001
  • Dal Cais, church and dynasty, Donnachadh O Corrain, Eiru 24, 1973, pp. 1–69
  • Nationality and kingship in pre-Norman Ireland, Donnchadh O Corrain, in Nationality and the pursuit of national independence, pp. 1–35, Historical Studies 11, ed. T.W. Moody, Belfast, 1978
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  • The archaeology of early Irish kingship, Richard B. Warner, in Power and Politics in Early Medieval Britain and Ireland, pp. 47–68, ed. S.T. Driscoll and M.R. Nieke, Edinburgh, 1988
  • From Kings to Warlords:The Changing Political Structure of Gaelic Ireland in the Later Middle Ages, Katharine Simms, Dublin, 1987.
  • The King as Judge in early Ireland, Marilyn Gerriets, CMCS 13 (1987), pp. 39–72.
  • High Kingship and Tiberius Claudius Cogidubnus, A.T. Fear, in EtC 30 (1994), pp. 165–68.
  • Kingship, society and sacrality:rank, power and ideology in early medieval Ireland, N.B. Aitchison, in Traditio 49 (1994), pp. 45–47.
  • Kings and kingship in Early Medieval Ireland, pp. 63–84, Daibhi O Croinin, 1995.
  • The Kingship of Tara in Early Christian Ireland, Thomas Charles-Edwards, 1995
  • Kings over overkings. Propaganda for pre-eminence in early medieval Ireland, Bart Jaski, in The Propagation of Power in the Medieval West, ed. M. Gosman, A. Vanderjagt, J. Veenstra, pp. 163–76, Groningen, 1996.
  • An inaugural ode to Hugh O'Connor (King of Connacht 1293–1309), Seam Mac Mathuna, ZCP 49–50, 1997, pp. 26–62.
  • The inauguration of Tairrdelbach Ua Conchobair at Ath an Termoinn, Elizabeth FitzPatrick, Peritia 12 (1998), pp. 351–358.
  • Kings, the kingship of Leinster and the regnal poems of "laidshenchas Laigen:a reflection of dynastic politics in leinster, 650–1150, Edel Bhreathnach, in Seanchas:Studies in Early and Medieval Irish Archaeology, History and Literature in Honour of Francis John Byrne, Four Courts Press, Dublin, 2000.
  • The Conntinuation of Bede, s.a. 750; high-kings, kings of Tara and Bretwaldas, T.M. Charles-Edwards, pp. 137–145, op.cit.
  • Early Irish Kingship and Succession, Bart Jaski, Dublin, 2000.
  • Leinster states and kings in Christian times pp. 33–52, The Ua Maelechlainn kings of Meath, pp. 90–107, Christian kings of Connacht, pp. 177–194, Paul Walsh, in Irish Leaders and Learning Through the Ages, ed. Nollaig O Muraile, 2003.
  • Finghin MacCarthaigh, king of Desmond, and the mystery of the second nunnery at Clonmacnoise, Conleth Manning, in Regions and Rulers in Ireland 1100–1650, ed. David Edwards, pp. 20–26, Four Courts Press, Dublin, 2004.
  • Kingship in Early Ireland, Charles Doherty, in The Kingship and Landscape of Tara, pp. 3–31, ed. Edel Bhreathnach, Four Courts Press, Dublin, 2005
  • Kings named in "Baile Chuinn Chechathaig" and the Airgialla Charter Poem, Ailbhe Mac Shamhrain and Paul Byrne, in op.cit., pp. 159–224.
  • High-Kings with Opposition, Maire-Therese Flannagan, in A New History of Ireland, Volume One:Pre-Historic and Early Ireland, 2008.

monarchy, ireland, queen, ireland, redirects, here, other, uses, queen, ireland, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challen. Queen of Ireland redirects here For other uses see Queen of Ireland disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Monarchy of Ireland news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Monarchical systems of government have existed in Ireland from ancient times In most of Ireland this continued until 1949 when it transitioned to being the Republic of Ireland Northern Ireland as part of the United Kingdom remains under a monarchical system of government Badge of the Kingdom of Ireland The office of High King of Ireland effectively ended with the Norman invasion of Ireland 1169 1171 in which the island was declared a fief of the Holy See under the Lordship of the King of England In practice conquered territory was divided amongst various Anglo Norman noble families who assumed title over both the land and the people with the prior Irish inhabitants being either displaced or subjugated under the previously alien system of serfdom Though the revolutionary change in the status quo was undeniable the Anglo Norman invaders would fail to conquer many of the Gaelic kingdoms of Ireland which continued to exist often expanding for centuries after however none could make any viable claims of High Kingship This lasted until the Parliament of Ireland conferred the crown of Ireland upon King Henry VIII of England during the English Reformation Henry initiated the Tudor conquest of Ireland which ended Gaelic political independence from the English monarch who now held the crowns of England and Ireland in a personal union The Union of the Crowns in 1603 expanded the personal union to include Scotland The personal union between England and Scotland became a political union with the enactments of the Acts of Union 1707 which created the Kingdom of Great Britain The crowns of Great Britain and Ireland remained in personal union until it was also ended by the Acts of Union 1800 which united Ireland and Great Britain into the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland in January 1801 In December 1922 most of Ireland seceded from the United Kingdom becoming the Irish Free State at the same time the newly created Northern Ireland which covered most of Ulster remained part of the United Kingdom As a dominion within the British Empire the Free State legally retained the same person as monarch as the United Kingdom which in 1927 changed its name to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland In 1937 the Free State adopted a new constitution that removed all mention of the monarchy In April 1949 the former Free State which covered most of Ireland declared itself a republic and withdrew from the Commonwealth of Nations this left Northern Ireland as the only part of the island that retained a monarchical system Contents 1 Gaelic kingdoms 1 1 Ard Ri co febressa High Kings with opposition 1 1 1 High Kings of Ireland 800 1198 1 1 2 Ruaidri King of Ireland 2 Lordship of Ireland 1198 1542 2 1 Lords of Ireland 1177 1542 3 Kingdom of Ireland 1542 1800 3 1 Re creation of title 3 2 Union with Great Britain 1707 1922 3 3 Partition Irish Free State and Northern Ireland 1922 1936 3 4 Abdication crisis President of Ireland and Republic of Ireland Act 1936 1949 3 5 List of monarchs of Ireland 3 5 1 Monarchs of Ireland 3 5 2 Monarchs of the Irish Free State and Ireland 3 5 3 King s title George V George VI 4 Proposed Irish monarchy 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 SourcesGaelic kingdoms editGaelic Ireland consisted of as few as five and as many as nine Primary kingdoms Cuicide Coicide fifths which were often subdivided into many minor smaller kingdoms Tuatha folkdoms The primary kingdoms were Ailech Airgialla Connacht Leinster Mide Osraige Munster Thomond and Ulster Until the end of Gaelic Ireland they continued to fluctuate expand and contract in size as well as dissolving entirely or being amalgamated into new entities The role of High King of Ireland was primarily titular and rarely if ever absolute Gaelic Ireland was not ruled as a unitary state nbsp Map of Ireland 900 AD The names of Connacht Ulster Leinster and Munster are still in use now applied to the four modern provinces of Ireland The following is a list of the main Irish kingdoms and their kings Kings of Ailech 5th century to 1185 Kings of Airgialla 1590 Kings of Connacht 406 1474 Kings of Leinster 634 to 1603 or 1632 de facto Kings of Mide 8th 12th centuries Kings of Osraige to 12th century Kings of Munster 4th century to 1138 or 1194 claimant Kings of Thomond 1118 1543 Kings of Ulster 5th 12th centuries Ard Ri co febressa High Kings with opposition edit Main article High King of Ireland Maire Herbert has noted that Annal evidence from the late eighth century in Ireland suggests that the larger provincial kingships were already accruing power at the expense of smaller political units Leading kings appear in public roles at church state proclamations and at royal conferences with their peers 2000 p 62 Responding to the assumption of the title ri hErenn uile king of all Ireland by Mael Sechlainn I in 862 she furthermore states that the ninth century assumption of the title of ri Erenn was a first step towards the definition of a national kingship and a territorially based Irish realm Yet change only gained ground after the stranglehold of Ui Neill power structures was broken in the eleventh century The renaming of a kingship engendered a new self perception which shaped the future definition of a kingdom and of its subjects Herbert 2000 p 72 Nevertheless the achievements of Mael Sechlainn I and his successors were purely personal and open to destruction upon their deaths Between 846 and 1022 and again from 1042 to 1166 kings from the leading Irish kingdoms made greater attempts to compel the rest of the island s populace to their rule with varying degrees of success until the inauguration of Ruaidri Ua Conchobair Rory O Connor in 1166 High Kings of Ireland 800 1198 edit Alister an Dubh 800 845 Mael Sechnaill mac Maele Ruanaid 846 860 Aed Findliath 861 876 Flann Sinna 877 914 Niall Glundub 915 917 Donnchad Donn 918 942 Congalach Cnogba 943 954 Domnall ua Neill 955 978 Mael Sechnaill mac Domnaill 979 1002 and 1014 1022 Brian Boru 1002 1014 Donnchad mac Briain died 1064 Diarmait mac Mael na mBo died 1072 Toirdelbach Ua Briain died 1086 Muirchertach Ua Briain died 1119 Domnall Ua Lochlainn died 1121 Toirdelbach Ua Conchobair c 1119 1156 Muirchertach Mac Lochlainn c 1156 1166 Ruaidri Ua Conchobair 1166 1198Ruaidri King of Ireland edit nbsp Ruaidri Ua ConchobairUpon the death of Muirchertach Mac Lochlainn in early 1166 Ruaidri King of Connacht proceeded to Dublin where he was inaugurated King of Ireland without opposition He was arguably the first undisputed full king of Ireland He was also the last Gaelic one as the events of the Norman invasion of 1169 1171 brought about the destruction of the high kingship and the direct involvement of the Kings of England in Irish politics One of Ruaidri s first acts as king was the subduing of Leinster which resulted in the exile of its king Diarmait Mac Murchada Ruaidri then obtained terms and hostages from all the notable kings and lords He then celebrated the Oenach Tailteann a recognised prerogative of the High Kings and made a number of notable charitable gifts and donations However his caput remained in his home territory in central Connacht County Galway Ireland s recognised capital Dublin was ruled by Ascall mac Ragnaill who had submitted to Ruaidri Only with the arrival of MacMurrough s Anglo Norman benefactors in May 1169 did Ruaidri s position begin to weaken A series of disastrous defeats and ill judged treaties lost him much of Leinster and encouraged uprisings by rebel lords By the time of the arrival of Henry II in 1171 Ruaidri s position as king of Ireland was increasingly untenable Ruaidri at first remained aloof from engagement with King Henry though many of the lesser kings and lords welcomed his arrival as they wished to see him curb the territorial gains made by his vassals Through the intercession of Lorcan Ua Tuathail Laurence O Toole the Archbishop of Dublin Ruaidri and Henry came to terms with the Treaty of Windsor in 1175 Ruaidri agreed to recognise Henry as his lord in return Ruaidri was allowed to keep all Ireland as his personal kingdom outside the petty kingdoms of Laigin Leinster and Mide as well as the city of Waterford Henry was unwilling or unable to enforce the terms of the treaty on his barons in Ireland who continued to gain territory in Ireland A low point came in 1177 with a successful raid into the heart of Connacht by a party of Anglo Normans led by one of Ruaidri s sons Prince Muirchertach They were expelled Ruaidhri ordering the blinding of Muirchertach but over the next six years his rule was increasingly diminished by internal dynastic conflict and external attacks Finally in 1183 he abdicated He was twice briefly returned to power in 1185 and 1189 but even within his home kingdom of Connacht he had become politically marginalized He lived quietly on his estates died at the monastery of Cong in 1198 and was buried at Clonmacnoise With the possible exception of the short reign of Brian Ua Neill Brian O Neill in 1258 1260 no other Gaelic king was ever again recognised as king or high king of Ireland Lordship of Ireland 1198 1542 editMain article Lordship of Ireland By the time of Ruaidri s death in 1198 King Henry II of England had invaded Ireland and given the part of it he controlled to his son John as a Lordship when John was just ten years old in 1177 When John succeeded to the English throne in 1199 he remained Lord of Ireland thereby bringing the kingdom of England and the lordship of Ireland into personal union By the mid 13th century while the island was nominally ruled by the king of England from c 1260 the effective area of control began to recede As various Cambro Norman noble families died out in the male line the Gaelic nobility began to reclaim lost territory Successive English kings did little to stem the tide instead using Ireland to draw upon men and supplies in the wars in Scotland and France By the 1390s the Lordship had effectively shrunk to the Pale a fortified area around the city of Dublin with the rest of the island under the control of independent Gaelic Irish or rebel Cambro Norman noble families King Richard II of England made two journeys to Ireland during his reign to rectify the situation as a direct result of his second visit in 1399 he lost his throne to Henry Bolingbroke This was the last time that a medieval king of England visited Ireland For the duration of the 15th century royal power in Ireland was weak the country being dominated by the various clans and dynasties of Gaelic O Neill O Brien MacCarthy or Cambro Norman Burke FitzGerald Butler origin Lords of Ireland 1177 1542 edit See also List of English monarchs John 1177 1216 First man to be made Lord of Ireland and established the precedent that that Lord would also be King of England Henry III 1216 1272 Henry III granted Ireland to his son Edward I in 1254 on condition that it would never be separated from the Crown Brian Ua Neill claimed the title of High King of Ireland from 1258 to 1260 until his defeat and death in the Battle of Druim Dearg also known as the Battle of Down Edward I 1272 1307 Edward II 1307 1327 Edward Bruce Earl of Carrick and brother of Robert Bruce King of Scotland declared himself High King of Ireland during a failed rebellion of 1315 1318 which formed part of the larger war between England and Scotland Edward III 1327 1377 Richard II 1377 1399 Robert de Vere was created Duke of Ireland in 1386 but forfeited his titles in 1388 Henry IV 1399 1413 Henry V 1413 1422 Henry VI 1422 1461 Edward IV 1461 1470 Henry VI 1470 1471 Edward IV 1471 1483 Edward V 1483 Richard III 1483 1485 Henry VII 1485 1509 Lambert Simnel claimed to be Edward Plantagenet 17th Earl of Warwick and was crowned King Edward VI in Christ Church Cathedral Dublin on 24 May 1487 His claim ended with the Battle of Stoke Field 16 June 1487 Perkin Warbeck claimed to be Richard of Shrewsbury Duke of York Richard IV and gained some Irish support before a failed invasion of England in 1495 Henry VIII 1509 1542 The title of Lord of Ireland was abolished by Henry VIII who was made King of Ireland by the Parliament of Ireland by the Crown of Ireland Act 1542 Kingdom of Ireland 1542 1800 editRe creation of title edit Main article Kingdom of Ireland nbsp Henry VIII claimed the title King of Ireland in 1542 The title King of Ireland was created by an act of the Irish Parliament in 1541 replacing the Lordship of Ireland which had existed since 1171 with the Kingdom of Ireland The 1st Duke of Richmond and Somerset Henry VIII s illegitimate son and Lord Lieutenant of Ireland had been considered for elevation as the newly created King of Ireland However Henry VIII s counsellors feared that creating a separate Kingdom of Ireland with a ruler other than that of England would create another threat like the King of Scotland 1 and Richmond died in 1536 The Crown of Ireland Act 1542 established a personal union between the English and Irish crowns providing that whoever was King of England was to be King of Ireland as well and so its first holder was King Henry VIII of England Henry s sixth and last wife Katherine Parr was the first Queen consort of Ireland following her marriage to King Henry in 1543 2 The title of King of Ireland was created after Henry VIII had been excommunicated in 1538 so it was not recognised by European Catholic monarchs Following the accession of the Catholic Mary I in 1553 and her marriage to Philip II of Spain in 1554 Pope Paul IV issued the papal bull Ilius in 1555 recognising them as Queen and King of Ireland together with her heirs and successors 3 For a brief period in the 17th century during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms from the impeachment and execution of Charles I in 1649 to the Irish Restoration in May 1660 there was no King of Ireland After the Irish Rebellion of 1641 Irish Catholics organised in Confederate Ireland still recognised Charles I and later Charles II as legitimate monarchs in opposition to the claims of the English Parliament and signed a formal treaty with Charles I in 1648 However in 1649 the Rump Parliament victorious in the English Civil War executed Charles I and made England a republic or Commonwealth The Parliamentarian general Oliver Cromwell came across the Irish Sea to crush the Irish royalists temporarily uniting England Scotland and Ireland under one government and styling himself Lord Protector of the three kingdoms see also Cromwellian conquest of Ireland After Cromwell s death in 1658 his son Richard emerged as the leader of this pan British Isles republic but he was not competent to maintain it The Parliament of England at Westminster voted to restore the monarchy and in 1660 King Charles II returned from exile in France to become King of England King of Scotland and King of Ireland Union with Great Britain 1707 1922 edit See also List of British monarchs The Acts of Union 1707 merged the kingdoms of England and Scotland into the Kingdom of Great Britain under the sovereignty of the British Crown The effect was to create a personal union between the Crown of Ireland and the British Crown instead of the English Crown Later from 1 January 1801 an additional merger took place between the two Kingdoms By the terms of the Acts of Union 1800 the Kingdom of Ireland merged with the Kingdom of Great Britain thus creating the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Following the separation of most of Ireland from that kingdom in 1922 the remaining constituent parts were renamed the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland in 1927 five years after the establishment of the Irish Free State nbsp Jacobite pretender Henry Benedict Stuart The French Directory suggested to United Irishmen making him King of the Irish in 1798 but were rebuffed Many Irishmen were Jacobites in the early 18th century During the early 18th century a significant number of Irishmen who had fled Ireland in the aftermath of the Treaty of Limerick continued to remain loyal to the Jacobite Stuart pretenders as Kings of Ireland particularly the Wild Geese military diaspora in France s Irish Brigade contrary to the House of Hanover However Ireland was host to a large military establishment and thus unlike Scotland was not the ground for legitimist royalist risings in the 18th century turning instead mostly to republicanism as dissention with the ascent of the United Irishmen However despite their general anti clericalism and republicanism the French Directory did suggest to the United Irishmen in 1798 restoring the Jacobite Pretender Henry Benedict Stuart as Henry IX King of the Irish 4 5 This was on account of General Jean Joseph Amable Humbert landing a force in County Mayo for the Irish Rebellion of 1798 and realising the local population were devoutly Catholic a significant number of Irish priests supported the Rising and had met with Humbert although Humbert s Army had been veterans of the anti clerical campaign in Italy 5 The French Directory hoped this option would allow the creation of a stable French client state in Ireland however Wolfe Tone the Protestant republican leader scoffed at the suggestion and it was quashed 5 Partition Irish Free State and Northern Ireland 1922 1936 edit Main article Monarchy in the Irish Free State nbsp Leinster House Dublin decorated for the visit of King George V and Queen Mary in 1911 Within a decade it was the seat of the Oireachtas of the Irish Free State In early December 1922 most of Ireland twenty six of the country s thirty two counties left the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland These Twenty Six Counties now became the Irish Free State a self governing dominion within the British Empire Six of Ireland s north eastern counties all within the nine county Province of Ulster remained within the United Kingdom as Northern Ireland As a Dominion the Free State was a constitutional monarchy with the British monarch as its head of state The monarch was officially represented in the new Free State by the Governor General of the Irish Free State The King s title in the Irish Free State was exactly the same as it was elsewhere in the British Empire being from 1922 to 1927 By the Grace of God of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and of the British Dominions beyond the Seas King Defender of the Faith Emperor of India and from 1927 to 1937 By the Grace of God of Great Britain Ireland and the British Dominions beyond the Seas King Defender of the Faith Emperor of India The change in the King s title was effected under an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom called the Royal and Parliamentary Titles Act 1927 intended to update the name of the United Kingdom as well as the King s title to reflect the fact that most of the island of Ireland had left the United Kingdom The Act therefore provided that Parliament shall hereafter be known as and styled the Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland instead of the Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and In every Act passed and public document issued after the passing of this Act the expression United Kingdom shall unless the context otherwise requires mean Great Britain and Northern Ireland 6 According to The Times the Imperial Conference proposed that as a result of the establishment of the Irish Free State the title of the king should be changed to George V by the Grace of God of Great Britain Ireland and the British Dominions beyond the seas King Defender of the Faith Emperor of India 6 The change did not mean that the king had now assumed different styles in the different parts of his Empire That development did not formally occur until 1953 four years after the new Republic of Ireland had left the Commonwealth Despite a lack of change in his title George V s position as king of that country became separated from his place as King of the United Kingdom as occurred with all the other British Dominions at the time The Government of the Irish Free State also known as His Majesty s Government in the Irish Free State 7 was confident that the relationship of these independent countries under the Crown would function as a personal union 8 Abdication crisis President of Ireland and Republic of Ireland Act 1936 1949 edit Main article Irish head of state from 1922 to 1949 The constitutional crisis resulting from the abdication of King Edward VIII in December 1936 was used by Eamon de Valera s government as a catalyst to amend the Constitution of the Irish Free State by eliminating all but one of the King s official duties This was achieved with the enactment on 11 December of the Constitution Amendment No 27 Act which removed the monarch from the constitution and on 12 December the External Relations Act 9 which provided that the monarch recognised by Britain and the rest of the Commonwealth could represent the Irish Free State for the purposes of the appointment of diplomatic and consular representatives and the conclusion of international agreements when authorised to do so by the Irish government The following year a new constitution was ratified changing the name of the Free State to Eire or Ireland in the English language and establishing the office of President of Ireland The King s role in Ireland was ambiguous Whether the Irish head of state was George VI or the President was left unclear 10 11 This ambiguity was eliminated with the enactment of the Republic of Ireland Act 1948 which came into force in April 1949 and declared the state to be a republic 12 The External Relations Act was repealed removing the remaining duties of the monarch and Ireland formally withdrew from the British Commonwealth 13 The position of the king in the Irish state was finally and formally ended by the Oireachtas with the repeal of the Crown of Ireland Act 1542 by the Statute Law Revision Pre Union Irish Statutes Act 1962 According to Desmond Oulton owner of Clontarf Castle his father John George Oulton had suggested to Eamon de Valera towards the end of the Irish Free State that Ireland should have its own king again as it was in the times of Gaelic Ireland 14 He suggested to him a member of the O Brien Clan descended in the paternal line from Brian Boru a previous High King of Ireland the most senior representative at the time was Donough O Brien 16th Baron Inchiquin 14 Oulton said that Donough s nephew Conor O Brien 18th Baron Inchiquin confirmed that De Valera did offer Donough O Brien the title of Prince President of the Irish Republic but this was turned down and so a President of Ireland was instituted instead 14 The British monarchy specifically continued and continues in Northern Ireland which remains a part of the sovereign state that is the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland From 1921 until 1973 the British monarch was officially represented in Northern Ireland by the Governor of Northern Ireland List of monarchs of Ireland edit Monarchs of Ireland edit British monarchs nbsp An Irish groat depicting Philip and MaryHenry VIII 1542 1547 Lord of Ireland 1509 1542 made king by the Crown of Ireland Act 1542 Edward VI 1547 1553 Lady Jane Grey 1553 disputed Mary I 1553 1558 Philip of Spain 1554 1558 jure uxoris the Spanish king Mary s husband s title as King of Ireland was reinforced by the Treason Act 1554 Elizabeth I 1558 1603 James I 1603 1625 Charles I 1625 1649 The Wars of the Three Kingdoms incorporating the Irish Rebellion of 1641 Confederate Ireland the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland and the Irish Confederate Wars took place between 1639 and 1653 Charles I was executed in 1649 and his son Charles II was recognised by some Irish lords as King of Ireland The Interregnum began with England Ireland Scotland and Wales ruled by the Council of State then the Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell 1649 1658 and his son Richard Cromwell 1658 1659 The Restoration in Ireland was effected in 1660 without major opposition Charles II being declared king on 14 May 1660 by the Irish Convention Charles II 1660 1685 James II 1685 1689 William III 1689 1702 and Mary II 1689 1694 The position of King of Ireland was contested by William III and James II between 1689 and 1691 after the Glorious Revolution of 1688 The Crown and Parliament Recognition Act 1689 made William King of Ireland and this was reinforced by his victory at the Battle of the Boyne part of the Williamite War in Ireland Anne 1702 1714 The Acts of Union 1707 united the Kingdom of England and Kingdom of Scotland to form the Kingdom of Great Britain However the Kingdom of Ireland remained a separate state George I 1714 1727 George II 1727 1760 George III 1760 1800 The Acts of Union 1800 instituted in reaction to the Irish Rebellion of 1798 created the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland George III 1801 1820 George IV 1820 1830 William IV 1830 1837 Victoria 1837 1901 Edward VII 1901 1910 George V 1910 1922 Monarchs of the Irish Free State and Ireland edit nbsp The royal arms of Ireland Badge of Ireland used during the period of the Kingdom of Ireland on coins etc George V 1922 1936 The Irish Free State became a self governing Dominion of the British Empire and subsequently in 1931 a legislatively independent country Edward VIII 1936 Arguably George VI 1936 1949 whose status was diminished see Irish head of state from 1922 to 1949 Following the Ireland Act 1949 only the part of Ireland known as Northern Ireland remained part of a monarchy King s title George V George VI edit The king s title in the Irish Free State when it became a self governing Dominion of the British Empire and its constitutional successor from December 1936 to April 1949 was the same as elsewhere in the British Commonwealth 15 but it was unclear whether the President of Ireland was Head of state of Ireland 1936 to 1949 or the king George VI The changes in the royal style in the 20th century took into account the emergence of independence for the dominions from the Imperial Parliament of the United Kingdom The kings successively and their advisers and governments in the United Kingdom were fully aware that the republican intent of the representatives of the Irish Free State was in marked contrast to the intent of the governments of certain other dominions such as Canada 16 and such differences were manifested in this period in the design and use of flags and other national symbols for the Irish Free State and other dominions 17 Proposed Irish monarchy editIn 1906 Patrick Pearse writing in the newspaper An Claidheamh Soluis envisioned the Ireland of 2006 as an independent Irish speaking kingdom with an Ard Ri or High King as head of state 18 19 During the Easter Rising in Dublin in 1916 some Republican leaders including Pearse and Joseph Plunkett contemplated giving the throne of an independent Ireland to Prince Joachim of Prussia 20 21 While they were not in favour of a monarchy in itself Pearse and Plunkett thought that if the uprising were successful and Germany won the First World War they would insist on an independent Ireland being a monarchy with a German prince as king in the same way as Romania and Bulgaria 22 The fact that Joachim did not speak English was also considered an advantage as he might be more disposed to learning and promoting the use of the Irish language 23 In his memoirs Desmond FitzGerald wrote That would have certain advantages for us It would mean that a movement for de anglicisation would flow from the head of the state downwards for what was English would be foreign to the head of the state He would naturally turn to those who were more Irish and Gaelic as to his friends for the non nationalist element in our country had shown themselves to be so bitterly anti German For the first generation or so it would be an advantage in view of our natural weakness to have a ruler who linked us with a dominant European power and thereafter when we were better prepared to stand alone or when it might be undesirable that our ruler should turn by personal choice to one power rather than be guided by what was most natural and beneficial for our country the ruler of that time would have become completely Irish 24 Ernest Blythe recalls that in January 1915 he heard Plunkett and Thomas MacDonagh express support for the idea at an Irish Volunteers meeting No objections were made by anyone and Bulmer Hobson was among the attendees Blythe himself said he found the idea immensely attractive 25 Sinn Fein was established in 1905 by Arthur Griffith as a monarchist party inspired by the Austro Hungarian Compromise which sought to create an Anglo Irish dual monarchy 26 During the party s 1917 Ard Fheis disputes between monarchists and republicans resulted in an agreement that the question of a republic versus a monarchy would be settled by public referendum after independence was achieved provided that no member of the House of Windsor could become king 27 28 As a result the Irish Republic had no head of state during the Irish War of Independence until the Anglo Irish Treaty negotiations when Eamon de Valera raised his status to President of the Irish Republic in order to grant himself equal status to George V citation needed In the 1930s an organisation known as the Irish Monarchist Society whose members included Francis Stuart and Osmonde Esmonde plotted to overthrow the Irish Free State and establish an independent Irish Catholic monarchy under a member of the O Neill dynasty 29 30 According to Hugo O Donnell 7th Duke of Tetuan de Valera raised the idea of an Irish monarchy with his great grandfather Juan O Donnell 31 Raymond Moulton O Brien the self styled Prince of Thomond and the United Christian Nationalist Party of which O Brien was the leader wanted to reestablish the monarchy with O Brien as king 32 References editCitations edit Scarisbrick J J English Monarchs Henry VIII University of California Press Parr Katherine 2011 Last Will and Testament of Dowager Queen Katherine Parr In Mueller Janel ed Katherine Parr Complete Works and Correspondence University of Chicago Press p 178 The papal bull ILIUS of 1555 conferring the title of King of Ireland upon Philip II Pittock 2006 p 210 a b c Aston 2002 p 222 a b The Times 4 March 1927 The Irish Law Times and Solicitor s Journal Public general statutes J Falconer 1929 p 66 Black v Chretien Suing a Minister of the Crown for Abuse of Power Misfeasance in Public Office and Negligence Murdoch University Electronic Journal of Law 9 3 September 2002 Retrieved 2 October 2008 Executive Authority External Relations Act 1936 Dublin Irish Statute Book 12 December 1936 3 2 Retrieved 6 May 2009 McMahon Deirdre 1984 Republicans and Imperialists Anglo Irish Relations in the 1930s p 181 ISBN 0300030711 In the words of Mary E Daly January 2007 The Irish Free State Eire Republic of Ireland Ireland A Country by Any Other Name Journal of British Studies 46 1 72 90 doi 10 1086 508399 JSTOR 10 1086 508399 After the enactment of the 1936 External Relations Act and the 1937 Constitution Ireland s only remaining link with the crown had been the accreditation of diplomats The president of Ireland was the head of state When opposition deputies asked de Valera whether Ireland was a republic a favorite pastime in the mid 1940s he tended to resort to dictionary definitions showing that Ireland had all the attributes of a republic Section 1 of the Republic of Ireland Act 1948 Kondō Atsushi 2001 Citizenship in a Global World Comparing Citizenship Rights for Aliens Hampshire Palgrave p 120 ISBN 0 333 80265 9 Ireland reluctantly remained a member of the Commonwealth as Irish citizens remained British Subjects However Irish representatives stopped attending Commonwealth meetings in 1937 and Ireland adopted a position of neutrality in World War II Ireland became a Republic in 1949 and formally left the Commonwealth a b c O Keeffe 2013 pp 21harvnb error no target CITEREFO Keeffe2013 help Proclamation altering the Style and Titles appertaining to the Crown London 13 May 1927 1 Heads of government attending the 1926 Imperial Conference included W T Cosgrave then serving as President of the Executive Council prime minister from 1922 to 1932 It was recorded that the distinct characteristics and histories of each was recognised by the parties attending the Conference See Alistair B Fraser 1998 The Flags of Canada For the chronology of Canadian flags from 1870 at the time of the Irish republican movement see Appendix III For explanation of the distinction between national flags and monarchical badges or blazons of arms see Chapter I a nation needs emblems and symbols to preserve traditions and inspire love of country Of these symbols the coat of arms and the flag are the chief Charles Frederick Hamilton Assistant Comptroller R C M P 1921 The function of a flag is to send the simple message of identity The function of arms is to dignify an individual or institution or country by special identifying symbolism and by appropriate reference to ancestry John Ross Matheson Canada s Flag A Search for a Country Boston G K Hall 1980 p 7 Canada s flag serves to identify something Canadian More specialized in its use Canada s arms identify national authority and jurisdiction Leaving aside strictly decorative uses of either the flag is used wherever one wishes to make the simple statement Canada or Canadian the arms only where the authority of the nation is asserted Alistair B Fraser 1998 op cit In My Garden An Claidheamh Soluis 4 August 1906 Patrick Pearse Predicts the Future Dublin Review of Books Bryan Fanning 20 May 2013 Memoirs of Desmond FitzGerald 1913 1916 Desmond FitzGerald Routledge amp K Paul 1968 p 141 Irish nationalism a history of its roots and ideology Sean Cronin Continuum 1981 p 255 The Irish Factor 1899 1919 Ireland s Strategic and Diplomatic Importance for Foreign Powers Jerome aan De Wiel Irish Academic Press 2008 p 66 Abject Loyalty Nationalism and Monarchy in Ireland During the Reign of Queen Victoria James H Murphy CUA Press 2001 p 301 Inside the GPO in 1916 Desmond FitzGerald s eyewitness account Irish Times 21 March 2016 Retrieved 2 September 2018 An Irish Monarchy The Irish Times 15 April 1966 Feeney Brian 2002 Sinn Fein a Hundred Turbulent Years Dublin The O Brien Press pp 32 33 The new nationalism 1916 18 F S L Lyons in A New History of Ireland Ireland under the Union II 1870 1921 William Edward Vaughan Clarendon Press 1976 p 233 Michael Laffan The Resurrection of Ireland The Sinn Fein Party 1916 1923 p 241 Francis Stuart A life Geoffrey Elborn Raven Arts Press 1990 p 101 Kevin Kieley Francis Stuart Artist and Outcast p 98 Ireland In The 20th Century Tim Pat Coogan Random House p 175 Aan de Wiel Jerome 2007 The Principality of Thomond and His Royal Highness Raymond Moulton Seaghan O Brien 1936 1963 Ireland s Greatest Diplomatic Farce PDF North Munster Antiquarian Journal 47 95 109 Retrieved 2 September 2018 Sources edit Aston Nigel 2002 Christianity and Revolutionary Europe 1750 1830 Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521465922 Parks David 1977 Life of all Irish Monarchs before 1200 Cambridge University Press ISBN 97805214657 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a Check isbn value length help Pittock Murray GH 2006 Poetry and Jacobite Politics in Eighteenth Century Britain and Ireland Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521030274 Synchronismen der irischen Konige Rudolf Thurneysen ZCP 19 1933 pp 81 99 The Ui Brian Kingship in Telach Oc James Hogan in Feil Sgrighinn Eoin Mhic Neill pp 406 444 ed John Ryan Dublin 1938 Early Irish History and Mythology T F O Rahilly 1946 The heir designate in early medieval Ireland Gearoid Mac Niocaill Irish Jurist 3 1968 pp 326 29 The rise of the Ui Neill and the high kingship of Ireland Francis John Byrne O Donnell Lecture 1969 published Dublin 1970 Irish regnal succession a reappraisal Donnchadh O Corrain Studia Hibernica 11 1971 pp 7 39 Gaelic and Gaelicised Ireland Kenneth Nicholls 1972 Ri Eirenn Ri Alban kingship and identity in the night and tenth centuries Maire Herbert in Kings clerics and chronicles in Scotland pp 62 72 ed S Taylor Dublin 2000 Irish Kings and High Kings Francis John Byrne 1973 3rd reprint Dublin 2001 Dal Cais church and dynasty Donnachadh O Corrain Eiru 24 1973 pp 1 69 Nationality and kingship in pre Norman Ireland Donnchadh O Corrain in Nationality and the pursuit of national independence pp 1 35 Historical Studies 11 ed T W Moody Belfast 1978 The Irish royal sites in history and archaeology B Wailes CMCS 3 1982 pp 1 29 A New History of Ireland vol ix maps genealogies lists a companion to Irish history part II edited T W Moody F X Martin F J Byrne Oxford 1984 The archaeology of early Irish kingship Richard B Warner in Power and Politics in Early Medieval Britain and Ireland pp 47 68 ed S T Driscoll and M R Nieke Edinburgh 1988 From Kings to Warlords The Changing Political Structure of Gaelic Ireland in the Later Middle Ages Katharine Simms Dublin 1987 The King as Judge in early Ireland Marilyn Gerriets CMCS 13 1987 pp 39 72 High Kingship and Tiberius Claudius Cogidubnus A T Fear in EtC 30 1994 pp 165 68 Kingship society and sacrality rank power and ideology in early medieval Ireland N B Aitchison in Traditio 49 1994 pp 45 47 Kings and kingship in Early Medieval Ireland pp 63 84 Daibhi O Croinin 1995 The Kingship of Tara in Early Christian Ireland Thomas Charles Edwards 1995 Kings over overkings Propaganda for pre eminence in early medieval Ireland Bart Jaski in The Propagation of Power in the Medieval West ed M Gosman A Vanderjagt J Veenstra pp 163 76 Groningen 1996 An inaugural ode to Hugh O Connor King of Connacht 1293 1309 Seam Mac Mathuna ZCP 49 50 1997 pp 26 62 The inauguration of Tairrdelbach Ua Conchobair at Ath an Termoinn Elizabeth FitzPatrick Peritia 12 1998 pp 351 358 Kings the kingship of Leinster and the regnal poems of laidshenchas Laigen a reflection of dynastic politics in leinster 650 1150 Edel Bhreathnach in Seanchas Studies in Early and Medieval Irish Archaeology History and Literature in Honour of Francis John Byrne Four Courts Press Dublin 2000 The Conntinuation of Bede s a 750 high kings kings of Tara and Bretwaldas T M Charles Edwards pp 137 145 op cit Early Irish Kingship and Succession Bart Jaski Dublin 2000 Leinster states and kings in Christian times pp 33 52 The Ua Maelechlainn kings of Meath pp 90 107 Christian kings of Connacht pp 177 194 Paul Walsh in Irish Leaders and Learning Through the Ages ed Nollaig O Muraile 2003 Finghin MacCarthaigh king of Desmond and the mystery of the second nunnery at Clonmacnoise Conleth Manning inRegions and Rulers in Ireland 1100 1650 ed David Edwards pp 20 26 Four Courts Press Dublin 2004 Kingship in Early Ireland Charles Doherty in The Kingship and Landscape of Tara pp 3 31 ed Edel Bhreathnach Four Courts Press Dublin 2005 Kings named in Baile Chuinn Chechathaig and the Airgialla Charter Poem Ailbhe Mac Shamhrain and Paul Byrne in op cit pp 159 224 High Kings with Opposition Maire Therese Flannagan in A New History of Ireland Volume One Pre Historic and Early Ireland 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Monarchy of Ireland amp oldid 1184873356 List of monarchs of Ireland, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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