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Ulster

Ulster (/ˈʌlstər/; Irish: Ulaidh [ˈʊlˠiː, ˈʊlˠə] or Cúige Uladh [ˌkuːɟə ˈʊlˠə, - ˈʊlˠuː]; Ulster Scots: Ulstèr[6][7][8] or Ulster)[9][10][11] is one of the four traditional or historic Irish provinces. It is made up of nine counties: six of these constitute Northern Ireland (a part of the United Kingdom); the remaining three are in the Republic of Ireland.

Ulster
Ulaidh (Irish)
Ulstèr (Ulster-Scots)
Sovereign statesUnited Kingdom
Republic of Ireland
CountiesAntrim (UK)
Armagh (UK)
Cavan (ROI)
Donegal (ROI)
Down (UK)
Fermanagh (UK)
Londonderry (UK)
Monaghan (ROI)
Tyrone (UK)
Government
 • MEPs[b]1 Sinn Féin MEP
2 Fine Gael MEPs
1 Independent MEP
 • UK MPs and RoI TDs8 DUP MPs
7 Sinn Féin MPs
2 SDLP MPs
1 Alliance MP
4 Sinn Féin TDs
3 Fianna Fáil TDs
2 Fine Gael TDs
1 Independent TDs
 • MLAs27 Sinn Féin MLAs
25 DUP MLAs
8 SDLP MLAs
9 UUP MLAs
17 Alliance MLAs
0 Green MLAs
1 PBP MLAs
1 TUV MLA
4 Independent MLA
[1]
 • Councillors (NI) and Councillors (ROI)
122 DUP Cllrs
105 Sinn Féin Cllrs
75 UUP Cllrs
59 SDLP Cllrs
53 Alliance Cllrs
8 Green Cllrs
6 TUV Cllrs
5 PBP Cllrs
3 PUP Cllr
2 Aontú Cllr
1 CCLA Cllr
24 Independent Cllrs

24 Fianna Fáil Cllrs
17 Sinn Féin Cllrs
17 Fine Gael Cllrs
1 Labour Cllr
1 Aontú Cllr
13 Independent Cllrs
Area
 • Total22,067 km2 (8,520 sq mi)
 • Rank2nd
Population
 (2022 estimate[a])
 • Total2,215,454
 • Rank2nd
 • Density100/km2 (260/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC±0 (GMT/WET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+1 (BST/IST)
Postcodes
Northern Ireland: BT
Donegal: Eircodes beginning with F
Cavan and Monaghan: Eircodes beginning with A or H7
Telephone area codesNorthern Ireland: 028 (from Great Britain)
048 (from Republic of Ireland)
+44-28 (from rest of world)
Donegal: +353-74
Cavan and Monaghan: +353-4x
ISO 3166 codeIE-U (Republic of Ireland)
GB-NIR (Northern Ireland)
Patron Saints: Finnian of Moville[2] and Columba

a. ^ The Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency[3] census of 2021 results (1,903,100) combined with the preliminary results of 2022 census of Ireland for Ulster (part of; 312,354).[4]

b. ^ The counties of Cavan, Monaghan and Donegal are part of the Midlands–North-West constituency (4 MEPs); these three counties contain 19.5% of the population of the constituency.[5] Following Brexit, as the United Kingdom left the EU, there are no MEPs from Northern Ireland.

It is the second-largest (after Munster) and second-most populous (after Leinster) of Ireland's four traditional provinces, with Belfast being its biggest city. Unlike the other provinces, Ulster has a high percentage of Protestants, making up almost half of its population. English is the main language and Ulster English the main dialect. A minority also speak Irish, and there are Gaeltachtaí (Irish-speaking regions) in County Donegal which is home to a quarter of the total Gaeltacht population of the Republic Ireland.[12] There are also large Irish-speaking networks in southern County Londonderry and in the Gaeltacht Quarter, Belfast. Ulster-Scots is also spoken extensively in Counties Antrim, Down, Londonderry, Tyrone and Donegal. Lough Neagh, in the east, is the largest lake in the British Isles, while Lough Erne in the west is one of its largest lake networks. The main mountain ranges are the Mournes, Sperrins, Croaghgorms and Derryveagh Mountains.

Historically, Ulster lay at the heart of the Gaelic world made up of Gaelic Ireland, Scotland and the Isle of Man. According to tradition, in ancient Ireland it was one of the fifths (Irish: cúige) ruled by a rí ruirech, or "king of over-kings". It is named after the overkingdom of Ulaid, in the east of the province, which was in turn named after the Ulaid folk. The other overkingdoms in Ulster were Airgíalla and Ailech. After the Norman invasion of Ireland in the twelfth century, eastern Ulster was conquered by the Anglo-Normans and became the Earldom of Ulster. By the late fourteenth century the Earldom had collapsed and the O'Neill dynasty had come to dominate most of Ulster, claiming the title King of Ulster. Ulster became the most thoroughly Gaelic and independent of Ireland's provinces. Its rulers resisted English encroachment but were defeated in the Nine Years' War (1594–1603). King James I then colonised Ulster with English-speaking Protestant settlers from Great Britain, in the Plantation of Ulster. This led to the founding of many of Ulster's towns. The inflow of Protestant settlers and migrants also led to bouts of sectarian violence with Catholics, notably during the 1641 rebellion and the Armagh disturbances.

Along with the rest of Ireland, Ulster became part of the United Kingdom in 1801. In the early twentieth century, moves towards Irish self-rule were opposed by many Ulster Protestants, sparking the Home Rule Crisis. In the last all Ireland election (1918 Irish general election) counties Donegal and Monaghan returned large Sinn Féin (nationalist) majorities. Sinn Féin candidates ran unopposed in Cavan. Fermanagh and Tyrone had Sinn Féin/Nationalist Party (Irish Parliamentary Party) majorities. The other four Counties of Ulster had Unionist Party majorities.[13] The home rule crisis and the subsequent Irish War of Independence, led to the partition of Ireland under the Government of Ireland Act 1920. Six Ulster counties became Northern Ireland, a self-governing territory within the United Kingdom, while the rest of Ireland became the Irish Free State, now the Republic of Ireland.

The term Ulster has no official function for local government purposes in either state. However, for the purposes of ISO 3166-2:IE, Ulster is used to refer to the three counties of Cavan, Donegal and Monaghan only, which are given country sub-division code "IE-U".[14] The name is also used by various organisations such as cultural and sporting bodies.

Terminology edit

Ulster's name ultimately derives from the Ulaidh, a group of tribes that once dwelt in this part of Ireland. The Norsemen knew the province as Ulaztir, the tír or land (a word borrowed from Irish) of the Ulaidh;[15] this was then taken into English as Ullister or Ulvester, and later contracted to Ulster.[16] Another, less probable explanation is that the suffix -ster represents the Old Norse element staðr ("place"), found in names like Lybster and Scrabster in Scotland.[15]

Ulster is still known as Cúige Uladh in Irish, meaning the province (literally "fifth") of the Ulaidh. Ulaidh has historically been anglicised as Ulagh or Ullagh[17] and Latinised as Ulidia or Ultonia.[18] The latter two have yielded the terms Ulidian and Ultonian. The Irish word for someone or something from Ulster is Ultach, and this can be found in the surnames MacNulty, MacAnulty, and Nulty, which all derive from Mac an Ultaigh, meaning "son of the Ulsterman".[19]

Northern Ireland is often referred to as Ulster,[20] despite including only six of Ulster's nine counties. This usage is most common among people in Northern Ireland who are unionist,[21] although it is also used by the media throughout the United Kingdom.[22][23] Most Irish nationalists object to the use of Ulster in this context.[21]

Geography and political sub-divisions edit

 
Ulster (coloured), showing Northern Ireland in pink and the Republic of Ireland part in green

Ulster has a population of just over two million people and an area of 22,067 square kilometres (8,520 sq mi). About 62% of the area of Ulster is in the UK while the remaining 38% is in the Republic of Ireland. Ulster's biggest city, Belfast, has an urban population of over half a million inhabitants, making it the second-largest city on the island of Ireland and the 10th largest urban area in the UK. Six of Ulster's nine counties, Antrim, Armagh, Down, Fermanagh, Londonderry and Tyrone, including the former parliamentary boroughs of Belfast and Londonderry, form Northern Ireland which remained part of the United Kingdom after the partition of Ireland in 1921. Three Ulster counties – Cavan, Donegal and Monaghan – form part of the Republic of Ireland. About half of Ulster's population lives in counties Antrim and Down. Across the nine counties, according to the aggregate UK 2011 Census for Northern Ireland, and the ROI 2011 Census for counties Cavan, Donegal and Monaghan, there is a Roman Catholic majority over Protestant of 50.8% to 42.7%.[24]

While the traditional counties continue to demarcate areas of local government in the Republic of Ireland, this is no longer the case in Northern Ireland. Since 1974, the traditional counties have a ceremonial role only. Local government in Northern Ireland is today demarcated by 11 districts.

County-based sub-divisions edit

County Population Area
County Antrim (Contae Aontroma; Coontie Anthrim/Antrìm/Antrim/Entrim) 618,108 3,088 km2 (1,192 sq mi)
County Armagh (Contae Ard Mhacha; Coontie Airmagh/Armagh) 174,792 1,327 km2 (512 sq mi)
County Cavan (Contae an Chabháin) 81,201 1,932 km2 (746 sq mi)
County Donegal (Contae Dhún na nGall/Thír Chonaill; Coontie Dunnygal/Dinnygal) 166,321 4,861 km2 (1,877 sq mi)
County Down (Contae an Dúin; Coontie Doon/Doun) 531,665 2,489 km2 (961 sq mi)
County Fermanagh (Contae Fhear Manach; Coontie Fermanagh/Fermanay) 61,170 1,691 km2 (653 sq mi)
County Londonderry (Contae Dhoire; Coontie Loonenderrie) 247,132 2,118 km2 (818 sq mi)
County Monaghan (Contae Mhuineacháin) 64,832 1,295 km2 (500 sq mi)
County Tyrone (Contae Thír Eoghain; Coontie Tyrone/Owenslann) 177,986 3,266 km2 (1,261 sq mi)
Total 2,123,207 22,067 km2 (8,520 sq mi)

Counties shaded in grey are in the Republic of Ireland. Counties shaded in pink are in Northern Ireland.

Council-based sub-divisions edit

Largest settlements edit

Settlements in Ulster with at least 14,000 inhabitants, listed in order of population:

  1. Belfast (480,000)
  2. Derry (105,000)
  3. Lisburn (75,000)
  4. Craigavon (65,000)
  5. Bangor (58,400)
  6. Ballymena (28,700)
  7. Newtownards (27,800)
  8. Newry (27,400)
  9. Carrickfergus (27,200)
  10. Coleraine (25,000)
  11. Antrim (20,000)
  12. Omagh (19,800)
  13. Letterkenny (19,600)
  14. Larne (18,200)
  15. Banbridge (14,700)
  16. Armagh (14,500)

Economy edit

The GDP of the province of Ulster is around €50 billion. Salary levels are the lowest on the island of Ireland.

Area Population Country Largest settlement GDP € GDP per person €
Greater Belfast 720,000 NI Belfast €20.9 bn €33,550
Border Region (includes two non-Ulster counties) 430,000 (roughly half in Ulster) ROI Letterkenny €10.7 bn €21,100
East of Northern Ireland 430,000 NI Ballymena €9.5 bn €20,300
North of Northern Ireland 280,000 NI Derry €5.5 bn €18,400
West and South of Northern Ireland 400,000 NI Newry €8.4 bn €19,300

[25]

Physical geography edit

The biggest lake in the British Isles, Lough Neagh, lies in eastern Ulster. The province's highest point, Slieve Donard (848 metres (2,782 ft)), stands in County Down. The most northerly point in Ireland, Malin Head, is in County Donegal, as are the sixth-highest (601 metres (1,972 ft)) sea cliffs in Europe, at Slieve League, and the province's largest island, Arranmore. The most easterly point in Ireland is also in Ulster, in County Down, and the most westerly point in the UK is in County Fermanagh. The longest river in the British Isles, the Shannon, rises at the Shannon Pot in County Cavan with underground tributaries from County Fermanagh. Volcanic activity in eastern Ulster led to the formation of the Antrim Plateau and the Giant's Causeway, one of Ireland's three UNESCO World Heritage Sites. Ulster also has a significant drumlin belt. The geographical centre of Ulster lies between the villages of Pomeroy and Carrickmore in County Tyrone. In terms of area, County Donegal is the largest county in all of Ulster.

Transport edit

Air edit

The province's main airport is Belfast International Airport (popularly called Aldergrove Airport), which is located at Aldergrove, 11.5 miles northwest of Belfast near Antrim. George Best Belfast City Airport (sometimes referred to as "the City Airport" or "the Harbour Airport") is another, smaller airport which is located at Sydenham in Belfast. The City of Derry Airport is located at Eglinton, 13 kilometres (8 mi) east of the city of Derry. There is also Donegal Airport (Irish: Aerfort Dhún na nGall), popularly known as Carrickfinn Airport, which is located in The Rosses.

Rail edit

Railway lines are run by Northern Ireland Railways (NIR). Belfast to Bangor and Belfast to Lisburn are strategically the most important routes on the network with the greatest number of passengers and largest profit margins. The Belfast-Derry railway line connecting Londonderry railway station, via Coleraine, Ballymoney, Ballymena and Antrim, with Lanyon Place and Belfast Great Victoria Street is a noted scenic route. Belfast is also connected with Carrickfergus and Larne Harbour, Portadown, Newry and onwards, via the Enterprise service jointly operated by NIR and Iarnród Éireann, to Dublin Connolly.

The main railway lines linking to and from Belfast Great Victoria Street and Belfast Central are:

  • The Derry Line and the Portrush Branch
  • The Larne Line
  • The Bangor Line
  • The Portadown Line

Only five Irish counties, all in Southern and Western Ulster, currently have no mainline railway. The historic Great Northern Railway of Ireland connected them. They are Cavan, Monaghan, Fermanagh, Tyrone and Donegal. A plan to re-link Sligo and Derry through Donegal has been postponed until at least 2030.[26]

Languages and dialects edit

Most people in Ulster speak English. English is taught in all schools in the province; Irish (Gaeilge) is taught in all schools in the counties that are part of the Republic, and in schools in Northern Ireland, almost exclusively in the Roman Catholic and Irish-medium sectors. In responses to the 2001 census in Northern Ireland 10% of the population had "some knowledge of Irish"[27] and 4.7% could "speak, read, write and understand" Irish.[27] Large parts of County Donegal are Gaeltacht areas where Irish is the first language and some people in west Belfast also speak Irish, especially in the "Gaeltacht Quarter".[28] The dialect of Irish most commonly spoken in Ulster (especially throughout Northern Ireland and County Donegal) is Gaeilge Thír Chonaill or Donegal Irish, also known as Gaeilge Uladh or Ulster Irish. Donegal Irish has many similarities to Scottish Gaelic. Polish is the third most common language. Ulster Scots dialects, sometimes known by the neologism Ullans, are also spoken in Counties Down, Antrim, Londonderry and Donegal.[29]

History edit

Early history edit

Ulster is one of the four Irish provinces. Its name derives from the Irish language Cúige Uladh (pronounced [ˌkuːɟə ˈʊlˠə]), meaning "fifth of the Ulaidh", named for the ancient inhabitants of the region.

The province's early story extends further back than written records and survives mainly in legends such as the Ulster Cycle. The archaeology of Ulster, formerly called Ulandia, gives examples of "ritual enclosures", such as the Giant's Ring near Belfast, which is an earth bank about 590 feet (180 m) in diameter and 15 feet (4.5 m) high, in the centre of which there is a dolmen.[30]

The Boyne and its tributary the Blackwater were the traditional southern boundary of the province of Ulster and appear as such in the Táin Bó Cúailnge. According to historian Francis John Byrne the Ulaid 'possibly still ruled directly in Louth as far as the Boyne in the early seventh century'[31] when Congal Cáech made a bid for the kingship of Tara. In 637, the Battle of Moira, known archaically as the Battle of Magh Rath, was fought by the Gaelic High King of Ireland Domhnall II against his foster son King Congal Cáech of Ulster, supported by his ally Domhnall the Freckled (Domhnall Brecc) of Dalriada. The battle was fought near the Woods of Killultagh, just outside the village of Moira in what would become County Down. It was allegedly the largest battle ever fought on the island of Ireland, and resulted in the death of Congal and the retreat of Domhnall Brecc.

In early medieval Ireland, a branch of the Northern Uí Néill, the Cenél nEógain of the province of Ailech, gradually eroded the territory of the province of Ulaidh until it lay east of the River Bann. The Cenél nEógain would make Tír Eóghain (most of which forms modern County Tyrone) their base. Among the High Kings of Ireland were Áed Findliath (died 879), Niall Glúndub (died 919), and Domnall ua Néill (died 980), all of the Cenél nEógain. The province of Ulaidh would survive restricted to the east of modern Ulster until the Norman invasion in the late 12th century. It would only once more become a province of Ireland in the mid-14th century after the collapse of the Norman Earldom of Ulster, when the O'Neills who had come to dominate the Northern Uí Néill stepped into the power vacuum and staked a claim for the first time the title of "king of Ulster" along with the Red Hand of Ulster symbol. It was then that the provinces of Ailech, Airgialla, and Ulaidh would all merge largely into what would become the modern province of Ulster.

 
A bronze statue commemorating The Flight of the Earls at Rathmullan in north County Donegal.

Domnall Ua Lochlainn (died 1121) and Muirchertach Mac Lochlainn (died 1166) were of this dynasty. The Meic Lochlainn were in 1241 overthrown by their kin, the clan Ó Néill (see O'Neill dynasty). The Ó Néill's were from then on established as Ulster's most powerful Gaelic family.

The Ó Domhnaill (O'Donnell) dynasty were Ulster's second most powerful clan from the early thirteenth-century through to the beginning of the seventeenth-century. The O'Donnells ruled over Tír Chonaill (most of modern County Donegal) in West Ulster.

After the Norman invasion of Ireland in the twelfth century, the east of the province fell by conquest to Norman barons, first De Courcy (died 1219), then Hugh de Lacy (1176–1243), who founded the Earldom of Ulster based on the modern counties of Antrim and Down.

In the 1600s Ulster was the last redoubt of the traditional Gaelic way of life, and following the defeat of the Irish forces in the Nine Years War (1594–1603) at the battle of Kinsale (1601), Elizabeth I's English forces succeeded in subjugating Ulster and all of Ireland.

The Gaelic leaders of Ulster, the O'Neills and O'Donnells, finding their power under English suzerainty limited, decamped en masse in 1607 (the Flight of the Earls) to Roman Catholic Europe. This allowed the English Crown to plant Ulster with more loyal English and Scottish planters, a process which began in earnest in 1610.

Plantations and civil wars edit

The Plantation of Ulster (Irish: Plandáil Uladh) was the organised colonisation (or plantation) of Ulster by people from Great Britain (especially Presbyterians from Scotland). Private plantation by wealthy landowners began in 1606,[32][33][34] while the official plantation controlled by King James I of England (who was also King James VI of Scots) began in 1609. All land owned by Irish chieftains, the Ó Neills and Ó Donnells (along with those of their supporters), who fought against the English Crown in the Nine Years War, were confiscated and used to settle the colonists. The Counties Tyrconnell, Tyrone, Fermanagh, Cavan, Coleraine and Armagh comprised the official Colony.[35] However, most of the counties, including the most heavily colonised Counties Antrim and Down, were privately colonised.[32][33][34] These counties, though not officially designated as subject to Plantation, had suffered violent depopulation during the previous wars and proved attractive to Private Colonialists from nearby Britain. The efforts to attract colonists from England and Scotland to the Ulster Plantation were considerably affected by the existence of British colonies in the Americas, which served as a more attractive destination for many potential emigrants.[36]

The official reason for the Plantation is said to have been to pay for the costly Nine Years' War,[37] but this view was not shared by all in the English government of the time, most notably the English Crown-appointed Attorney-General for Ireland in 1609, Sir John Davies:

A barbarous country must be first broken by a war before it will be capable of good government; and when it is fully subdued and conquered, if it be not well planted and governed after the conquest, it will eftsoons return to the former barbarism.[38]

 
A modern Protestant mural in Belfast celebrating Oliver Cromwell and his activities.

The Plantation of Ulster continued well into the 18th century, interrupted only by the Irish Rebellion of 1641. This Rebellion was initially led by Sir Phelim O'Neill (Irish: Sir Féilim Ó Néill), and was intended to overthrow British rule rapidly, but quickly degenerated into attacks on colonists, in which dispossessed Irish slaughtered thousands of the colonists. In the ensuing wars (1641–1653, fought against the background of civil war in England, Scotland and Ireland), Ulster became a battleground between the Colonialists and the native Irish. In 1646, an Irish army under command by Owen Roe O'Neill (Irish: Eoghan Ruadh Ó Néill) inflicted a defeat on a Scottish Covenanter army at Benburb in County Tyrone, but the native Irish forces failed to follow up their victory and the war lapsed into stalemate. The war in Ulster ended with the defeat of the native army at the Battle of Scarrifholis, near Newmills on the western outskirts of Letterkenny, County Donegal, in 1650, as part of the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland conducted by Oliver Cromwell and the New Model Army, the aim of which was to expel all native Irish to the province of Connaught.[39]

Forty years later, in 1688–1691, the Williamite War was fought, the belligerents of which were the Williamites and Jacobites. The war was partly due to a dispute over who was the rightful claimant to the British Throne, and thus the supreme monarch of the nascent British Empire. However, the war was also a part of the greater War of the Grand Alliance, fought between King Louis XIV of France and his allies, and a European-wide coalition, the Grand Alliance, led by Prince William of Orange and Emperor Leopold I of the Holy Roman Empire, supported by the Vatican and many other states. The Grand Alliance was a cross-denominational alliance designed to stop French eastward colonialist expansion under Louis XIV, with whom King James II was allied.

The majority of Irish people were "Jacobites" and supported James II due to his 1687 Declaration of Indulgence or, as it is also known, The Declaration for the Liberty of Conscience, that granted religious freedom to all denominations in England and Scotland and also due to James II's promise to the Irish Parliament of an eventual right to self-determination.[40][41] However, James II was deposed in the Glorious Revolution, and the majority of Ulster Colonialists (Williamites) backed William of Orange. Both the Williamite and Jacobite armies were religiously mixed; William of Orange's own elite forces, the Dutch Blue Guards had a papal banner with them during the invasion, many of them being Dutch Roman Catholics.[42]

At the start of the war, Irish Jacobites controlled most of Ireland for James II, with the exception of the Williamite strongholds at Derry and at Enniskillen in Ulster. The Jacobites besieged Derry from December 1688 to July 1689, ending when a Williamite army from Britain relieved the city. The Williamites based in Enniskillen defeated another Jacobite army at the battle of Newtownbutler on 28 July 1689. Thereafter, Ulster remained firmly under Williamite control and William's forces completed their conquest of the rest of Ireland in the next two years. The war provided Protestant loyalists with the iconic victories of the Siege of Derry, the Battle of the Boyne (1 July 1690) and the Battle of Aughrim (12 July 1691), all of which the Orange Order commemorate each year.

The Williamites' victory in this war ensured British rule in Ireland for over 200 years. The Protestant Ascendancy in Ireland excluded most of Ulster's population from having any Civil power on religious grounds. Roman Catholics (descended from the indigenous Irish) and Presbyterians (mainly descended from Scottish colonists) both suffered discrimination under the Penal Laws, which gave full political rights only to Anglican Protestants (mostly descended from English settlers). In the 1690s, Scottish Presbyterians became a majority in Ulster, due to a large influx of them into the Province.

Emigration edit

Considerable numbers of Ulster-Scots emigrated to the North American colonies throughout the 18th century (160,000 settled in what would become the United States between 1717 and 1770 alone).

Disdaining (or forced out of) the heavily English regions on the Atlantic coast, most groups of Ulster-Scots settlers crossed into the "western mountains", where their descendants populated the Appalachian regions and the Ohio Valley. Here they lived on the frontiers of America, carving their own world out of the wilderness. The Scots-Irish soon became the dominant culture of the Appalachians from Pennsylvania to Georgia. Author (and US Senator) Jim Webb puts forth a thesis in his book Born Fighting to suggest that the character traits he ascribes to the Scots-Irish such as loyalty to kin, mistrust of governmental authority, and a propensity to bear arms, helped shape the American identity.

In the United States Census, 2000, 4.3 million Americans claimed Scots-Irish ancestry. The areas where the most Americans reported themselves in the 2000 Census only as "American" with no further qualification (e.g. Kentucky, north-central Texas, and many other areas in the Southern US) are largely the areas where many Scots-Irish settled, and are in complementary distribution with the areas which most heavily report Scots-Irish ancestry.

According to the Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups, 400,000 people in the US were of Irish birth or ancestry in 1790 when the first US Census counted 3,100,000 white Americans. According to the encyclopaedia, half of these Irish Americans were descended from Ulster, and half from the other three provinces of Ireland.[43]

Republicanism, rebellion and communal strife edit

Most of the 18th century saw a calming of sectarian tensions in Ulster. The economy of the province improved, as small producers exported linen and other goods. Belfast developed from a village into a bustling provincial town. However, this did not stop many thousands of Ulster people from emigrating to British North America in this period, where they became known as "Scots Irish" or "Scotch-Irish".[citation needed]

Political tensions resurfaced, albeit in a new form, towards the end of the 18th century. In the 1790s many Roman Catholics and Presbyterians, in opposition to Anglican domination and inspired by the American and French revolutions joined in the United Irishmen movement. This group (founded in Belfast) dedicated itself to founding a non-sectarian and independent Irish republic. The United Irishmen had particular strength in Belfast, Antrim and Down. Paradoxically however, this period also saw much sectarian violence between Roman Catholics and Protestants, principally members of the Church of Ireland (Anglicans, who practised the British state religion and had rights denied to both Presbyterians and Roman Catholics), notably the "Battle of the Diamond" in 1795, a faction fight between the rival "Defenders" (Roman Catholic) and "Peep O'Day Boys" (Anglican), which led to over 100 deaths and to the founding of the Orange Order. This event, and many others like it, came about with the relaxation of the Penal Laws and Roman Catholics began to be allowed to purchase land and involve themselves in the linen trade (activities which previously had involved many onerous restrictions). Protestants, including some Presbyterians, who in some parts of the province had come to identify with the Roman Catholic community, used violence to intimidate Roman Catholics who tried to enter the linen trade. Estimates suggest that up to 7000 Roman Catholics suffered expulsion from Ulster during this violence. Many of them settled in northern Connacht. These refugees' linguistic influence still survives in the dialects of Irish spoken in County Mayo, which have many similarities to Ulster Irish not found elsewhere in Connacht. Loyalist militias, primarily Anglicans, also used violence against the United Irishmen and against Roman Catholic and Protestant republicans throughout the province.

In 1798 the United Irishmen, led by Henry Joy McCracken, launched a rebellion in Ulster, mostly supported by Presbyterians. But the British authorities swiftly put down the rebellion and employed severe repression after the fighting had ended. In the wake of the failure of this rebellion, and following the gradual abolition of official religious discrimination after the Act of Union in 1800, Presbyterians came to identify more with the State and with their Anglican neighbours, due to their civil rights now being respected by both the state and their Anglican neighbours.

The 1859 Ulster Revival was a major Christian revival that spread throughout Ulster.

Industrialisation, Home Rule and partition edit

 
Royal Avenue, Belfast. Photochrom print circa 1890–1900.

In the 19th century, Ulster had the only large-scale industrialisation and became the most prosperous province on the island. In the latter part of the century, Belfast briefly overtook Dublin as the island's largest city. Belfast became famous in this period for its huge dockyards and shipbuilding – and notably for the construction of the RMS Titanic. Sectarian divisions in Ulster became hardened into the political categories of unionist (supporters of the Union with Britain; mostly, but not exclusively, Protestant) and nationalist (advocates of repeal of the 1800 Act of Union, usually, though not exclusively, Roman Catholic). Northern Ireland's current politics originate from these late 19th century disputes over Home Rule that would have devolved some powers of government to Ireland. At least a dozen large scale sectarian disturbances/riots occurred in Belfast during the 19th century.[44] Ulster Protestants usually opposed Home Rule — fearing for their religious rights calling it "Rome Rule" in an autonomous Roman Catholic-dominated Ireland and also not trusting politicians from the agrarian south and west to support the more industrial economy of Ulster. This lack of trust, however, was largely unfounded as during the 19th and early 20th century important industries in the southernmost region of Cork included brewing, distilling, wool and like Belfast, shipbuilding.[45]

 
The results of the 1918 Irish general election, in which Sinn Féin and the Irish Parliamentary Party won the majority of votes on the island of Ireland, shown in the color green and light green respectively, with the exception being primarily in the East of the province of Ulster.

Thousands of unionists, led by the Dublin-born barrister Sir Edward Carson and James Craig, signed the "Ulster Covenant" of 1912 pledging to resist Home Rule. This movement also set up the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF). In April 1914, the UVF assisted with the landing of 30,000 German rifles with 3,000,000 rounds at Larne by blockading authorities. (See Larne gunrunning). The Curragh Incident showed it would be difficult to use the British army to enforce home rule from Dublin on Ulster's unionist minority.

In response, Irish republicans created the Irish Volunteers, part of which became the forerunner of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) – to seek to ensure the passing of the Home Rule Bill. Upon the outbreak of World War I in 1914, 200,000 Irishmen, both Southern and Northern, of all religious sects volunteered to serve in the British Army. This had the effect of interrupting the armed stand-off in Ireland. As the war progressed, in Ireland, opposition to the War grew stronger, reaching its peak in 1918 when the British government proposed laws to extend conscription to all able bodied Irishmen during the Conscription Crisis.

In the aftermath of World War I, the political party Sinn Féin ("Ourselves") won the majority of votes in the 1918 Irish general election, this political party pursued a policy of complete independent self-determination for the island of Ireland as outlined in the Sinn Féin campaign Manifesto of 1918, a great deal more than the devolved government/Home Rule advocated by the (I.P.P) Irish Parliamentary Party. Following the Sinn Féin victory in these elections the Irish Declaration of Independence was penned and Irish republicans launched a guerrilla campaign against British rule in what became the Irish War of Independence (January 1919 – July 1921). The fighting in Ulster during the Irish War of Independence generally took the form of street battles between Protestants and Roman Catholics in the city of Belfast. Estimates suggest that about 600 civilians died in this communal violence, the majority of them (58%) Roman Catholics (see The Troubles (1920–1922)). The IRA remained relatively quiescent in Ulster, with the exception of the south Armagh area, where Frank Aiken led it. A lot of IRA activity also took place at this time in County Donegal and the City of Derry, where one of the main Republican leaders was Peadar O'Donnell. Hugh O'Doherty, a Sinn Féin politician, was elected mayor of Derry at this time. In the First Dáil, which was elected in late 1918, Prof. Eoin Mac Néill served as the Sinn Féin T.D. for Londonderry City.

1920 to present edit

Partition of Ireland, first mooted in 1912, was introduced with the enactment of the Government of Ireland Act 1920, which gave a form of "Home rule" self-government to two areas, Southern Ireland, with its capital at Dublin, and "Northern Ireland", consisting of six of Ulster's central and eastern counties, both within a continuing United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. Dissatisfaction with this led to the Irish War of Independence, which formally ceased on 11 July 1921. Low-level violence, however, continued in Ulster, causing Michael Collins in the south to order a boycott of Northern products in protest at attacks on the Nationalist community there. The Partition was effectively confirmed by the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 6 December 1921. One of the primary stipulations of the treaty was the transformation of Ireland into a self-governing British dominion called the Irish Free State (which later became the sovereign Republic of Ireland), but with the option of a continuation of the home rule institution of Northern Ireland, still within the United Kingdom, if the Northern Ireland Parliament (already in existence) chose to opt out of the Irish Free State. All parties knew that this was certain to be the choice of the Ulster Unionists who had a majority in the parliament, and immediately on the creation of the Free State they resolved to leave it.

Following the Anglo Irish treaty, the exact border between the new dominion of the Irish Free State and the future Northern Ireland, if it chose to opt out, was to be decided by the Irish Boundary Commission. This did not announce its findings until 1925, when the line was again drawn around six of Ulster's nine counties, with no change from the partition of 1920.

Electorally, voting in the six Northern Ireland counties of Ulster tends to follow religious or sectarian lines; noticeable religious demarcation does not exist in the South Ulster counties of Cavan and Monaghan in the Republic of Ireland. County Donegal is largely a Roman Catholic county, but with a large Protestant minority. Generally, Protestants in Donegal vote for the political party Fine Gael ("Family of the Irish").[46] However, religious sectarianism in politics has largely disappeared from the rest of the Republic of Ireland. This was illustrated when Erskine H. Childers, a Church of Ireland member and Teachta Dála (TD, a member of the lower house of the National Parliament) who had represented Monaghan, won election as President after having served as a long-term minister under Fianna Fáil Taoisigh Éamon de Valera, Seán Lemass and Jack Lynch.

The Orange Order freely organises in counties Donegal, Cavan and Monaghan, with several Orange parades taking place throughout County Donegal each year. The only major Orange Order march in the Republic of Ireland takes place every July in the village of Rossnowlagh, near Ballyshannon, in the south of County Donegal.

As of 2017, Northern Ireland has seven Roman Catholic members of parliament, all members of Sinn Féin (of a total of 18 from the whole of Northern Ireland) in the British House of Commons at Westminster; and the other three counties have one Protestant T.D. of the ten it has elected to Dáil Éireann, the Lower House of the Oireachtas, the parliament of the Republic of Ireland. At present (August 2007) County Donegal sends six T.D.'s to Dáil Éireann. The county is divided into two constituencies: Donegal North-East and Donegal South-West, each with three T.D.'s. County Cavan and County Monaghan form the one constituency called Cavan-Monaghan, which sends five T.D.'s to the Dáil (one of whom is a Protestant).

The historic Flag of Ulster served as the basis for the Ulster Banner (often referred to as the Flag of Northern Ireland), which was the flag of the Government of Northern Ireland until the proroguing of the Stormont parliament in 1973.

People edit

Sport edit

In Gaelic games (which include Gaelic football and hurling), Ulster counties play the Ulster Senior Football Championship and Ulster Senior Hurling Championship. In football, the main competitions in which they compete with the other Irish counties are the All-Ireland Senior Football Championship and National Football League, while the Ulster club champions represent the province in the All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship. Hurling teams play in the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, National Hurling League and All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship. The whole province fields a team to play the other provinces in the Railway Cup in both football and hurling. Gaelic Football is by far the most popular of the GAA sports in Ulster but hurling is also played, especially in Antrim, Armagh, Derry, and Down.

The border has divided association football teams since 1921.[49] The Irish Football Association (the I.F.A.) oversees the sport in N.I., while the Football Association of Ireland (the F.A.I.) oversees the sport in the Republic. As a result, separate international teams are fielded and separate championships take place (Irish Football League in Northern Ireland, League of Ireland in the rest of Ulster and Ireland). Anomalously, Derry City F.C. has played in the League of Ireland since 1985 due to crowd trouble at some of their Irish League matches prior to this. The other major Ulster team in the League of Ireland is Finn Harps of Ballybofey, County Donegal. When Derry City F.C. and Finn Harps play against each other, the game is usually referred to as a 'North-West Derby'. There have been cup competitions between I.F.A. and F.A.I. clubs, most recently the Setanta Sports Cup.

In Rugby union, the professional rugby team representing the province and the IRFU Ulster Branch, Ulster Rugby, compete in the Pro14 along with teams from Wales, Scotland, Italy, South Africa and the other Irish Provinces (Leinster, Munster and Connacht). They also compete in Europe's main club rugby tournament, the European Rugby Champions Cup, which they won (as the Heineken Cup) back in 1999. Notable Ulster rugby players include Willy John McBride, Jack Kyle and Mike Gibson. The former is the most capped British and Irish Lion of all time, having completed four tours with the Lions in the sixties and seventies. At international level players from Ulster join with those from the other 3 provinces to form the island-wide Ireland team.

The Ulster Hockey Union organises field hockey in the province and contributes substantially to the all-island hockey team.[50]

Cricket is also played in Ulster, especially in Northern Ireland and East Donegal.[51] Ulster enters two teams into the Interprovincial Series; the North Knights and the North West Warriors, who are the respective representative teams of the Northern Cricket Union (NCU) and the North West Cricket Union (NWCU).

Golf is, however, by far the most high-profile sport and the sport that Ulster has succeeded at more than any other. Ulster has produced many great players over the years, from Fred Daly winning The Open Championship in 1947 at the Royal Liverpool Golf Club, Hoylake to most recently Rory McIlroy winning the US Open and Darren Clarke winning The Open Championship in 2011. Ulster also has another Major winner in Graeme McDowell, who also won the US Open in 2010. The Open Championship returned to Ulster, after 68 years, in 2019 at Royal Portrush Golf Club.

In horse racing, specifically National Hunt, Ulster has produced the most dominant jockey of all time, Tony McCoy.

The Circuit of Ireland Rally is an annual automobile rally held in Ulster since 1931.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Northern Ireland Assembly Election Results 2022". BBC. BBC. Retrieved 13 May 2022.
  2. ^ Challoner, Richard. A Memorial of Ancient British Piety: or, a British Martyrology, p. 128 29 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine. W. Needham, 1761. Accessed 14 March 2013.
  3. ^ "2021 Census". Retrieved 5 August 2022.
  4. ^ "FP003 Preliminary Population 2022 & FP005 Components of Population Change 2016 to 2022". 23 June 2022. Retrieved 29 June 2022.
  5. ^ Census of Ireland 2016: 296,120 out of 1,521,592 total.
  6. ^ Ulster Scots – Ulstèr-Scotch 25 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine NI Department for Regional Development.
  7. ^ Ulster's Hiddlin Swaatch – Culture Northern Ireland 22 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine Dr Clifford Smyth
  8. ^ Guide to Monea Castle – Ulster-Scots version 30 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine Department of the Environment.
  9. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 February 2013.
  10. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 April 2014.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 30 September 2011.
  12. ^ "Results". census.cso.ie. from the original on 26 May 2013. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
  13. ^ The Irish Election of 1918 (Report). Northern Ireland Elections. Retrieved 31 August 2022.
  14. ^ ISO 3166-2 Newsletter II-1, 19 February 2010, which gives "Ulster" as the official English name and "Ulaidh" as the official Irish name of the province, citing "Ordnance Survey Office, Dublin 1993" as its source – http://www.iso.org/iso/iso_3166-2_newsletter_ii-1_corrected_2010-02-19.pdf 3 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ a b Sommerfelt, Alf (1958). "The English Forms of the Names of the Main Provinces of Ireland" (PDF). Lochlann: A Review of Celtic Studies. Oslo University Press. 1: 223–7. (PDF) from the original on 14 April 2021. Retrieved 8 January 2021.
  16. ^ "Ulster". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  17. ^ County Down 5 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine, A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland (1837)
  18. ^ "Publications". 26 March 2018. from the original on 9 June 2016. Retrieved 17 October 2015 – via Google Books.
  19. ^ Robert Bell; The book of Ulster Surnames, page 180. The Blackstaff Press, 2003. ISBN 0-85640-602-3
  20. ^ "the definition of Ulster". Dictionary.com. from the original on 20 December 2007. Retrieved 17 November 2007.
  21. ^ a b Melaugh, Dr Martin. "CAIN: Glossary of Terms on Northern Ireland Conflict". cain.ulst.ac.uk. from the original on 6 December 2010. Retrieved 30 May 2010.
  22. ^ Ulster Facts, information, pictures | Encyclopedia.com articles about Ulster 28 March 2020 at the Wayback Machine. Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved on 23 July 2013.
  23. ^ Evans-Pritchard, Ambrose (7 April 2009). . The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 10 April 2009.
  24. ^ "Community Background", 2011 Census, for NI, and "Religion", 2011 Census, for RoI
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 6 October 2014.
  26. ^ "DERRY-SLIGO TRAIN LINK "RAILED OUT" | Derry Daily". 16 September 2013. from the original on 8 February 2017. Retrieved 26 August 2016.
  27. ^ a b Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency Census 2001 Output 14 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^ Melaugh, Dr Martin. "CAIN: Key Issue: Language: Pritchard, R.M.O. (2004) Protestants and the Irish Language: Historical Heritage and Current Attitudes in Northern Ireland". cain.ulst.ac.uk. from the original on 28 September 2012. Retrieved 22 March 2008.
  29. ^ Gregg, R. J. (1972). "The Scotch-Irish Dialect Boundaries in Ulster". In Wakelin, Martyn F. (ed.). Patterns in the Folk Speech of the British Isles. London: Athlone Press. ISBN 978-0-485-11128-6.
  30. ^ Riordain, S. O. (1966). Antiquities of the Irish Countryside. University Paperbacks (reprint ed.). London: Methuen & Co. Ltd.
  31. ^ p. 113, Byrne, Francis John, Irish kings and high-kings, Batsford, 1987, ISBN 0-7134-5882-8
  32. ^ a b Stewart, A. T. Q. (1989). The Narrow Ground: The Roots of Conflict in Ulster (Rev. ed.). London: Faber and Faber Ltd. p. 38. ISBN 978-0-571-15485-2.
  33. ^ a b Falls, Cyril (1996). The Birth of Ulster. London: Constable and Company Ltd. pp. 156–157. ISBN 978-0-09-476610-5.
  34. ^ a b Perceval-Maxwell, M. (1999). The Scottish Migration to Ulster in the Reign of James I. Belfast: Ulster Historical Foundation. p. 89. ISBN 978-0-901905-44-4.
  35. ^ T. A. Jackson, p. 51.
  36. ^ Tommy McKearney, "Northern Ireland: From Imperial Asset to International Encumbrance", in Journal of World-Systems Theory, vol. 22 issue 1, p. 110; http://jwsr.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/jwsr/article/view/636/741 22 February 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  37. ^ Wars and Conflicts – Plantation of Ulster – English and Scottish Planters – 1641 Rebellion 26 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine BBC History
  38. ^ Davies, John (1890). Morley, Henry (ed.). A Discovery of the True Cause Why Ireland Was Never Entirely Subdued Nor Brought Under Obedience of the Crown of England Until the Beginning of His Majesty's Happy Reign. London: George Routledge and Sons, Ltd. pp. 218–219.
  39. ^ . BBC. Archived from the original on 13 November 2012.
  40. ^ Harris, Tim (2006). Revolution: The Great Crisis of the British Monarchy, 1685–1720. London: Allen Lane. p. 440. ISBN 978-0-7139-9759-0.
  41. ^ Magennis, Eoin (1998). "A 'Beleaguered Protestant'?: Walter Harris and the Writing of Fiction Unmasked in Mid-18th-Century Ireland". Eighteenth-Century Ireland. 13: 6–111. doi:10.3828/eci.1998.8. JSTOR 30064327. S2CID 256129781.
  42. ^ Rabushka, Alvin (2008). Taxation in Colonial America, 1607–1775. Princeton University Press. p. 279. ISBN 978-0-691-13345-4.
  43. ^ Miller, Randall M. (30 December 2008). The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Daily Life in America [4 volumes]. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-0-313-06536-1.
  44. ^ Owen, John (1921), History of Belfast, Belfast, W. & G. Baird, pgs 272 & 422.
  45. ^ https://www.scribd.com/doc/32717516/1919-Cork-Its-Trade-and-Commerce%7C pg 168
  46. ^ "The Future's Bright For Donegal's Orangemen". Independent News And Media. 11 July 2004. from the original on 17 January 2008. Retrieved 6 June 2008.
  47. ^ Deane, C.D. 1983. The Ulster Countryside. p.81 Century Books
  48. ^ Hackney, P. (ed) Stewart and Corry's Flora of the North- east of Ireland. Third edition. Institute of Irish Studies, The Queen's University of Belfast.p.3 – 10 ISBN 0-85389-446-9
  49. ^ "Football Association of Ireland". www.fai.ie. from the original on 7 December 2006. Retrieved 5 January 2007.
  50. ^ "Ireland hockey: Seven Ulster players in squad for Olympic qualifier against Canada". BBC Sport. 28 October 2019. from the original on 29 October 2019. Retrieved 28 October 2019.
  51. ^ McGarry, John; O'Leary, Brendan (8 June 1995). Explaining Northern Ireland: Broken Images. Wiley. ISBN 9780631183495 – via Google Books.

References edit

  • Deane, C. Douglas (1983). The Ulster Countryside. Century Books. ISBN 0-903152-17-7.

Further reading edit

  • Braidwood, J. 1964. Ulster Dialects, An Introductory Symposium Ulster Folk Museum.
  • Faulkner, J. and Thompson, R. 2011. The Natural History of Ulster. National Museums of Northern Ireland. Publication No. 026. ISBN 0-900761-49-0
  • Morton, O. 1994. Marine Algae of Northern Ireland. Ulster Museum, Belfast. ISBN 0-900761-28-8
  • Sheane, Michael. Ulster Blood. Ilfracombe: Arthur H. Stockwell, 2005.
  • Stewart and Corry's Flora of the North-east of Ireland. Third edition. Institute of Irish Studies, The Queen's University of Belfast

External links edit

  • Census 2011 – Ulster Irish language stats
  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 June 2007. Retrieved 7 April 2007. (96.8 KB) The cases of "Protestant Ulster" and Cornwall, by Professor Philip Payton
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Ulster" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.

54°24′N 7°00′W / 54.4°N 7.0°W / 54.4; -7.0

ulster, other, uses, disambiguation, irish, ulaidh, ˈʊlˠiː, ˈʊlˠə, cúige, uladh, ˌkuːɟə, ˈʊlˠə, ˈʊlˠuː, scots, ulstèr, four, traditional, historic, irish, provinces, made, nine, counties, these, constitute, northern, ireland, part, united, kingdom, remaining, . For other uses see Ulster disambiguation Ulster ˈ ʌ l s t er Irish Ulaidh ˈʊlˠiː ˈʊlˠe or Cuige Uladh ˌkuːɟe ˈʊlˠe ˈʊlˠuː Ulster Scots Ulster 6 7 8 or Ulster 9 10 11 is one of the four traditional or historic Irish provinces It is made up of nine counties six of these constitute Northern Ireland a part of the United Kingdom the remaining three are in the Republic of Ireland Ulster Ulaidh Irish Ulster Ulster Scots FlagCoat of armsSovereign statesUnited KingdomRepublic of IrelandCountiesAntrim UK Armagh UK Cavan ROI Donegal ROI Down UK Fermanagh UK Londonderry UK Monaghan ROI Tyrone UK Government MEPs b 1 Sinn Fein MEP 2 Fine Gael MEPs 1 Independent MEP UK MPs and RoI TDs8 DUP MPs 7 Sinn Fein MPs 2 SDLP MPs 1 Alliance MP 4 Sinn Fein TDs 3 Fianna Fail TDs 2 Fine Gael TDs 1 Independent TDs MLAs27 Sinn Fein MLAs 25 DUP MLAs 8 SDLP MLAs 9 UUP MLAs 17 Alliance MLAs 0 Green MLAs 1 PBP MLAs 1 TUV MLA4 Independent MLA 1 Councillors NI and Councillors ROI 122 DUP Cllrs 105 Sinn Fein Cllrs 75 UUP Cllrs 59 SDLP Cllrs 53 Alliance Cllrs 8 Green Cllrs 6 TUV Cllrs 5 PBP Cllrs 3 PUP Cllr 2 Aontu Cllr 1 CCLA Cllr 24 Independent Cllrs 24 Fianna Fail Cllrs 17 Sinn Fein Cllrs 17 Fine Gael Cllrs 1 Labour Cllr 1 Aontu Cllr 13 Independent CllrsArea Total22 067 km2 8 520 sq mi Rank2ndPopulation 2022 estimate a Total2 215 454 Rank2nd Density100 km2 260 sq mi Time zoneUTC 0 GMT WET Summer DST UTC 1 BST IST PostcodesNorthern Ireland BTDonegal Eircodes beginning with FCavan and Monaghan Eircodes beginning with A or H7Telephone area codesNorthern Ireland 028 from Great Britain 048 from Republic of Ireland 44 28 from rest of world Donegal 353 74Cavan and Monaghan 353 4xISO 3166 codeIE U Republic of Ireland GB NIR Northern Ireland Patron Saints Finnian of Moville 2 and Columba a The Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency 3 census of 2021 results 1 903 100 combined with the preliminary results of 2022 census of Ireland for Ulster part of 312 354 4 b The counties of Cavan Monaghan and Donegal are part of the Midlands North West constituency 4 MEPs these three counties contain 19 5 of the population of the constituency 5 Following Brexit as the United Kingdom left the EU there are no MEPs from Northern Ireland It is the second largest after Munster and second most populous after Leinster of Ireland s four traditional provinces with Belfast being its biggest city Unlike the other provinces Ulster has a high percentage of Protestants making up almost half of its population English is the main language and Ulster English the main dialect A minority also speak Irish and there are Gaeltachtai Irish speaking regions in County Donegal which is home to a quarter of the total Gaeltacht population of the Republic Ireland 12 There are also large Irish speaking networks in southern County Londonderry and in the Gaeltacht Quarter Belfast Ulster Scots is also spoken extensively in Counties Antrim Down Londonderry Tyrone and Donegal Lough Neagh in the east is the largest lake in the British Isles while Lough Erne in the west is one of its largest lake networks The main mountain ranges are the Mournes Sperrins Croaghgorms and Derryveagh Mountains Historically Ulster lay at the heart of the Gaelic world made up of Gaelic Ireland Scotland and the Isle of Man According to tradition in ancient Ireland it was one of the fifths Irish cuige ruled by a ri ruirech or king of over kings It is named after the overkingdom of Ulaid in the east of the province which was in turn named after the Ulaid folk The other overkingdoms in Ulster were Airgialla and Ailech After the Norman invasion of Ireland in the twelfth century eastern Ulster was conquered by the Anglo Normans and became the Earldom of Ulster By the late fourteenth century the Earldom had collapsed and the O Neill dynasty had come to dominate most of Ulster claiming the title King of Ulster Ulster became the most thoroughly Gaelic and independent of Ireland s provinces Its rulers resisted English encroachment but were defeated in the Nine Years War 1594 1603 King James I then colonised Ulster with English speaking Protestant settlers from Great Britain in the Plantation of Ulster This led to the founding of many of Ulster s towns The inflow of Protestant settlers and migrants also led to bouts of sectarian violence with Catholics notably during the 1641 rebellion and the Armagh disturbances Along with the rest of Ireland Ulster became part of the United Kingdom in 1801 In the early twentieth century moves towards Irish self rule were opposed by many Ulster Protestants sparking the Home Rule Crisis In the last all Ireland election 1918 Irish general election counties Donegal and Monaghan returned large Sinn Fein nationalist majorities Sinn Fein candidates ran unopposed in Cavan Fermanagh and Tyrone had Sinn Fein Nationalist Party Irish Parliamentary Party majorities The other four Counties of Ulster had Unionist Party majorities 13 The home rule crisis and the subsequent Irish War of Independence led to the partition of Ireland under the Government of Ireland Act 1920 Six Ulster counties became Northern Ireland a self governing territory within the United Kingdom while the rest of Ireland became the Irish Free State now the Republic of Ireland The term Ulster has no official function for local government purposes in either state However for the purposes of ISO 3166 2 IE Ulster is used to refer to the three counties of Cavan Donegal and Monaghan only which are given country sub division code IE U 14 The name is also used by various organisations such as cultural and sporting bodies Contents 1 Terminology 2 Geography and political sub divisions 2 1 County based sub divisions 2 2 Council based sub divisions 2 3 Largest settlements 3 Economy 4 Physical geography 5 Transport 5 1 Air 5 2 Rail 6 Languages and dialects 7 History 7 1 Early history 7 2 Plantations and civil wars 7 3 Emigration 7 4 Republicanism rebellion and communal strife 7 5 Industrialisation Home Rule and partition 7 6 1920 to present 8 People 9 Sport 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksTerminology editUlster s name ultimately derives from the Ulaidh a group of tribes that once dwelt in this part of Ireland The Norsemen knew the province as Ulaztir the tir or land a word borrowed from Irish of the Ulaidh 15 this was then taken into English as Ullister or Ulvester and later contracted to Ulster 16 Another less probable explanation is that the suffix ster represents the Old Norse element stadr place found in names like Lybster and Scrabster in Scotland 15 Ulster is still known as Cuige Uladh in Irish meaning the province literally fifth of the Ulaidh Ulaidh has historically been anglicised as Ulagh or Ullagh 17 and Latinised as Ulidia or Ultonia 18 The latter two have yielded the terms Ulidian and Ultonian The Irish word for someone or something from Ulster is Ultach and this can be found in the surnames MacNulty MacAnulty and Nulty which all derive from Mac an Ultaigh meaning son of the Ulsterman 19 Northern Ireland is often referred to as Ulster 20 despite including only six of Ulster s nine counties This usage is most common among people in Northern Ireland who are unionist 21 although it is also used by the media throughout the United Kingdom 22 23 Most Irish nationalists object to the use of Ulster in this context 21 Geography and political sub divisions edit nbsp Ulster coloured showing Northern Ireland in pink and the Republic of Ireland part in greenUlster has a population of just over two million people and an area of 22 067 square kilometres 8 520 sq mi About 62 of the area of Ulster is in the UK while the remaining 38 is in the Republic of Ireland Ulster s biggest city Belfast has an urban population of over half a million inhabitants making it the second largest city on the island of Ireland and the 10th largest urban area in the UK Six of Ulster s nine counties Antrim Armagh Down Fermanagh Londonderry and Tyrone including the former parliamentary boroughs of Belfast and Londonderry form Northern Ireland which remained part of the United Kingdom after the partition of Ireland in 1921 Three Ulster counties Cavan Donegal and Monaghan form part of the Republic of Ireland About half of Ulster s population lives in counties Antrim and Down Across the nine counties according to the aggregate UK 2011 Census for Northern Ireland and the ROI 2011 Census for counties Cavan Donegal and Monaghan there is a Roman Catholic majority over Protestant of 50 8 to 42 7 24 While the traditional counties continue to demarcate areas of local government in the Republic of Ireland this is no longer the case in Northern Ireland Since 1974 the traditional counties have a ceremonial role only Local government in Northern Ireland is today demarcated by 11 districts County based sub divisions edit County Population AreaCounty Antrim Contae Aontroma Coontie Anthrim Antrim Antrim Entrim 618 108 3 088 km2 1 192 sq mi County Armagh Contae Ard Mhacha Coontie Airmagh Armagh 174 792 1 327 km2 512 sq mi County Cavan Contae an Chabhain 81 201 1 932 km2 746 sq mi County Donegal Contae Dhun na nGall Thir Chonaill Coontie Dunnygal Dinnygal 166 321 4 861 km2 1 877 sq mi County Down Contae an Duin Coontie Doon Doun 531 665 2 489 km2 961 sq mi County Fermanagh Contae Fhear Manach Coontie Fermanagh Fermanay 61 170 1 691 km2 653 sq mi County Londonderry Contae Dhoire Coontie Loonenderrie 247 132 2 118 km2 818 sq mi County Monaghan Contae Mhuineachain 64 832 1 295 km2 500 sq mi County Tyrone Contae Thir Eoghain Coontie Tyrone Owenslann 177 986 3 266 km2 1 261 sq mi Total 2 123 207 22 067 km2 8 520 sq mi Counties shaded in grey are in the Republic of Ireland Counties shaded in pink are in Northern Ireland Council based sub divisions edit District CouncilCounty Cavan Cavan County CouncilCounty Donegal Donegal County CouncilCounty Monaghan Monaghan County CouncilFermanagh and Omagh Fermanagh and Omagh District CouncilDerry and Strabane Derry and Strabane District CouncilMid Ulster Mid Ulster District CouncilCauseway Coast and Glens Causeway Coast and Glens District CouncilMid and East Antrim Mid and East Antrim District CouncilAntrim and Newtownabbey Antrim and Newtownabbey Borough CouncilArds and North Down Ards and North Down Borough CouncilArmagh Banbridge and Craigavon Armagh Banbridge and Craigavon District CouncilLisburn and Castlereagh Lisburn and Castlereagh City CouncilNewry Mourne and Down Newry Mourne and Down District CouncilBelfast Belfast City CouncilLargest settlements edit Settlements in Ulster with at least 14 000 inhabitants listed in order of population Belfast 480 000 Derry 105 000 Lisburn 75 000 Craigavon 65 000 Bangor 58 400 Ballymena 28 700 Newtownards 27 800 Newry 27 400 Carrickfergus 27 200 Coleraine 25 000 Antrim 20 000 Omagh 19 800 Letterkenny 19 600 Larne 18 200 Banbridge 14 700 Armagh 14 500 Economy editThe GDP of the province of Ulster is around 50 billion Salary levels are the lowest on the island of Ireland Area Population Country Largest settlement GDP GDP per person Greater Belfast 720 000 NI Belfast 20 9 bn 33 550Border Region includes two non Ulster counties 430 000 roughly half in Ulster ROI Letterkenny 10 7 bn 21 100East of Northern Ireland 430 000 NI Ballymena 9 5 bn 20 300North of Northern Ireland 280 000 NI Derry 5 5 bn 18 400West and South of Northern Ireland 400 000 NI Newry 8 4 bn 19 300 25 Physical geography editThe biggest lake in the British Isles Lough Neagh lies in eastern Ulster The province s highest point Slieve Donard 848 metres 2 782 ft stands in County Down The most northerly point in Ireland Malin Head is in County Donegal as are the sixth highest 601 metres 1 972 ft sea cliffs in Europe at Slieve League and the province s largest island Arranmore The most easterly point in Ireland is also in Ulster in County Down and the most westerly point in the UK is in County Fermanagh The longest river in the British Isles the Shannon rises at the Shannon Pot in County Cavan with underground tributaries from County Fermanagh Volcanic activity in eastern Ulster led to the formation of the Antrim Plateau and the Giant s Causeway one of Ireland s three UNESCO World Heritage Sites Ulster also has a significant drumlin belt The geographical centre of Ulster lies between the villages of Pomeroy and Carrickmore in County Tyrone In terms of area County Donegal is the largest county in all of Ulster nbsp At White Park Bay nbsp Countryside west of Ballynahinch nbsp Mourne country cottage nbsp The track of the County Donegal Railways Joint Committee CDRJC restored next to Lough Finn near Fintown station nbsp The approach of autumn Tardree forestTransport editAir edit The province s main airport is Belfast International Airport popularly called Aldergrove Airport which is located at Aldergrove 11 5 miles northwest of Belfast near Antrim George Best Belfast City Airport sometimes referred to as the City Airport or the Harbour Airport is another smaller airport which is located at Sydenham in Belfast The City of Derry Airport is located at Eglinton 13 kilometres 8 mi east of the city of Derry There is also Donegal Airport Irish Aerfort Dhun na nGall popularly known as Carrickfinn Airport which is located in The Rosses Rail edit Railway lines are run by Northern Ireland Railways NIR Belfast to Bangor and Belfast to Lisburn are strategically the most important routes on the network with the greatest number of passengers and largest profit margins The Belfast Derry railway line connecting Londonderry railway station via Coleraine Ballymoney Ballymena and Antrim with Lanyon Place and Belfast Great Victoria Street is a noted scenic route Belfast is also connected with Carrickfergus and Larne Harbour Portadown Newry and onwards via the Enterprise service jointly operated by NIR and Iarnrod Eireann to Dublin Connolly The main railway lines linking to and from Belfast Great Victoria Street and Belfast Central are The Derry Line and the Portrush Branch The Larne Line The Bangor Line The Portadown LineOnly five Irish counties all in Southern and Western Ulster currently have no mainline railway The historic Great Northern Railway of Ireland connected them They are Cavan Monaghan Fermanagh Tyrone and Donegal A plan to re link Sligo and Derry through Donegal has been postponed until at least 2030 26 Languages and dialects editMain articles Ulster English Ulster Irish Hiberno English and Ulster Scots dialects Most people in Ulster speak English English is taught in all schools in the province Irish Gaeilge is taught in all schools in the counties that are part of the Republic and in schools in Northern Ireland almost exclusively in the Roman Catholic and Irish medium sectors In responses to the 2001 census in Northern Ireland 10 of the population had some knowledge of Irish 27 and 4 7 could speak read write and understand Irish 27 Large parts of County Donegal are Gaeltacht areas where Irish is the first language and some people in west Belfast also speak Irish especially in the Gaeltacht Quarter 28 The dialect of Irish most commonly spoken in Ulster especially throughout Northern Ireland and County Donegal is Gaeilge Thir Chonaill or Donegal Irish also known as Gaeilge Uladh or Ulster Irish Donegal Irish has many similarities to Scottish Gaelic Polish is the third most common language Ulster Scots dialects sometimes known by the neologism Ullans are also spoken in Counties Down Antrim Londonderry and Donegal 29 History editEarly history edit Further information History of Ireland This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ulster is one of the four Irish provinces Its name derives from the Irish language Cuige Uladh pronounced ˌkuːɟe ˈʊlˠe meaning fifth of the Ulaidh named for the ancient inhabitants of the region The province s early story extends further back than written records and survives mainly in legends such as the Ulster Cycle The archaeology of Ulster formerly called Ulandia gives examples of ritual enclosures such as the Giant s Ring near Belfast which is an earth bank about 590 feet 180 m in diameter and 15 feet 4 5 m high in the centre of which there is a dolmen 30 The Boyne and its tributary the Blackwater were the traditional southern boundary of the province of Ulster and appear as such in the Tain Bo Cuailnge According to historian Francis John Byrne the Ulaid possibly still ruled directly in Louth as far as the Boyne in the early seventh century 31 when Congal Caech made a bid for the kingship of Tara In 637 the Battle of Moira known archaically as the Battle of Magh Rath was fought by the Gaelic High King of Ireland Domhnall II against his foster son King Congal Caech of Ulster supported by his ally Domhnall the Freckled Domhnall Brecc of Dalriada The battle was fought near the Woods of Killultagh just outside the village of Moira in what would become County Down It was allegedly the largest battle ever fought on the island of Ireland and resulted in the death of Congal and the retreat of Domhnall Brecc In early medieval Ireland a branch of the Northern Ui Neill the Cenel nEogain of the province of Ailech gradually eroded the territory of the province of Ulaidh until it lay east of the River Bann The Cenel nEogain would make Tir Eoghain most of which forms modern County Tyrone their base Among the High Kings of Ireland were Aed Findliath died 879 Niall Glundub died 919 and Domnall ua Neill died 980 all of the Cenel nEogain The province of Ulaidh would survive restricted to the east of modern Ulster until the Norman invasion in the late 12th century It would only once more become a province of Ireland in the mid 14th century after the collapse of the Norman Earldom of Ulster when the O Neills who had come to dominate the Northern Ui Neill stepped into the power vacuum and staked a claim for the first time the title of king of Ulster along with the Red Hand of Ulster symbol It was then that the provinces of Ailech Airgialla and Ulaidh would all merge largely into what would become the modern province of Ulster nbsp A bronze statue commemorating The Flight of the Earls at Rathmullan in north County Donegal Domnall Ua Lochlainn died 1121 and Muirchertach Mac Lochlainn died 1166 were of this dynasty The Meic Lochlainn were in 1241 overthrown by their kin the clan o Neill see O Neill dynasty The o Neill s were from then on established as Ulster s most powerful Gaelic family The o Domhnaill O Donnell dynasty were Ulster s second most powerful clan from the early thirteenth century through to the beginning of the seventeenth century The O Donnells ruled over Tir Chonaill most of modern County Donegal in West Ulster After the Norman invasion of Ireland in the twelfth century the east of the province fell by conquest to Norman barons first De Courcy died 1219 then Hugh de Lacy 1176 1243 who founded the Earldom of Ulster based on the modern counties of Antrim and Down In the 1600s Ulster was the last redoubt of the traditional Gaelic way of life and following the defeat of the Irish forces in the Nine Years War 1594 1603 at the battle of Kinsale 1601 Elizabeth I s English forces succeeded in subjugating Ulster and all of Ireland The Gaelic leaders of Ulster the O Neills and O Donnells finding their power under English suzerainty limited decamped en masse in 1607 the Flight of the Earls to Roman Catholic Europe This allowed the English Crown to plant Ulster with more loyal English and Scottish planters a process which began in earnest in 1610 Plantations and civil wars edit The Plantation of Ulster Irish Plandail Uladh was the organised colonisation or plantation of Ulster by people from Great Britain especially Presbyterians from Scotland Private plantation by wealthy landowners began in 1606 32 33 34 while the official plantation controlled by King James I of England who was also King James VI of Scots began in 1609 All land owned by Irish chieftains the o Neills and o Donnells along with those of their supporters who fought against the English Crown in the Nine Years War were confiscated and used to settle the colonists The Counties Tyrconnell Tyrone Fermanagh Cavan Coleraine and Armagh comprised the official Colony 35 However most of the counties including the most heavily colonised Counties Antrim and Down were privately colonised 32 33 34 These counties though not officially designated as subject to Plantation had suffered violent depopulation during the previous wars and proved attractive to Private Colonialists from nearby Britain The efforts to attract colonists from England and Scotland to the Ulster Plantation were considerably affected by the existence of British colonies in the Americas which served as a more attractive destination for many potential emigrants 36 The official reason for the Plantation is said to have been to pay for the costly Nine Years War 37 but this view was not shared by all in the English government of the time most notably the English Crown appointed Attorney General for Ireland in 1609 Sir John Davies A barbarous country must be first broken by a war before it will be capable of good government and when it is fully subdued and conquered if it be not well planted and governed after the conquest it will eftsoons return to the former barbarism 38 nbsp A modern Protestant mural in Belfast celebrating Oliver Cromwell and his activities The Plantation of Ulster continued well into the 18th century interrupted only by the Irish Rebellion of 1641 This Rebellion was initially led by Sir Phelim O Neill Irish Sir Feilim o Neill and was intended to overthrow British rule rapidly but quickly degenerated into attacks on colonists in which dispossessed Irish slaughtered thousands of the colonists In the ensuing wars 1641 1653 fought against the background of civil war in England Scotland and Ireland Ulster became a battleground between the Colonialists and the native Irish In 1646 an Irish army under command by Owen Roe O Neill Irish Eoghan Ruadh o Neill inflicted a defeat on a Scottish Covenanter army at Benburb in County Tyrone but the native Irish forces failed to follow up their victory and the war lapsed into stalemate The war in Ulster ended with the defeat of the native army at the Battle of Scarrifholis near Newmills on the western outskirts of Letterkenny County Donegal in 1650 as part of the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland conducted by Oliver Cromwell and the New Model Army the aim of which was to expel all native Irish to the province of Connaught 39 Forty years later in 1688 1691 the Williamite War was fought the belligerents of which were the Williamites and Jacobites The war was partly due to a dispute over who was the rightful claimant to the British Throne and thus the supreme monarch of the nascent British Empire However the war was also a part of the greater War of the Grand Alliance fought between King Louis XIV of France and his allies and a European wide coalition the Grand Alliance led by Prince William of Orange and Emperor Leopold I of the Holy Roman Empire supported by the Vatican and many other states The Grand Alliance was a cross denominational alliance designed to stop French eastward colonialist expansion under Louis XIV with whom King James II was allied The majority of Irish people were Jacobites and supported James II due to his 1687 Declaration of Indulgence or as it is also known The Declaration for the Liberty of Conscience that granted religious freedom to all denominations in England and Scotland and also due to James II s promise to the Irish Parliament of an eventual right to self determination 40 41 However James II was deposed in the Glorious Revolution and the majority of Ulster Colonialists Williamites backed William of Orange Both the Williamite and Jacobite armies were religiously mixed William of Orange s own elite forces the Dutch Blue Guards had a papal banner with them during the invasion many of them being Dutch Roman Catholics 42 At the start of the war Irish Jacobites controlled most of Ireland for James II with the exception of the Williamite strongholds at Derry and at Enniskillen in Ulster The Jacobites besieged Derry from December 1688 to July 1689 ending when a Williamite army from Britain relieved the city The Williamites based in Enniskillen defeated another Jacobite army at the battle of Newtownbutler on 28 July 1689 Thereafter Ulster remained firmly under Williamite control and William s forces completed their conquest of the rest of Ireland in the next two years The war provided Protestant loyalists with the iconic victories of the Siege of Derry the Battle of the Boyne 1 July 1690 and the Battle of Aughrim 12 July 1691 all of which the Orange Order commemorate each year The Williamites victory in this war ensured British rule in Ireland for over 200 years The Protestant Ascendancy in Ireland excluded most of Ulster s population from having any Civil power on religious grounds Roman Catholics descended from the indigenous Irish and Presbyterians mainly descended from Scottish colonists both suffered discrimination under the Penal Laws which gave full political rights only to Anglican Protestants mostly descended from English settlers In the 1690s Scottish Presbyterians became a majority in Ulster due to a large influx of them into the Province Emigration edit Considerable numbers of Ulster Scots emigrated to the North American colonies throughout the 18th century 160 000 settled in what would become the United States between 1717 and 1770 alone Disdaining or forced out of the heavily English regions on the Atlantic coast most groups of Ulster Scots settlers crossed into the western mountains where their descendants populated the Appalachian regions and the Ohio Valley Here they lived on the frontiers of America carving their own world out of the wilderness The Scots Irish soon became the dominant culture of the Appalachians from Pennsylvania to Georgia Author and US Senator Jim Webb puts forth a thesis in his book Born Fighting to suggest that the character traits he ascribes to the Scots Irish such as loyalty to kin mistrust of governmental authority and a propensity to bear arms helped shape the American identity In the United States Census 2000 4 3 million Americans claimed Scots Irish ancestry The areas where the most Americans reported themselves in the 2000 Census only as American with no further qualification e g Kentucky north central Texas and many other areas in the Southern US are largely the areas where many Scots Irish settled and are in complementary distribution with the areas which most heavily report Scots Irish ancestry According to the Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups 400 000 people in the US were of Irish birth or ancestry in 1790 when the first US Census counted 3 100 000 white Americans According to the encyclopaedia half of these Irish Americans were descended from Ulster and half from the other three provinces of Ireland 43 Republicanism rebellion and communal strife edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Most of the 18th century saw a calming of sectarian tensions in Ulster The economy of the province improved as small producers exported linen and other goods Belfast developed from a village into a bustling provincial town However this did not stop many thousands of Ulster people from emigrating to British North America in this period where they became known as Scots Irish or Scotch Irish citation needed Political tensions resurfaced albeit in a new form towards the end of the 18th century In the 1790s many Roman Catholics and Presbyterians in opposition to Anglican domination and inspired by the American and French revolutions joined in the United Irishmen movement This group founded in Belfast dedicated itself to founding a non sectarian and independent Irish republic The United Irishmen had particular strength in Belfast Antrim and Down Paradoxically however this period also saw much sectarian violence between Roman Catholics and Protestants principally members of the Church of Ireland Anglicans who practised the British state religion and had rights denied to both Presbyterians and Roman Catholics notably the Battle of the Diamond in 1795 a faction fight between the rival Defenders Roman Catholic and Peep O Day Boys Anglican which led to over 100 deaths and to the founding of the Orange Order This event and many others like it came about with the relaxation of the Penal Laws and Roman Catholics began to be allowed to purchase land and involve themselves in the linen trade activities which previously had involved many onerous restrictions Protestants including some Presbyterians who in some parts of the province had come to identify with the Roman Catholic community used violence to intimidate Roman Catholics who tried to enter the linen trade Estimates suggest that up to 7000 Roman Catholics suffered expulsion from Ulster during this violence Many of them settled in northern Connacht These refugees linguistic influence still survives in the dialects of Irish spoken in County Mayo which have many similarities to Ulster Irish not found elsewhere in Connacht Loyalist militias primarily Anglicans also used violence against the United Irishmen and against Roman Catholic and Protestant republicans throughout the province In 1798 the United Irishmen led by Henry Joy McCracken launched a rebellion in Ulster mostly supported by Presbyterians But the British authorities swiftly put down the rebellion and employed severe repression after the fighting had ended In the wake of the failure of this rebellion and following the gradual abolition of official religious discrimination after the Act of Union in 1800 Presbyterians came to identify more with the State and with their Anglican neighbours due to their civil rights now being respected by both the state and their Anglican neighbours The 1859 Ulster Revival was a major Christian revival that spread throughout Ulster Industrialisation Home Rule and partition edit nbsp Royal Avenue Belfast Photochrom print circa 1890 1900 In the 19th century Ulster had the only large scale industrialisation and became the most prosperous province on the island In the latter part of the century Belfast briefly overtook Dublin as the island s largest city Belfast became famous in this period for its huge dockyards and shipbuilding and notably for the construction of the RMS Titanic Sectarian divisions in Ulster became hardened into the political categories of unionist supporters of the Union with Britain mostly but not exclusively Protestant and nationalist advocates of repeal of the 1800 Act of Union usually though not exclusively Roman Catholic Northern Ireland s current politics originate from these late 19th century disputes over Home Rule that would have devolved some powers of government to Ireland At least a dozen large scale sectarian disturbances riots occurred in Belfast during the 19th century 44 Ulster Protestants usually opposed Home Rule fearing for their religious rights calling it Rome Rule in an autonomous Roman Catholic dominated Ireland and also not trusting politicians from the agrarian south and west to support the more industrial economy of Ulster This lack of trust however was largely unfounded as during the 19th and early 20th century important industries in the southernmost region of Cork included brewing distilling wool and like Belfast shipbuilding 45 nbsp The results of the 1918 Irish general election in which Sinn Fein and the Irish Parliamentary Party won the majority of votes on the island of Ireland shown in the color green and light green respectively with the exception being primarily in the East of the province of Ulster Thousands of unionists led by the Dublin born barrister Sir Edward Carson and James Craig signed the Ulster Covenant of 1912 pledging to resist Home Rule This movement also set up the Ulster Volunteer Force UVF In April 1914 the UVF assisted with the landing of 30 000 German rifles with 3 000 000 rounds at Larne by blockading authorities See Larne gunrunning The Curragh Incident showed it would be difficult to use the British army to enforce home rule from Dublin on Ulster s unionist minority In response Irish republicans created the Irish Volunteers part of which became the forerunner of the Irish Republican Army IRA to seek to ensure the passing of the Home Rule Bill Upon the outbreak of World War I in 1914 200 000 Irishmen both Southern and Northern of all religious sects volunteered to serve in the British Army This had the effect of interrupting the armed stand off in Ireland As the war progressed in Ireland opposition to the War grew stronger reaching its peak in 1918 when the British government proposed laws to extend conscription to all able bodied Irishmen during the Conscription Crisis In the aftermath of World War I the political party Sinn Fein Ourselves won the majority of votes in the 1918 Irish general election this political party pursued a policy of complete independent self determination for the island of Ireland as outlined in the Sinn Fein campaign Manifesto of 1918 a great deal more than the devolved government Home Rule advocated by the I P P Irish Parliamentary Party Following the Sinn Fein victory in these elections the Irish Declaration of Independence was penned and Irish republicans launched a guerrilla campaign against British rule in what became the Irish War of Independence January 1919 July 1921 The fighting in Ulster during the Irish War of Independence generally took the form of street battles between Protestants and Roman Catholics in the city of Belfast Estimates suggest that about 600 civilians died in this communal violence the majority of them 58 Roman Catholics see The Troubles 1920 1922 The IRA remained relatively quiescent in Ulster with the exception of the south Armagh area where Frank Aiken led it A lot of IRA activity also took place at this time in County Donegal and the City of Derry where one of the main Republican leaders was Peadar O Donnell Hugh O Doherty a Sinn Fein politician was elected mayor of Derry at this time In the First Dail which was elected in late 1918 Prof Eoin Mac Neill served as the Sinn Fein T D for Londonderry City 1920 to present edit Main article History of Northern Ireland See also Demographics and politics of Northern Ireland and Politics of the Republic of Ireland Partition of Ireland first mooted in 1912 was introduced with the enactment of the Government of Ireland Act 1920 which gave a form of Home rule self government to two areas Southern Ireland with its capital at Dublin and Northern Ireland consisting of six of Ulster s central and eastern counties both within a continuing United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Dissatisfaction with this led to the Irish War of Independence which formally ceased on 11 July 1921 Low level violence however continued in Ulster causing Michael Collins in the south to order a boycott of Northern products in protest at attacks on the Nationalist community there The Partition was effectively confirmed by the Anglo Irish Treaty of 6 December 1921 One of the primary stipulations of the treaty was the transformation of Ireland into a self governing British dominion called the Irish Free State which later became the sovereign Republic of Ireland but with the option of a continuation of the home rule institution of Northern Ireland still within the United Kingdom if the Northern Ireland Parliament already in existence chose to opt out of the Irish Free State All parties knew that this was certain to be the choice of the Ulster Unionists who had a majority in the parliament and immediately on the creation of the Free State they resolved to leave it Following the Anglo Irish treaty the exact border between the new dominion of the Irish Free State and the future Northern Ireland if it chose to opt out was to be decided by the Irish Boundary Commission This did not announce its findings until 1925 when the line was again drawn around six of Ulster s nine counties with no change from the partition of 1920 Electorally voting in the six Northern Ireland counties of Ulster tends to follow religious or sectarian lines noticeable religious demarcation does not exist in the South Ulster counties of Cavan and Monaghan in the Republic of Ireland County Donegal is largely a Roman Catholic county but with a large Protestant minority Generally Protestants in Donegal vote for the political party Fine Gael Family of the Irish 46 However religious sectarianism in politics has largely disappeared from the rest of the Republic of Ireland This was illustrated when Erskine H Childers a Church of Ireland member and Teachta Dala TD a member of the lower house of the National Parliament who had represented Monaghan won election as President after having served as a long term minister under Fianna Fail Taoisigh Eamon de Valera Sean Lemass and Jack Lynch The Orange Order freely organises in counties Donegal Cavan and Monaghan with several Orange parades taking place throughout County Donegal each year The only major Orange Order march in the Republic of Ireland takes place every July in the village of Rossnowlagh near Ballyshannon in the south of County Donegal As of 2017 update Northern Ireland has seven Roman Catholic members of parliament all members of Sinn Fein of a total of 18 from the whole of Northern Ireland in the British House of Commons at Westminster and the other three counties have one Protestant T D of the ten it has elected to Dail Eireann the Lower House of the Oireachtas the parliament of the Republic of Ireland At present August 2007 County Donegal sends six T D s to Dail Eireann The county is divided into two constituencies Donegal North East and Donegal South West each with three T D s County Cavan and County Monaghan form the one constituency called Cavan Monaghan which sends five T D s to the Dail one of whom is a Protestant The historic Flag of Ulster served as the basis for the Ulster Banner often referred to as the Flag of Northern Ireland which was the flag of the Government of Northern Ireland until the proroguing of the Stormont parliament in 1973 People editWilliam Sherard 1659 1728 was the first biologist in Ulster 47 48 Sport editIn Gaelic games which include Gaelic football and hurling Ulster counties play the Ulster Senior Football Championship and Ulster Senior Hurling Championship In football the main competitions in which they compete with the other Irish counties are the All Ireland Senior Football Championship and National Football League while the Ulster club champions represent the province in the All Ireland Senior Club Football Championship Hurling teams play in the All Ireland Senior Hurling Championship National Hurling League and All Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship The whole province fields a team to play the other provinces in the Railway Cup in both football and hurling Gaelic Football is by far the most popular of the GAA sports in Ulster but hurling is also played especially in Antrim Armagh Derry and Down The border has divided association football teams since 1921 49 The Irish Football Association the I F A oversees the sport in N I while the Football Association of Ireland the F A I oversees the sport in the Republic As a result separate international teams are fielded and separate championships take place Irish Football League in Northern Ireland League of Ireland in the rest of Ulster and Ireland Anomalously Derry City F C has played in the League of Ireland since 1985 due to crowd trouble at some of their Irish League matches prior to this The other major Ulster team in the League of Ireland is Finn Harps of Ballybofey County Donegal When Derry City F C and Finn Harps play against each other the game is usually referred to as a North West Derby There have been cup competitions between I F A and F A I clubs most recently the Setanta Sports Cup In Rugby union the professional rugby team representing the province and the IRFU Ulster Branch Ulster Rugby compete in the Pro14 along with teams from Wales Scotland Italy South Africa and the other Irish Provinces Leinster Munster and Connacht They also compete in Europe s main club rugby tournament the European Rugby Champions Cup which they won as the Heineken Cup back in 1999 Notable Ulster rugby players include Willy John McBride Jack Kyle and Mike Gibson The former is the most capped British and Irish Lion of all time having completed four tours with the Lions in the sixties and seventies At international level players from Ulster join with those from the other 3 provinces to form the island wide Ireland team The Ulster Hockey Union organises field hockey in the province and contributes substantially to the all island hockey team 50 Cricket is also played in Ulster especially in Northern Ireland and East Donegal 51 Ulster enters two teams into the Interprovincial Series the North Knights and the North West Warriors who are the respective representative teams of the Northern Cricket Union NCU and the North West Cricket Union NWCU Golf is however by far the most high profile sport and the sport that Ulster has succeeded at more than any other Ulster has produced many great players over the years from Fred Daly winning The Open Championship in 1947 at the Royal Liverpool Golf Club Hoylake to most recently Rory McIlroy winning the US Open and Darren Clarke winning The Open Championship in 2011 Ulster also has another Major winner in Graeme McDowell who also won the US Open in 2010 The Open Championship returned to Ulster after 68 years in 2019 at Royal Portrush Golf Club In horse racing specifically National Hunt Ulster has produced the most dominant jockey of all time Tony McCoy The Circuit of Ireland Rally is an annual automobile rally held in Ulster since 1931 See also edit nbsp Northern Ireland portal nbsp Ireland portalCulture of Ulster Kings of Ulster List of Ulster related topics Red Hand of Ulster Ulidia kingdom Ulster nationalism Ulster Scots peopleNotes edit Northern Ireland Assembly Election Results 2022 BBC BBC Retrieved 13 May 2022 Challoner Richard A Memorial of Ancient British Piety or a British Martyrology p 128 Archived 29 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine W Needham 1761 Accessed 14 March 2013 2021 Census Retrieved 5 August 2022 FP003 Preliminary Population 2022 amp FP005 Components of Population Change 2016 to 2022 23 June 2022 Retrieved 29 June 2022 Census of Ireland 2016 296 120 out of 1 521 592 total Ulster Scots Ulster Scotch Archived 25 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine NI Department for Regional Development Ulster s Hiddlin Swaatch Culture Northern Ireland Archived 22 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine Dr Clifford Smyth Guide to Monea Castle Ulster Scots version Archived 30 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine Department of the Environment North South Ministerial Council 2010 Annual Report in Ulster Scots PDF Archived from the original PDF on 27 February 2013 North South Ministerial Council 2009 Annual Report in Ulster Scots PDF Archived from the original PDF on 1 April 2014 Tourism Ireland 2008 Yearly Report in Ulster Scots Archived from the original on 30 September 2011 Results census cso ie Archived from the original on 26 May 2013 Retrieved 22 November 2019 The Irish Election of 1918 Report Northern Ireland Elections Retrieved 31 August 2022 ISO 3166 2 Newsletter II 1 19 February 2010 which gives Ulster as the official English name and Ulaidh as the official Irish name of the province citing Ordnance Survey Office Dublin 1993 as its source http www iso org iso iso 3166 2 newsletter ii 1 corrected 2010 02 19 pdf Archived 3 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine a b Sommerfelt Alf 1958 The English Forms of the Names of the Main Provinces of Ireland PDF Lochlann A Review of Celtic Studies Oslo University Press 1 223 7 Archived PDF from the original on 14 April 2021 Retrieved 8 January 2021 Ulster Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required County Down Archived 5 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland 1837 Publications 26 March 2018 Archived from the original on 9 June 2016 Retrieved 17 October 2015 via Google Books Robert Bell The book of Ulster Surnames page 180 The Blackstaff Press 2003 ISBN 0 85640 602 3 the definition of Ulster Dictionary com Archived from the original on 20 December 2007 Retrieved 17 November 2007 a b Melaugh Dr Martin CAIN Glossary of Terms on Northern Ireland Conflict cain ulst ac uk Archived from the original on 6 December 2010 Retrieved 30 May 2010 Ulster Facts information pictures Encyclopedia com articles about Ulster Archived 28 March 2020 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopedia com Retrieved on 23 July 2013 Evans Pritchard Ambrose 7 April 2009 Ireland imposes emergency cuts The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 10 April 2009 Community Background 2011 Census for NI and Religion 2011 Census for RoI Eurostat Data Explorer Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 Retrieved 6 October 2014 DERRY SLIGO TRAIN LINK RAILED OUT Derry Daily 16 September 2013 Archived from the original on 8 February 2017 Retrieved 26 August 2016 a b Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency Census 2001 Output Archived 14 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine Melaugh Dr Martin CAIN Key Issue Language Pritchard R M O 2004 Protestants and the Irish Language Historical Heritage and Current Attitudes in Northern Ireland cain ulst ac uk Archived from the original on 28 September 2012 Retrieved 22 March 2008 Gregg R J 1972 The Scotch Irish Dialect Boundaries in Ulster In Wakelin Martyn F ed Patterns in the Folk Speech of the British Isles London Athlone Press ISBN 978 0 485 11128 6 Riordain S O 1966 Antiquities of the Irish Countryside University Paperbacks reprint ed London Methuen amp Co Ltd p 113 Byrne Francis John Irish kings and high kings Batsford 1987 ISBN 0 7134 5882 8 a b Stewart A T Q 1989 The Narrow Ground The Roots of Conflict in Ulster Rev ed London Faber and Faber Ltd p 38 ISBN 978 0 571 15485 2 a b Falls Cyril 1996 The Birth of Ulster London Constable and Company Ltd pp 156 157 ISBN 978 0 09 476610 5 a b Perceval Maxwell M 1999 The Scottish Migration to Ulster in the Reign of James I Belfast Ulster Historical Foundation p 89 ISBN 978 0 901905 44 4 T A Jackson p 51 Tommy McKearney Northern Ireland From Imperial Asset to International Encumbrance in Journal of World Systems Theory vol 22 issue 1 p 110 http jwsr pitt edu ojs index php jwsr article view 636 741 Archived 22 February 2019 at the Wayback Machine Wars and Conflicts Plantation of Ulster English and Scottish Planters 1641 Rebellion Archived 26 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine BBC History Davies John 1890 Morley Henry ed A Discovery of the True Cause Why Ireland Was Never Entirely Subdued Nor Brought Under Obedience of the Crown of England Until the Beginning of His Majesty s Happy Reign London George Routledge and Sons Ltd pp 218 219 A Short History of Ireland BBC Archived from the original on 13 November 2012 Harris Tim 2006 Revolution The Great Crisis of the British Monarchy 1685 1720 London Allen Lane p 440 ISBN 978 0 7139 9759 0 Magennis Eoin 1998 A Beleaguered Protestant Walter Harris and the Writing of Fiction Unmasked in Mid 18th Century Ireland Eighteenth Century Ireland 13 6 111 doi 10 3828 eci 1998 8 JSTOR 30064327 S2CID 256129781 Rabushka Alvin 2008 Taxation in Colonial America 1607 1775 Princeton University Press p 279 ISBN 978 0 691 13345 4 Miller Randall M 30 December 2008 The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Daily Life in America 4 volumes ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 06536 1 Owen John 1921 History of Belfast Belfast W amp G Baird pgs 272 amp 422 https www scribd com doc 32717516 1919 Cork Its Trade and Commerce 7C pg 168 The Future s Bright For Donegal s Orangemen Independent News And Media 11 July 2004 Archived from the original on 17 January 2008 Retrieved 6 June 2008 Deane C D 1983 The Ulster Countryside p 81 Century Books Hackney P ed Stewart and Corry s Flora of the North east of Ireland Third edition Institute of Irish Studies The Queen s University of Belfast p 3 10 ISBN 0 85389 446 9 Football Association of Ireland www fai ie Archived from the original on 7 December 2006 Retrieved 5 January 2007 Ireland hockey Seven Ulster players in squad for Olympic qualifier against Canada BBC Sport 28 October 2019 Archived from the original on 29 October 2019 Retrieved 28 October 2019 McGarry John O Leary Brendan 8 June 1995 Explaining Northern Ireland Broken Images Wiley ISBN 9780631183495 via Google Books References editDeane C Douglas 1983 The Ulster Countryside Century Books ISBN 0 903152 17 7 Further reading editBraidwood J 1964 Ulster Dialects An Introductory Symposium Ulster Folk Museum Faulkner J and Thompson R 2011 The Natural History of Ulster National Museums of Northern Ireland Publication No 026 ISBN 0 900761 49 0 Morton O 1994 Marine Algae of Northern Ireland Ulster Museum Belfast ISBN 0 900761 28 8 Sheane Michael Ulster Blood Ilfracombe Arthur H Stockwell 2005 Stewart and Corry s Flora of the North east of Ireland Third edition Institute of Irish Studies The Queen s University of BelfastExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ulster Census 2011 Ulster Irish language stats Inconvenient Peripheries Ethnic Identity and the United Kingdom Estate PDF Archived from the original PDF on 16 June 2007 Retrieved 7 April 2007 96 8 KB The cases of Protestant Ulster and Cornwall by Professor Philip Payton Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Ulster Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press 54 24 N 7 00 W 54 4 N 7 0 W 54 4 7 0 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ulster amp oldid 1190780464, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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