1. What in terms of legislative independence would Home
Rule, if it had ever been implemented, have meant for Ireland? In other
words, how much real independence would it have given us? Would the
granting of Home Rule at any stage between 1886 and 1912 have settled
the 'Irish Question', or would it have caused even greater
trouble?
Think of the violent opposition of the British Conservative
Party to what they thought would lead to the dismemberment of the
British Empire. Think of the equally violent opposition of the
Unionists (North and South) to the threat of the destruction of their
"cherished position of equal citizenship in the United Kingdom."
2. Two short related questions: (i) 'The Easter Rising was
the first act in the War of Independence.' Discuss.
(ii) Explain the immediate reaction of the British government to the
Easter Rising.
Think of what effects the Rising had on Irish nationalists, on popular
feeling towards those executed and on future recruitment into Sinn Fein
and the IRA. Remember, 1916 was a terrible year in the Great War
(1914-1918) for Britain. Despite her attempts to bring the USA into the
war (with the sinking of the Lusitania, Feb. 1915), she was unsure of
ultimate victory and was losing thousands of men every single day in
trench warfare on the Western Front. If you were in the British War
Office in 1916, how would you have reacted to the 1916 Rising?
Oh! What a Lovely War (1969): http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0064754/
Copyright ©2008 Aidan Breen, Ph.D.