, an early exponent of
philosophical anarchism in his work
A Vindication of Natural Society One of the earliest examples of anarchism in Ireland was in the early work of the Anglo-Irish political philosopher
Edmund Burke.
A Vindication of Natural Society, though intended as a satire of
Henry St John's
deism, elaborated one of the first literary expressions of
philosophical anarchism, which inspired the works of the English radical
William Godwin and was later praised by the American individualist anarchist
Benjamin Tucker. Some
libertarian scholars have insisted that Burke was initially sincere in his anarchist views, but later disowned them in order to advance his political career, although this characterisation has since been disputed.
Socialism Following the events surrounding the
Paris Commune, efforts were made to establish branches of the
International Workingmen's Association (IWA) in Ireland, led by
Joseph Patrick McDonnell, the Irish representative on the IWA's General Council. In February 1872, a branch of the IWA was established in Dublin by Richard McKeon, but its activities quickly came under attack by
anti-communist mobs, which forced its premature closure on 7 April of the same year. A
Cork branch had also been established in February, to more success, gaining 300 members within weeks. When an anti-communist meeting was called by city officials on 24 March, a hundred internationalist workers wearing green neckties disrupted the meeting, themselves taking control of the stage after several hours of conflict with its organisers. But like the Dublin branch, the Cork branch was itself driven out of the city amid a "red scare" driven by the local clergy. There were other short-lived branches in
Cootehill and
Belfast, which were likewise suppressed. , depicting a landlord begging for rent. Socialists were not able to establish their own organisations again until the 1880s, in the context of the greater socialist revival happening around the
United Kingdom. One early mention of an Irish connection to
anarchism was the
Boston-based
Irish nationalist W.G.H. Smart, who wrote articles for
The An-archist in 1880 and 1881. By this time, members of the
Irish Home Rule movement led by
Charles Stewart Parnell established the
Irish National Land League, which spearheaded a period of agrarian agitation for land rights known as the
Land War. The implementation of the
Coercion Act to suppress the movement triggered the formation of the
Social Democratic Federation (SDF), which quickly developed into the first nation-wide socialist organisation in the United Kingdom. By December 1884, attempts were being made to form an Irish branch of the SDF by a local socialist club in Dublin, which on 18 January 1885 established the Dublin Democratic Association (DDA) "to promote and defend the rights of labour, and to restore the land to the people," although this did not affiliate with the SDF due to worries that it would alienate Catholic members of the
Irish National League. Only about one quarter of the DDA's members were actually socialists, the rest being a mix of various different radical tendencies, the largest of which were nationalist Land Leaguers. Largely the organisation focused on promoting "the advancement of democratic principles", but after a foreign Marxist was invited to speak at the club, nationalist members protested, causing a split in the DDA that resulted in its disbandment by May 1885. , a
libertarian socialist organisation that had a branch in Dublin from 1885 to 1887. By this time there had been a split within the SDF, in which
libertarian socialists led by
William Morris and
Andreas Scheu broke from
Henry Hyndman's parliamentarian faction, establishing the
Socialist League with the intention of fomenting a
social revolution. From its outset the League lent its support to the Home Rule movement, with its secretary
John Lincoln Mahon setting into motion efforts to recruit Irish members to the League. By June 1885, the League's Michael Gabriel, an
English anarchist, had moved to the
North Strand in Dublin, where he distributed the League's newspaper
Commonweal. Despite a sense of pessimism regarding the prospects of propagating socialism in Ireland, in December 1885, Gabriel was able to establish a branch of the Socialist League in Dublin, drawing its membership from a number of former members of the DDA and even a couple former members of the IWA. The anti-parliamentarism and atheism proclaimed by the League quickly made the rounds at the local socialist club, in spite of the impediment provided by the prevailing religious orthodoxy in Ireland. The Dublin League remained a small organisation throughout its existence, with few more than 20 members, but still managed to successfully propagate socialism for the first time in Ireland. At the first meeting of the Dublin branch, which attracted 60 people, the young Irish anarchist Thomas Fitzpatrick railed against Irish nationalism in favour of
internationalism, arguing against Home Rule but without providing a socialist alternative (one which would only later be provided by
James Connolly). The Irish Socialist League's opposition to Home Rule came largely from its anarchist rejection of parliamentarism, with Gabriel arguing that "the power of one man to govern another should be swept away under the socialist system." Unlike its predecessors, the activities and meetings of the Socialist League were able to continue largely unmolested until April 1886, organising among local bottlemakers during a
lockout and inviting William Morris to give lectures in the city. But with the defeat of the
First Home Rule Bill, the organisation's capacities began to wane as political agitation in Ireland started to focus almost exclusively on the issue of Home Rule. By October 1886, the Dublin League had come into conflict with the London-based Central Council over the earlier expulsion of Charles Reuss, with the anarchist-leaning Dublin branch supporting Reuss in line with
The Anarchist newspaper. The branch quickly resolved the dispute within a month, but members had already become discouraged by the conflict, and the Dublin League collapsed in March 1887. Nevertheless, former members of the League continued their socialist agitation for years to come, with the Socialist League being quickly succeeded by the National Labour League (NLL). The NLL mobilised the unemployed to demonstrate in the streets and proclaimed a distinctly
revolutionary socialist outlook, calling for the
common ownership of land and for Irish workers to rise up against capitalism. By the turn of the 1890s,
new unionism was introduced to Ireland by the Irish Socialist Union, laying the foundations for the rise of
syndicalism. Irish writer
Oscar Wilde notably expressed anarchist sympathies, especially in his essay
The Soul of Man under Socialism. , an Irish doctor that led the anarchist movement in
Sheffield, before moving to Argentina. Around 1890
John Creaghe, an Irish doctor who was joint founder (with Fred Charles), of
The Sheffield Anarchist, took part in the "no rent"
agitation before leaving
Sheffield in 1891. He went on to become the founding editor in Argentina of the anarchist paper,
El Oprimido, which was one of the first to support the "organisers" current (as opposed to refusal to organise large scale organisations). In 1892 English anarchists visited Fred Allen at the Dublin independent offices to see if his Fair Trial Fund could be used for anarchist as well as
Irish Republican Brotherhood prisoners. In 1894 at
Trinity College Dublin's Fabian Society "over 200 students listened sympathetically" to a lecture on "Anarchism and Darwinism".
Syndicalism , leading figure in the Irish
syndicalist movement and commander of the
Irish Citizen Army during the
Easter Rising. In 1896, the Irish syndicalist
James Connolly moved to
Dublin, where he founded the
Irish Socialist Republican Party (ISRP) with the aim of establishing an
Irish workers' republic, but left the party in 1903 following an internal conflict with
E. W. Stewart regarding trade unionism and electoralism. Connolly subsequently led the Scottish left-wing faction of the
Social Democratic Federation to split off and form the
Socialist Labour Party (SLP), a
De Leonist political party that advocated for
industrial unionism. He then moved to the United States, where he collaborated with fellow syndicalists in the
American SLP and the
Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), before returning to Ireland in 1908. Another Irish syndicalist that moved to Dublin at this time was
James Larkin, a trade union activist of the
Liverpool-based
National Union of Dock Labourers (NUDL) that had been expelled for participated in
wildcat strike actions. Connolly and Larkin together collaborated in the foundation of the
Irish Transport and General Workers' Union (ITGWU), a trade union with
syndicalist tendencies which the two hoped would eventually form the nucleus of "
One Big Union" in Ireland. Connolly's view of syndicalism held that "the political, territorial state of capitalist society will have no place or function under Socialism", thus he rejected the use of state bureaucracy in the transition to socialism, instead considering that
industrial unions would
provide the framework for a future socialist society. Connolly also viewed electoral participation as a "political weapon" for industrial unionists, although he rejected the conquest of state power as a goal, believing that any
social revolution must immediately abolish the
state. This position led Connolly and Larkin to establish the
Labour Party as the political wing of the
Irish Trades Union Congress (ITUC), of which the ITGWU was an affiliate. A series of industrial disputes led by the ITGWU eventually escalated into the
Dublin lock-out of 1913. During the lockout, Connolly and Larkin came together with
Jack White to establish the
Irish Citizen Army (ICA), a workers' militia set up to protect striking workers from the
police. Following the suppression of the strike movement, Larkin fled to the United States, where he became involved in the activities of the IWW and later gravitated towards
Bolshevism. Meanwhile, with the outbreak of
World War I, a section of the ICA around Connolly began to plan for an armed uprising against
British rule with the aim of establishing an independent Irish Republic. Connolly's take on republicanism rejected
nationalism, which he believed would simply lead to Irish workers being oppressed by an Irish capitalist state. Connolly insisted on the necessity for Irish independence to come about through a socialist revolution in which workers would seize the
means of production, stating that "only the Irish working class remain as the incorruptible inheritors of the fight for freedom in Ireland." But by 1916, Connolly had shelved his anti-nationalist criticisms and socialist ambitions, leading the ICA into an alliance with Irish nationalists. During the
Easter Rising, republican forces including the ICA seized a number of strategically important buildings around Dublin and a
Provisional Government including Connolly
proclaimed the formation of an Irish Republic, before its suppression by British forces and the unconditional surrender of the rebels. Connolly and the other rebel leaders were executed in the weeks following. In his analysis of the Rising,
The Only Hope of Ireland, the Russian anarcho-communist
Alexander Berkman declared that it had failed because of its nationalist character and lack of socialist program: of the
CNT-
FAI, an
anarcho-syndicalist organisation which the Irish anarchist
Jack White supported during the
Spanish Civil War. Following the
Irish War of Independence, Jack White had found himself politically isolated from the main camps of the new
Irish Free State, gravitating towards
anti-parliamentary communism and briefly joining
Sylvia Pankhurst's
Workers Socialist Federation. In 1934, a number of communist members of the
Irish Republican Army came together with other left-wing figures to establish the
Republican Congress, which White joined, organising a branch in Dublin with other former
British Army serviceman. The Congress soon experienced a split between socialists in favour of establishing a workers' republic and communists that advocated a temporary alliance with
Fianna Fáil, with the socialists breaking off and many joining the Labour Party, while White himself remained in the organisation. When the
Spanish Civil War broke out, the Congress organised support for the
Republicans and established the
Connolly Column, with White joining it to fight against the
Nationalists. Upon arriving in Spain, White was immediately impressed by the
revolutionary gains, particularly the collectivisation projects and the organisation of the
confederal militias advanced by the
anarchists. While fighting on the Aragon front, White trained militiamen and women how to use firearms, while also becoming increasingly disillusioned with the influence of the Communist Party over the Irish internationalists, gravitating closer towards anarchism. White began to clash with Irish
Marxist-Leninists like
Frank Ryan, enough so that he relinquished command in the
International Brigades and joined the anarcho-syndicalist
National Confederation of Labor (CNT). Back in
London he worked with
Emma Goldman and the
Freedom newspaper to organise support for the Spanish anarchists, but following the Nationalist victory in the civil war and the subsequent Allied victory in
World War II, White died in 1946, leaving behind a number of papers that his family destroyed out of shame. Later developments in Irish syndicalism included the establishment of the
Congress of Irish Unions after a split in the ITUC, their subsequent merger into the
Irish Congress of Trade Unions and eventually the merger of the ITGWU and Larkin's
Workers' Union into the
Services, Industrial, Professional and Technical Union (SIPTU), which continues its activities to this day as Ireland's largest trade union. == Modern development ==