Boundary commission The day after the establishment of the
Irish Free State, the Houses of the
Parliament of Northern Ireland resolved to make an address to the King so as to opt out of the Irish Free State Immediately afterwards, the need to settle an agreed border between the Irish Free State and Northern Ireland arose. In response to this issue
a commission was set up involving representatives from the
Government of the Irish Free State, the
Government of Northern Ireland, and the
Government of the United Kingdom which would chair the Commission. Ultimately and after some controversy, the present border was fixed, not by the Commission but by agreement between the United Kingdom (including Northern Ireland) and the Irish Free State.
Anglo-Irish Trade War A further dispute arose in 1930 over the issue of the Irish government's refusal to reimburse the United Kingdom with "land annuities". These annuities were derived from government financed
soft loans given to Irish tenant farmers before independence to allow them to buy out their farms from landlords (see
Irish Land Acts). These loans were intended to redress
the issue of landownership in Ireland arising from the wars of the 17th century. The refusal of the Irish government to pass on monies it collected from these loans to the British government led to a retaliatory and escalating
trade war between the two states from 1932 until 1938, a period known as the
Anglo-Irish Trade War or the Economic War. While the UK was less affected by the Economic War, the Irish economy was virtually crippled by the resulting
capital flight. Unemployment was extremely high and the effects of the
Great Depression compounded the difficulties. The government urged people to support the confrontation with the UK as a national hardship to be shared by every citizen. Pressures, especially from agricultural producers in Ireland and exporters in the UK, led to an agreement between the two governments in 1938 resolving the dispute. Many
infant industries were established during this "economic war". Almost complete import substitution was achieved in many sectors behind a
protective tariff barrier. These industries proved valuable during the war years as they reduced the need for imports. Under the terms of resulting
Anglo-Irish Trade Agreement, all duties imposed during the previous five years were lifted but Ireland was still entitled to impose tariffs on British imports to protect new Irish "infant" industries. Ireland was to pay a one-off £10 million sum to the United Kingdom (as opposed to annual repayments of £250,000 over 47 more years). Arguably the most significant outcome, however, was the return of so-called "
Treaty Ports", three ports in Ireland maintained by the UK as
sovereign bases under the terms of the
Anglo-Irish Treaty. The handover of these ports made it harder for Britain to ensure the safety of the
Atlantic Conveys.
Articles 2 and 3 and the name Ireland Ireland adopted
a new constitution in 1937. This declared Ireland to be a sovereign, independent state, but did not explicitly declare Ireland to be a republic. However, it did change the name of the state from
Irish Free State to
Ireland (or in the Irish language). It also contained
irredentist claims on Northern Ireland, stating that the "national territory [of the Irish state] consists of the whole island of Ireland" (Article 2). This was measured in some way by Article 3, which stated that, "Pending the re-integration of the national territory ... the laws enacted by the parliament [of Ireland] shall have the like area and extent of application as the laws of Saorstat Éireann" ( is the Irish language name of the
Irish Free State). The United Kingdom initially accepted the change in the name to
Ireland. However, it subsequently changed its practice and passed legislation providing that the Irish state could be called
Eire (notably without a ) in British law. For some time, the United Kingdom was supported by some other
Commonwealth countries. However, by the mid-1960s,
Ireland was the accepted diplomatic name of the Irish state. As a consequence of the
Northern Ireland peace process, Articles 2 and 3 were changed in 1999 formalising shared Irish and British citizenship in Northern Ireland, removing the irredentist claim and making provisions for common "[institutions] with executive powers and functions ... in respect of all or any part of the island."
Abdication crisis and the Republic of Ireland Act and his three brothers The Irish Free State had been governed, at least until 1936, under a form of constitutional monarchy linked to the United Kingdom. The King had a number of symbolically important duties, including exercising the
executive authority of the state, appointing the cabinet and promulgating the law. However, when
Edward VIII proposed to marry
Wallis Simpson, an American
socialite and
divorcée, in 1936, it caused a
constitutional crisis across the
British Empire. In the chaos that ensued his abdication, the Irish Free State took the opportunity to amend its constitution and remove all of the functions of the King except one: that of representing the state abroad. In 1937,
a new constitution was adopted which entrenched the monarch's diminished role by transferring many of the functions performed by the King until 1936 to a new office of the
President of Ireland, who was declared to "take precedence over all other persons in the State". However, the 1937 constitution did not explicitly declare that the state was a republic, nor that the President was head of state. Without explicit mention, the King continued to retain his role in external relations and the Irish Free State continued to be regarded as a member of the
British Commonwealth and to be associated with the United Kingdom. During the period from December 1936 to April 1949, it was unclear whether or not the Irish state was a
republic or a form of
constitutional monarchy and (from 1937) whether its
head of state was the
President of Ireland (
Douglas Hyde until 1945, and
Seán T. O'Kelly afterwards) or the
King of Ireland (
George VI). The exact constitutional status of the state during this period has been a matter of scholarly and political dispute. The state's ambiguous status ended in 1949, when the
Republic of Ireland Act stripped the King of his role in external relations and declared that the state may be described as the
Republic of Ireland. The decision to do so was sudden and unilateral. However, it did not result in greatly strained relations between Ireland and the United Kingdom. The question of the head of the Irish state from 1936 to 1949 was largely a matter of symbolism and had little practical significance. The UK response was to legislate that it would not grant Northern Ireland to the Irish state without the consent of the
Parliament of Northern Ireland (which was unlikely to happen in
unionist-majority Northern Ireland). One practical implication of explicitly declaring the state to be a republic in 1949 was that it automatically terminated the state's membership of the
British Commonwealth, in accordance with the rules in operation at the time. However, despite this, the United Kingdom legislated that Irish citizens would retain similar rights to Commonwealth subjects and were not to be regarded as foreigners. The Republic of Ireland Act came into force on 18 April 1949. Ten days later, 28 April 1949, the rules of the Commonwealth of Nations were changed through the
London Declaration so that, when India declared itself a republic, it would not have to leave. The prospect of Ireland rejoining the Commonwealth, even today, is still occasionally raised but has never been formally considered by the Irish government.
Toponyms A minor, though recurring, source of antagonism between Britain and Ireland is the name of the archipelago in which they both are located. Known as the
British Isles in Britain, this name is opposed by most in Ireland and its use is objected to by the Irish Government. A spokesman for the Irish Embassy in London recently said, "The British Isles has a dated ring to it, as if we are still part of the Empire. We are independent, we are not part of Britain, not even in geographical terms. We would discourage its usage .". No consensus on another name for the islands exists. In practice, the two Governments and the shared institutions of the archipelago avoid use of the term, frequently using the more appropriate term
these islands in place of any term.
The Troubles Political violence broke out in Northern Ireland in 1968 following clashes over a
civil rights campaign. The civil rights campaign demanding an end to institutionalised discrimination against
nationalists by the
unionist Government of Northern Ireland. As the violence escalated,
rioting and attacks by nationalist and unionist groups began to de-stabilise the province and required the presence of
British troops on the ground. In the wake of the riots, the
Republic of Ireland expressed its concern about the situation. In a televised broadcast,
Taoiseach Jack Lynch stated that the Irish Government could "no longer stand by" while hundreds of people were being injured. This was interpreted as a threat of military intervention. Angry crowds burned down the
British Embassy in Dublin in protest at the shooting by British troops of 13 civilians in Derry, Northern Ireland on
Bloody Sunday (1972) and in 1981 protesters tried to storm the British Embassy in response to the IRA
hunger strikes of that year. In 1978, the
European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) trial
Ireland v. the United Kingdom ruled that the techniques used in interrogating prisoners in Northern Ireland "amounted to a practice of
inhuman and degrading treatment", in breach of the
European Convention on Human Rights. Throughout the conflict, the Republic of Ireland was primarily crucial for the
IRA campaign against British troops and
loyalist paramilitaries. Irish historian Gearóid Ó Faoleán wrote for
The Irish Times that "[t]hroughout the country,
republicans were as much a part of their communities as any others. Many were involved in the
GAA or other local organisations and their neighbours could, to paraphrase [Irish writer Tim Pat Coogan|Tim Pat] Coogan, quietly and approvingly mutter about the 'boys' – and then go off without a qualm the next day to vote for a political party aggressively opposed to the IRA."
Shannon Airport and
Cork and
Cobh harbours were used extensively by the
IRA for arms importation overseas during the early 1970s aided by sympathetic workers on-site. Most IRA training camps were located in the republic, as did safe houses and arms factories. The vast majority of the finances used in the IRA campaign came from criminal and legitimate activities in the Republic of Ireland rather than overseas sources. Large numbers of
improvised explosive devices and
firearms were manufactured by IRA members and supporters in Southern Ireland and then transported into Northern Ireland and England for use against targets in these regions. For example, one IRA arms factory near Stannaway Road, Dublin, was producing six firearms a day in 1973. An arms factory in the County Dublin village of
Donabate in 1975 was described as "a centre for the manufacture of grenades, rockets and mortars."
Gelignite stolen from quarries, farms and construction sites in the Republic was behind the 48,000lbs of explosives detonated in Northern Ireland in the first six months of 1973 alone. IRA training ranged from basic small arms and explosives manufacturing to heavy machine guns, overseen by Southern Irish citizens, including a former member of the
Irish Defence Forces. Thousands of Irish citizens in the Republic joined the IRA throughout the conflict; for example, the
assassination of Louis Mountbatten in August 1979 was carried out by IRA member
Thomas McMahon from
Monaghan. An attempt by the two governments to resolve the conflict in Northern Ireland politically in 1972 through the
Sunningdale Agreement failed due to opposition by hard-line factions in Northern Ireland. With no resolution to the conflict in sight, the Irish government established the
New Ireland Forum in 1984 to look into solutions. While the British
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Margaret Thatcher rejected the forum's proposals, it informed the British government's opinion and it is said to have given the Irish Taoiseach
Garret FitzGerald a
mandate during the negotiation of the 1985
Anglo-Irish Agreement, which was directed at resolving the conflict. The 1992
Downing Street Declaration further consolidated the views of the two Governments and the 1998
Good Friday Agreement eventually formed the basis for peace in the province. The Irish Department of Foreign Affairs established a "Reconciliation Fund" in 1982 to support organisations whose work tends to improve cross-community or North–South relations. Since 2006, the
Minister for Foreign Affairs has hosted an annual "Reconciliation Networking Forum" (sometimes called the "Reconciliation Forum"; not to be confused with the
Forum for Peace and Reconciliation) in Dublin to which such groups are invited.
Brexit There is
a controversy about the impact that
Britain's withdrawal from the European Union will have at the end of the transition period on the
border between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland, in particular the impact it may have on the economy and people of the island were customs or immigration checks to be put in place at the border. It was prioritized as one of the three most important areas to resolve in order to reach the
Agreement on the withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union. The people of the UK voted to leave the European Union in a non-binding
referendum on 23 June 2016, an act which would effectively make the Republic of Ireland-Northern Ireland border an
external EU border. Due to the lack of supporting legislation, all referendums in the UK are not legally binding, which was confirmed by a Supreme Court judge in November 2016. Nevertheless, the UK government chose to proceed with the departure from the European Union. All parties have stated that they want to avoid a hard border in Ireland particularly due to the sensitive nature of the border. The border issue is concerned by a protocol related to the withdrawal agreement, known as the
Protocol on Ireland and Northern Ireland. ==Good Friday Agreement==