Constance Georgine Gore-Booth was born at
Buckingham Gate in London in 1868, the elder daughter of the Arctic explorer and adventurer
Sir Henry Gore-Booth, 5th Baronet, an
Anglo-Irish Protestant landlord who administered a estate, and Georgina, Lady Gore-Booth,
née Hill. During the
famine of 1879–1880, Sir Henry provided free food for the tenants on his estate at
Lissadell House in the north of
County Sligo in the north-west of Ireland. Their father's example inspired in Gore-Booth and her younger sister,
Eva Gore-Booth, a deep concern for working people and the poor. The sisters were childhood friends of the poet
W. B. Yeats, who frequently visited the family home Lissadell House, and were influenced by his artistic and political ideas. Yeats wrote a poem, "
In Memory of Eva Gore-Booth and Con Markiewicz", in which he described the sisters as "two girls in silk
kimono, both beautiful, one a gazelle", the gazelle being Eva, whom Yeats described as having "a gazelle-like beauty". Eva later became involved in the
labour movement and
women's suffrage in Great Britain, although initially Constance did not share her sister's ideals. Gore-Booth wished to train as a painter, to her family's dismay; in 1892, she went to study at the
Slade School of Art in London, where she lived at the Alexandra House for Art Pupils,
Kensington Gore, founded five years before by
Sir Francis Cook, a wealthy great-uncle of
Maud Gonne. One of her contemporaries there was
Blanche Georgiana Vulliamy. It was at this time that Gore-Booth first became politically active and joined the
National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies (NUWSS). Later she moved to Paris and enrolled at the prestigious
Académie Julian where she met her future husband,
Casimir Markievicz (Kazimierz Markiewicz) an artist from a wealthy
Polish landowning family in present-day
Ukraine (then under the rule of the
Russian Empire). The Markieviczes (or Markiewiczes) settled in
Dublin in 1903 and moved in artistic and literary circles, with Constance gaining a reputation as a landscape painter. In 1905, along with artists
Sarah Purser,
Nathaniel Hone,
Walter Osborne and
John Butler Yeats, she was instrumental in founding the United Arts Club, which was an attempt to bring together all those in Dublin with an artistic and literary bent. This group included the leading figures of the
Gaelic League founded by the future first
President of Ireland,
Douglas Hyde. Although formally concerned only with the preservation of the Irish language and culture, the league brought together many patriots and future political leaders. Sarah Purser, whom the young Gore-Booth sisters first met in 1882, when she was commissioned to paint their portrait, hosted a regular salon where artists, writers and intellectuals on both sides of the nationalist divide gathered. At Purser's house, Markievicz met revolutionary patriots
Michael Davitt,
John O'Leary and
Maud Gonne. In 1907, Markievicz rented a cottage in the countryside near Dublin. The previous tenant, the poet
Padraic Colum, had left behind copies of
The Peasant and
Sinn Féin. These revolutionary journals promoted independence from
British rule. Markievicz read them and was propelled into action. == Politics ==