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NovaNET answer: the right to home rule ~lostlette~
The potato famine hit Ireland in the 1840's. it was when the potatos (their main food source) went bad so they had to move. but some stayed for family and died.
Yes, but not to the same extent and also in different ways. Many people moved to Dublin as a result of the famine. The east coast generally had a lot of people moving towards it and some died there, some stayed and some emigrated through Dublin to Britain and other places.
The Cold War demanded that we intervene.
They famine caused many people to emigrate to the USA, but that was mainly in the 1840s and far less than 15 million. The entire population of Ireland prior to the famine was only about 8 million, many of whom died or emigrated to countries other than the USA or survived and stayed in Ireland.
They stayed in the homes of thoses they occupied.
Up to about 1170 Ireland was a largely disunified arrangement of kingdoms although there were High Kings, the island was never really a united entity - petty kings ruled various areas (They would nowadays be called 'war-lords'.) Into this came the English at the invitation of one of the powerful who wished for assistance in regaining his kingdom.... and they stayed for a bit longer than they were welcome. "The English" later became "The British" as England merged with Scotland. They ruled Irish before, during and after the great famine of the 1840s.
Northern
The Israelites came to Egypt during a time of famine and stayed there. A later Pharaoh who did not know what Joseph had done for the Egyptians enslaved them.
Eventually some went back but mostly they stayed where they moved to and spread.
Cuba has stayed communist ever since.
Switzerland and Sweden.