What causes an Irish exodus to England and the US during the 19th century?
There was a famine in Ireland, known as the Great Famine, or the Irish Potato Famine. Over a million people died during the 7 years between 1845 to 1852. This drove many Irish to immigrate to to the United States.
What caused the Irish home rule crisis of 1912-1914?
How did the Basque people get from northern Spain to Ireland?
By land the most ancient times and by a combination of overland and water routes in less ancient times are the ways that the Basque people got from northern Spain to Ireland.
Specifically, the Basque and the Irish are genetically linked through the maternal H and paternal r1b lines. They have a common ancestor who may have spoken ancient Basque or an ancient Basque's linguistic ancestor. The ancestor of today's Basque and Irish peoples traveled from what we know as northern and western Spain to what is now the Emerald Isle no later than 8,000 to 17,000 years ago.
...thank god! thought i was gone there for a minute
What is the abbreviation for Northern Ireland?
N. I. - many people call it Ulster, but this is technically incorrect as a third of Ulster is in the Republic
A famine is an extreme shortage of food, caused by drought, crop failure, disaster, or overpopulation. Famines are often characterized by starvation, and by emigration or exodus (leaving the affected area) to find food.
Steele is an English and Scottish name, a nickname for someone considered as hard as steel.
When did Ireland's war of independence start?
Ireland has had various wars during its history, like the war of independence (21 January 1919 - 11 July 1921) and the Irish civil war ( 28 June 1922 - 24 May 1923) amongst others. You may also be referring to the troubles in Northern Ireland which started in the late 1960s running through to the 1990s. That was not your standard war, as often perceived by those who are not fully familiar with it. It was mainly isolated terrorists events, like individual shootings or bombings, not hand to hand combat in open warfare. There could be days, weeks and even months between incidents. It was primarily confined to Northern Ireland, and not throughout Ireland, which is another common misconception. There were relatively few incidents outside of Northern Ireland, with some being in other parts of Ireland and some in Britain.
He was buried in Christ Church Cathedral in Dublin in Ireland and later moved to Ferns Cathedral in Wexford.
What were the causes of the Irish war of indepence?
the Celtic nationalism & the tension between british protestant & Irish catholics
religion and a desire for home rule.
Bes is a comic dwarf god who brings good luck and happiness to a home?
Bes is a comic dwarf god who brings good luck and happiness to a home?
In the Irish language what is a shelta?
A secret jargon that is also known as Cant andGammon. it is used by travelling people in Great Britain and Ireland, based on systematic inversion or alteration of Gaelic words.
What is the conflict between North and South Ireland?
There's no real conflict between the native Irish in these areas. N Ireland is subject to the rule of England. The Republic of Ireland won it's independence from England in 1921. English control of Ireland was forcible and accomplished by invasion starting in 1167. There has been an 800 year struggle for freedom since then. The Republic is free but N Ireland was left under british rule as part of the treaty in 1921. Since then, the fighting and violence has been part of the N Irish continued struggle for independence. Their fight is really internal, between the native Irish (primarily catholics) and the "anglo irish" (all protestants) in N. Ireland.
Why are there two sides in Northern Ireland?
That is a question that could have a long and detailed answer, relating to Irish history. Putting it briefly, before Irish independence from Britain, the majority of people in what is now known as Northern Ireland did not want to become independent while a significant minority did. Those two positions remain, so you have two sides in Northern Ireland. The unionists and loyalists want to be have a union with Britain and the nationalists and republicans want a totally united Ireland. The unionists and loyalists still form the majority of people in Northern Ireland.
Why did the English take over the Irish food and land?
The English believed they needed to conquer more land and so they took Scotish welsh and Irish land. Clearly that beleif hasn't left their minds because they still won't leave Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Cornwall or the Isle of Man
Why did people from Northern Ireland immigrate to America in the early 1700's?
To escape poverty, hunger and for the chance of a better life.
They were a member of a secret society in Ireland that terrorized law officers during the 1840s to prevent evictions.
Jessica is not a name of Irish origin, if that's the question.
According to one source it is from Latin Jesca, from the Greek Ieskha, fom the Hebrew Yiskáh.
The name "Jessie" is Seasaidh in (Scottish) Gaelic.
When did Northern Ireland become legally part of UK?
In 1801. Then in 1922, most of Ireland became independent, leaving just Northern Ireland still as part of the United Kingdom and what is now the Republic of Ireland as independent.
Why did Ireland's population drop after 1840?
A million died in the famine which followed the potato blight of 1845, and millions emigrated in the following century as landowners switched from arable to livestock farming, largely for the British market.
Ireland is split into four provinces (originally 5, thousands of years ago). Ulster, Munster, Leinster and Connacht. Each Province is sub divided into counties. There are 32 counties in Ireland. 9 of the 11 counties in Ulster are currently under indirect British rule. The remaining 26 counties form the Republic of Ireland. The occupied six counties of Ulster are also erroneously referred to as "The North", Northern Ireland" & "Ulster".
What did Irish immigrants travel to America on?
Until commercial aviation became widely available to the internationally traveling public in the late-1940s after the end of World War II, all immigrants from other continents traveled to America on ships.
While steam began to propel passenger ships in the mid-19th century, sail-driven ships continued to be used until the end of the 1800s because (1) they existed in large numbers, and (2) were considerably cheaper to operate. For traveling passengers there was a very considerable difference in fares between steam and sail. Thus, during the 19th century, steam ships were primarily used by the wealthy, while sailing ships were used by the destitute. Ships sailing westward across the north Atlantic had to tack against the prevailing winds on voyages that could take up to three months from England to America, but could use those same winds to return to the British Isles in just three or four weeks. To get to America with a sailing ship it was usually more efficient to first travel south from England all the way past Portugal and the Canary Islands to western Africa, catch the westerly winds across the South Atlantic to the Caribbean, and then follow the Gulf Stream north along the American coastline to Charleston, New York or Boston, with an average voyage time of 9 to 12 weeks.
Irish immigrants had traveled to America (and Canada) on sailing ships in steady but small numbers since colonies began being established in the early 1500s, and 250 years later their descendants fought in the American Revolutionary War against the British monarchy, participated in writing the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, and were elected to the First Continental Congress.
However, during the mid-19th century, impoverished Irish immigrants came to America in really large numbers, the greatest such ethnic migration to America until that of modern day Latin American Hispanics. Today, most people share an interest in this great 1840-1870 flood of Irish immigrants - one that peaked just before the very deadly American Civil War.
Prior to the opening of Ellis Island at the end of that century, Irish immigrants, sickly, uneducated and improvised after four centuries of oppressive British crown rule, which included assorted efforts at systematic ethnic cleansing, property confiscation, disenfranchisement, usury, population seeding ("plantings"), excessive taxation, etc., came to America mostly on super low-fare slave ships they called "coffin ships" because so many passengers died en route. The ships were usually European three-masted sailing cargo ships with small crews especially converted for the purpose of transporting slaves. Starting in Liverpool, the voyage usually took an average of ten awful weeks.
During the great Ireland Famine years of the mid-19th century, over 2,000,000 starving Irish left their homeland for America crammed like sardines into these coffin ships. Since their penniless "white n-g-er" passengers had no sale value upon arrival, there was no need to care for them with adequate food, sanitation or medical attention. The ships had mortality rates of around 30%. It is estimated that in one single decade from 1844 to 1854, over 300,000 of their Irish passengers -- men, women and children - died of diseases such as malnutrition, dehydration, dysentery and scurvy before arriving in America, their bodies simply dumped overboard at sea. Those who made that treacherous voyage had almost zero hope of ever returning home, so, if they survived, they put everything they had into making life in America work. The whole experience was one long one-way "do or die" journey.
The millions of Irish who braved such a perilous voyage during the mid-19th century were not so different from those of other cultures of the time also trying to reach North America. They just faced an urgent decision whether to die ignominiously of starvation under British crown oppression in their homeland or die trying to reach a better chance of life elsewhere, and many who left believed that their death or banishment had always been the British objective since the time of Henry VIII.
One of those who managed to survive the journey was a 25 year old young lady named Bridget from County Wexford in southern Ireland who arrived alone in Boston at the height of the famine in 1849. She soon married a poor Irish immigrant she had known back home named Patrick and settled into the filthy and violent slums near the Boston harbor. She soon lost her first born son and her husband to cholera, but managed to gradually build, on her own, a small retail business while caring for and raising her remaining four children. Her name was Bridget Kennedy, and just three generations later, her great grandson, John, overcoming four centuries of virulent anti-Catholic Irish bigotry in the British Isles and America and using the family fortune his great grandmother had established in the Boston slums, returned to Ireland in first class as President of the United States. There was, of course, some great irony in Great Britain that the leader of the "American Camelot" was Irish -- one of those despised "sub-human undesirables".
The Irish were still coming to America on converted cargo ships forty years after Bridget when Ellis Island opened in 1892. Although millions of Irish immigrants had preceded her for a half century of far harsher circumstances, the very first immigrant to step off a ship onto Ellis Island was Annie Moore of County Cork, Ireland, who was either 15 or 17. She settled in New York's 4th Ward, in a rough and tumble seaport slum, and soon married a German baker. They had ten (or 11) children, five of whom survived to adulthood. She died in 1923 at 47 (or 49) and is buried in Queens next to five of her children. Her story is very common for Irish-Americans. Her age and the fact that she was traveling alone was also not uncommon; many such immigrants lost relatives on the very dangerous journey throughout the 19th century. Today Annie Moore has the very remarkable distinction of having her likeness cast in bronze in two different life-size statues, one on Ellis Island New York and one in Cobh Ireland.
Until it became possible to ride in a very comfortable jet airliner for several hours in order to get from Europe or Asia to New York or San Francisco (roughly around 1950), those who left for North America during the 400 years from 1550 to 1950 were the bravest of the brave, those who survived the toughest of the tough, of their native cultures. They were the people who struck out on their own, leaped from the comfortably familiar to the dangerously unknown, to risk a very treacherous voyage and face certain great adversity at their destination. Upon arrival they all - man, woman and child - would discover that their arduous journey had only just begun. They had to make a life commitment to succeed against great odds as free souls in a new world, or die trying. There was no turning back, no second chances if things didn't work out so well. Such were the special people who made America, and then defended it repeatedly in deadly wars.
Those who succeeded gradually built in a huge wilderness a great nation with a truly vibrant culture - something of truly great and real value - a rich society that made its mark on the world as a place where free people without interference from rulers could thrive, could create and defend a special place that would then attract people from all over the world seeking an enormously easier path to freedom and success than those who went before them. Everyone who showed up in the magic that was America after World War II could simply demand as their birthright all that America's ancestors had given their blood, sweat and tears to build and defend for their children.
But the Irish who left Ireland during the 18th century, and all their many millions of American descendents, always kept a special place in their hearts for their Emerald Isle. Ellis and Ireland - Isle Of Hope, Isle Of Tears.