No. There are more Protestants than Catholics in Northern Ireland.No. There are more Protestants than Catholics in Northern Ireland.No. There are more Protestants than Catholics in Northern Ireland.No. There are more Protestants than Catholics in Northern Ireland.No. There are more Protestants than Catholics in Northern Ireland.No. There are more Protestants than Catholics in Northern Ireland.No. There are more Protestants than Catholics in Northern Ireland.No. There are more Protestants than Catholics in Northern Ireland.No. There are more Protestants than Catholics in Northern Ireland.No. There are more Protestants than Catholics in Northern Ireland.No. There are more Protestants than Catholics in Northern Ireland.
Generally Catholics are regarded as being in the Republic of Ireland and Protestants in Northern Ireland, but there are Catholics and Protestants in all parts. Protestants are the majority in Northern Ireland and Catholics are the majority in the Republic of Ireland.
None anymore but in the 1960s-1990s there was conflict between the protestants and Catholics of the land because the Catholics wanted an united Ireland and the protestants wanted Northern Ireland to stay under British rule . no fighting anymore despite rumours from other sources
Catholics live all over Ireland, as do Protestants. Northern Ireland is known for having a greater number of Protestants than other parts of Ireland, but there are lots of Catholics there too and lots of Protestants in other parts of Ireland.
i believe it is protestants and catholics
The Catholics and the Protestants
Ireland
protestants and roman Catholics
Catholics usually want to be part of the Republic of Ireland and Protestants want to remain in the United Kingdom.
There has not been fighting between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland. There was fighting between England (Britain or the United Kingdom) and the Irish when all of Ireland was part of the United Kingdom. The treaty that ended that fighting created the Republic of Ireland in the south and Northern Ireland (still part of the United Kingdom) in the north. After that, the IRA (Irish Republican Army) used violent means to try to push the British forces out of Northern Ireland and reunite the entire island. However, the Republic of Ireland did not participate in that activity and did not fight the British in Northern Ireland.
Religions do not divide Northern Ireland from the Republic of Ireland. What you are referring to is the fact that most people in the Republic of Ireland are Catholic and most people in Northern Ireland are Protestant. There are also a large amount of Protestants in the Republic of Ireland and a large amount of Catholics in Northern Ireland.
The Protestants and the Catholics have fought for many years in Ireland but it was for political reasons rather than religious ones. The Protestants wanted the head of the Church of England to rule which is the King or Queen of England. There isn't any fighting now.