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Irish Houses of Parliament - The continuing symbolism of the Old Irish Houses of Parliament |  | Irish Houses of Parliament - The continuing symbolism of the Old Irish Houses of Parliament: Encyclopedia II - Irish Houses of Parliament - The continuing symbolism of the Old Irish Houses of Parliament |  | From the 1830s under Daniel O'Connell, generations of leaders campaigned for the creation of a new Irish parliament, convinced that the Act of Union had been a great mistake. While O'Connell campaigned for full scale Repeal of the Act, leaders like Isaac Butt and Charles Stewart Parnell sought a more modest form of Home Rule within the United Kingdom, rather than the full recreation of an independent Irish state. However even if the proposal got through the British House of Commons (and the first two attempts, in 1886 and 1893 ...
See also:Irish Houses of Parliament, Irish Houses of Parliament - Plans for the new building, Irish Houses of Parliament - Design of the new building, Irish Houses of Parliament - Pearce's design copied in the US Capitol and British Museum, Irish Houses of Parliament - Public ceremonial in the Irish Houses of Parliament, Irish Houses of Parliament - Abolition of Irish Parliament, Irish Houses of Parliament - After 1800: From a parliament to a bank, Irish Houses of Parliament - The continuing symbolism of the Old Irish Houses of Parliament, Irish Houses of Parliament - The Dáil choses a different home, Irish Houses of Parliament - A curiously contradictory symbol, Irish Houses of Parliament - Footnotes |  | | Irish Houses of Parliament, Irish Houses of Parliament - A curiously contradictory symbol, Irish Houses of Parliament - Abolition of Irish Parliament, Irish Houses of Parliament - After 1800: From a parliament to a bank, Irish Houses of Parliament - Design of the new building, Irish Houses of Parliament - Footnotes, Irish Houses of Parliament - Pearce's design copied in the US Capitol and British Museum, Irish Houses of Parliament - Plans for the new building, Irish Houses of Parliament - Public ceremonial in the Irish Houses of Parliament, Irish Houses of Parliament - The Dáil choses a different home, Irish Houses of Parliament - The continuing symbolism of the Old Irish Houses of Parliament |  | |
|  |  | Irish Houses of Parliament: Encyclopedia II - Irish Houses of Parliament - The continuing symbolism of the Old Irish Houses of Parliament
Irish Houses of Parliament - The continuing symbolism of the Old Irish Houses of Parliament
From the 1830s under Daniel O'Connell, generations of leaders campaigned for the creation of a new Irish parliament, convinced that the Act of Union had been a great mistake. While O'Connell campaigned for full scale Repeal of the Act, leaders like Isaac Butt and Charles Stewart Parnell sought a more modest form of Home Rule within the United Kingdom, rather than the full recreation of an independent Irish state. However even if the proposal got through the British House of Commons (and the first two attempts, in 1886 and 1893 did not) the British House of Lords with its massive unionist majority was guaranteed to veto it. However the passage of the Parliament Act, 1911 which restricted the veto powers of the House of Lords, opened up the prospect that an Irish Home Rule Bill might indeed pass through both Houses, receive the Royal Assent and become law.
Leaders from O'Connell to Parnell and later John Redmond spoke of the proud day when an Irish parliament might once again meet in what they called Grattan's Parliament in College Green. When, in 1911, King George V and his consort, Queen Mary visited Dublin where they attracted mass crowds, street sellers sold drawings of the King and Queen arriving in the not too distant future at the Old Houses of Parliament in College Green to open the new Irish parliament. In 1914, the Third Home Rule Act did indeed complete all parliamentary stages and receive the Royal Assent. The day when the old parliament would one day become the seat of parliament seemed around the corner. However the intervening First World War provided what proved to be a fatal delay for Home Rule. In 1916, a small band of radical republicans under Patrick Pearse staged the Easter Rising, in which they seized a number of prominent Irish buildings and proclaimed an Irish Republic. Surprisingly one building they did not take over was the old Parliament House. Perhaps they feared that as a bank it would be heavily protected. Perhaps, already expecting that the Rising would ultimately fail and that the reaction to the Rising and what Pearse called their "blood sacrifice", rather than the Rising itself, would reawaken Irish nationalism and produce independence, they did not seek to use the building for fear that it like the GPO would be destroyed in the British counter-attack. Or perhaps because of its association with a former ascendancy parliament, it carried little symbolism for their new republic.
Interestingly their are two tapestries designed by Dutch landscape painter William Van der Hagen and woven by John Van Beaver dating from circa 1733 in the hall. The tapestries are unique. One represents the "Glorious Battle of the Boyne" and the other the "Glorious Defence of Londonderry". Each of the tapestries has five portrait and narrative medallions around the central scene which depict, narrate and name central characters and events in each of the battles. Both also have "trophies of arms and figures of Fame below enclosed by fringed curtains."
Other related archives16 November, 1605, 1612, 17 March, 1707, 1727, 1729, 17th century, 1800, 1801, 1940s, 1st January, Act of Union, American English, Anglo-Irish, Anglo-Irish War, Arthur Griffith, Bank of Ireland, Battle of the Boyne, Black Rod, British, British English, British House of Commons, British House of Lords, British Museum, Capitol, Castletown House, Charles Stewart Parnell, Church of Ireland, College Green, Commons, Constitution of 1782, Daniel O'Connell, Defence of Londonderry, Dublin Castle, Duke of Leinster, Dáil, Easter Rising, Edward Lovett Pearce, English, First Dáil, First World War, Four Courts, George Carew, George III, George IV, George V, Government of Ireland Act 1920, Henrietta Street, Henry Grattan, Henry VIII, Hibernia, Home Rule, House of Commons of Southern Ireland, Ionic, Ireland, Irish Free State, Irish Republic, James Gandon, John Foster, John Redmond, King's Inns, Kingdom of Ireland, Latin, Leinster House, London, Lord Chancellor of Ireland, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, Lords, Mace, Mary, Merrion Square, Michaelmas, Munster, Oireachtas Éireann, Palace of Westminster, Parliament Act, Patrick Pearse, Plantation of Ulster, Poyning's Law, Republic of Ireland, Royal Assent, Royal Hospital, Kilmainham, Scottish, Seanad, Sinn Féin, Speaker, Speech from the Throne, Stormont, Third Home Rule Act, Trinity College Dublin, Unilateral Declaration of Independence, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, United States, Viceregal Apartments, W.T. Cosgrave, Washington, DC, William Connolly, World War II, acre, bicameral, nineteenth century, representative peers, rotten boroughs, the Custom House, unionist, woolsack
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "The continuing symbolism of the Old Irish Houses of Parliament", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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