What is King Of Ireland?

Information about King Of Ireland

Irish Political History series
MONARCHISM

Main articles
Kingdom of Ireland
Monarchy in Irish Free State
Royal Titles Act

Constitutional Structures
Monarchy in Ireland
Governor-General
Lord Lieutenant of Ireland
Governor of Northern Ireland
Royal Assent
Oath of Allegiance
HMG in the Irish Free State
Letters patent

Parties & Organisations
All-for-Ireland League
Cumann na nGaedhael
Irish Parliamentary Party
Ulster Unionist Party
Sinn Fin

Campaigners
Isaac Butt
Henry Grattan
Arthur Griffith
Timothy Michael Healy
Daniel O'Connell
Kevin O'Higgins

Documents & Ideas
Anglo-Irish Treaty
Irish Free State Constitution
Dil Constitution
Dual monarchy
External Relations Act
Republic of Ireland Act
The Resurrection of Hungary

Other Irish movements
Loyalism
Nationalism
Republicanism
Unionism
The designation King of Ireland (Irish: Rí na hÉireann) and Queen (regnant) of Ireland has been used during three periods of Irish history.

In the centuries prior to 1169, Ireland was arguably in the process of becoming a national kingdom under a High King of Ireland. In the aftermath of a Cambro-Norman incursion into Ireland in 1169 Henry II and his successors became "Lord of Ireland". The Treaty of Windsor in 1175 recognised the last native king as overlord of all Ireland outside Norman control but further Cambro-Norman incursions weakened his authority and after his abdication the office fell dormant.

After Henry VIII of England made himself Supreme Head of the Church of England, he also requested and got legislation through the Irish Parliament, in 1541 (effective 1542, see Crown of Ireland Act 1542), naming him King of Ireland and head of the Church of Ireland (which today, both in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland, remains a member of the Anglican communion but is no longer an established church like the Church of England). The title "King of Ireland" was then used until 1 January 1801, the effective date of the second Act of Union, which merged Ireland and Great Britain to create the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.

However, in 1555, Pope Paul IV also issued a papal bull granting the title King of Ireland to Philip II of Spain[1]. This followed the Pope's excommunication of English King Henry VIII, after his break with Rome's papal authority, and was a reaction to Henry VIII arrogating to himself the title "King of Ireland", following the act of the Irish Parliament in 1541, thereby subverting the prior feudal overlordship of the Papacy which under the English Pope Adrian IV had granted Ireland as a Lordship to the King Henry II of England in 1155. Philip did become King consort from 1554 to 1558 with his marriage to Mary I, and King's County was named for him. Later, with the failure of the Spanish Armada, Philip could not establish a foothold in Ireland, and Gaelic Irish-Spanish efforts to roll-back English rule in Ireland were routed at the Battle of Kinsale in 1601.

After creation in 1922 of the Irish Free State as an independent dominion within the British Empire, King George V continued to reign in Ireland as King of the United Kingdom. In Northern Ireland this was unsurprising; six of the nine counties of the province of Ulster remained within the UK and were not part of the Free State. Continued use of this title in the Free State was problematic, however, and in 1927 the old Anglo-Irish title "King of Ireland" was revived to emphasize the Irish Free State's status as one of several independent countries worldwide under a shared monarchy.

In 1949, the part of Ireland not covered by Northern Ireland severed the last link with the monarch when Ireland (Éire) (as the Irish Free State had been renamed in 1937) became the Republic of Ireland, thereby leaving the Commonwealth and laying the title "King of Ireland" to rest.

History

The Kings of Ireland to 1607

Gaelic Ireland consisted as few as five and as many as nine main kingdoms, further subdivided into dozens of smaller kingdoms. The primary kingdoms were Connacht, Ailech, Airgíalla, Ulster, Mide, Leinster, Osraige, Munster and Thomond. Up to the end of Gaelic Ireland they continued to fluctuate, expand and contract in size, as well as dissolving entirely or being amalgamated into new entities.

The names of Connacht, Ulster, Leinster and Munster are still in current use, being now applied to the four modern provinces of Ireland. The following is a list of the main Irish kingdoms and their kings.

Kingdom of Ireland (1542–1801)

The title "King of Ireland" was created by an act of the Irish Parliament in 1541, replacing the Lordship of Ireland, which had existed since 1171, with the Kingdom of Ireland. The Crown of Ireland Act 1542 established a personal union between the English and Irish crowns, providing that whoever was king of England was to be king of Ireland as well, and so its first holder was King Henry VIII of England.

For a brief period in the seventeenth century, during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms, from the impeachment and execution of Charles I to the Restoration of the monarchy in England, there was no 'King of Ireland' in fact, only in name. After the Irish Rebellion of 1641, Irish Catholics, organised in Confederate Ireland recognised Charles I and later, Charles II, as legitimate monarchs, in opposition to the claims of the English Parliament, and signed a formal treaty with the elder Charles. However, in 1649, England became a republic, or "Commonwealth," when the Rump Parliament, victorious in the English Civil War, executed Charles I. The Parliamentarian general, Oliver Cromwell came across the Irish sea to quash any attempt to restore the monarchy by temporarily — though illegally — uniting England, Scotland, and Ireland under one government, styling himself "Lord Protector" of the three kingdoms. (See also Cromwellian conquest of Ireland.) After Cromwell's death in 1658, his son Richard emerged as the leader of this pan-British republic, but he was not competent to maintain it. Parliament at London voted to restore the monarchy, and Charles II returned from exile in France in 1660 to become King of England, Scotland, and Ireland.

When the first Act of Union took effect in 1707, merging England and Scotland into the semi-federal Kingdom of Great Britain, the personal union between the Irish, Scottish, and English crowns became a personal union between the Irish and British crowns. The Kingdom of Ireland was then merged to Great Britain on 1 January 1801 when the second Act of Union took effect, creating the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (since 1922, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland).

Irish Free State (1927–1936)

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Leinster House, decorated for the visit of King George V and Queen Mary in 1911.
Within a decade it was the seat of the Oireachtas of the Irish Free State.
Twenty-six of Ireland's thirty-two counties left the United Kingdom in 1922 (the six northeastern counties of Ireland opted to remain British), as the Irish Free State (renamed Éire in 1937), a self-governing dominion of the British Empire. As a dominion, the Free State was a constitutional monarchy with the British monarch as its head of state. However, until 1927, King George V was still formally styled "King of the United Kingdom". It was five years before the Royal and Parliamentary Titles Act 1927 revived the title "King of Ireland" as a separate position to the British crown. As before 1801, the two crowns existed in a personal union.

In conjunction with the change, the Free State achieved greater autonomy within the British Empire. For example, the British cabinet could no longer advise the King on matters pertinent to the Irish Free State but the king, through his governor general (after 1937, through the President of Ireland) took the advice of his Irish prime ministers. The Free State was also granted its own Great Seal and began to sign treaties in its own right, instead of through Britain.

That last item — the right of British dominions to sign treaties on their own behalf without the imperial oversight of London — dates to the First World War and the insistence of the then-Dominion of Canada that she be represented at the Versailles Peace Talks and sign the treaty under her own name, though within the context of the British Empire. Canada had already managed to reserve this right to herself in an earlier treaty negotiation with the United States. Canadian insistence on the right to sign the Treaty of Versailles independently effectively secured this right to all British dominions, including post-bellum dominions like the Irish Free State.

Éire / Ireland (1936–1949)



From 1936 to 1949 the role of the King of Ireland in the Irish state was greatly reduced and ambiguous. An amendment to the Free State constitution in 1936 all but eliminated all of the King's official duties but one. Under the External Relations Act of the same year he continued to represent the Free State in international affairs. This purely external role continued when the new Constitution of Ireland was introduced in 1937.

The position of King of Ireland ceased with the passage of the Republic of Ireland Act 1948, which came into force in April 1949. This act, as the name suggested, declared the state to be a republic. The Crown of Ireland Act was eventually repealed in the Republic of Ireland by the Statute Law Revision (Pre-Union Irish Statutes) Act, 1962.

The monarchy continues in Northern Ireland, which remains a part of the United Kingdom.

List of Lords, Kings and Queens of Ireland (non-native)

Lords of Ireland (1171–1541)

Kings and Queens of Ireland (1541–1801)

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Henry VIII claimed the title "King of Ireland" in 1542.
  • Henry VIII and I, King of Ireland (1542–1547); previously Prince Henry (VII), Lord of Ireland, (1509–1542). (Although universally known as "Henry VIII," he was technically Henry I in Ireland, as the first of the English kings Henry to be King of Ireland; and the same principle applies to his successors until 1801.)
  • Edward VI and I, (1547–1553) (Edward VI of England, I of Ireland)
  • Jane, (1553)
  • Mary I, (1553–1558)
  • Elizabeth I, (1558–1603)
  • James VI & I, (1603–1625) (James VI of Scotland, I of England and Ireland)
  • Charles I, (1625–1649)
  • Oliver Cromwell (1649–1660) (Lord Protector). (see English Interregnum)
  • Charles II, (1660–1685)
  • James VII & II, (1685–1688)
  • William III, II & I, (1689–1702) & Mary II, (1689–1694) (William III of England and the Netherlands, II of Scotland, I of Ireland; and Mary II of England, Scotland and Ireland.)
  • Anne, (1702–1714)
  • George I, (1714–1727)
  • George II, (1727–1760)
  • George III (1760–1801)

Kings and Queens of the United Kingdom (1801–1927)

Kings of Ireland (1927–1949)

Kings George I, II, and III had reigned as "King of Ireland"; after a constitutional change Georges III & IV had reigned as "King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland." As the governments of Ireland and the United Kingdom were separate from 1922 and the royal titles from 1927, it might be supposed that George V, once again called "King of Ireland", should be numbered "IV" as the 4th of that name to be "King of Ireland." This is not the convention, however; regnal numerals are always fully cumulative and do not depend on the precise wording of actual titles; if they did, George III would have suddenly become "George I of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland" at that constitutional change.

Edward VIII was the first monarch to accede to the British throne with the Northern Irish designation attached to his title. His brother, George VI was the first actually so crowned, and the last to be crowned King of Ireland.

See also

Kingdom of Ireland was the name given to the Irish state from 1541, by an act of the Parliament of Ireland. The new Monarch replaced the Lordship of Ireland, which had been created in 1171. King Henry VIII thus became the first King of Ireland since 1169.
..... Read more.
King was the head of state of the 1922–1937 Irish Free State. Under the Free State constitution, the state was governed under a form of constitutional monarchy. The King exercised a number of important duties, including appointing the Executive Council (cabinet), dissolving
..... Read more.
Acts of Parliament of predecessor
states to the United Kingdom

Acts of English Parliament to 1601
Acts of English Parliament to 1641
Acts and Ordinances (Interregnum) to 1660
Acts of English Parliament to 1699
Acts of English Parliament to 1706
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The Governor-General (Irish: Seanascal) was the representative of the King in the 1922–1937 Irish Free State. Until 1927 he was also the agent of the British government in the Irish state. By convention the office of Governor-General was largely ceremonial.
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The Lord Lieutenant of Ireland (Irish; Ard-Leifteanant) (plural: Lords Lieutenant), also known as the Judiciar in the early mediaeval period and as the Lord Deputy
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Northern Ireland 1921-72

This article is part of the series:
Politics of Northern Ireland 1921-72



Government
Governor of Northern Ireland
Privy Council
Prime Minister of Northern Ireland
'''Executive Committee

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The granting, reserving or withholding of the Royal Assent was one of the key roles, and potentially one of the key powers, possessed by the Governor-General of the Irish Free State.
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The Irish Oath of Allegiance was a controversial provision in the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921, which Irish TDs (members of the Irish parliament) and Senators were required to take, in order to take their seats in Dáil Éireann (The Chamber of Deputies) and Seanad Éireann (the Irish
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His Majesty's Government in the Irish Free State (HMGIFS) was the formal designation used by the Executive Council (cabinet) of the Irish Free State in formal correspondence it and the United Kingdom or other Commonwealth states.
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Letters patent are a type of legal instrument in the form of an open letter issued by a monarch or government, granting an office, right, monopoly, title, or status to a person or to some entity such as a corporation. The opposite of letters patent (Lat.
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The All-for-Ireland League (AFIL), was an Irish, Munster-based non-sectarian political party (1909-1918). It was founded by Member of Parliament (MP) William O'Brien in order to establish a new national organisation to pursue a creed of political brotherhood and reconciliation
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Cumann na nGaedhael (IPA: [ˈkʊmən nə ˈŋɰeːɫ]; "Society of the Gaels"), sometimes spelt Cumann na nGaedheal,[1]
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The Irish Parliamentary Party (IPP) (commonly called the Irish Party) was formed in 1882 by Charles Stewart Parnell, the leader of the Nationalist Party, replacing the Home Rule League, as official parliamentary party for Irish nationalist Members of Parliament (MPs) elected to
..... Read more.
Ulster Unionist Party

Leader Sir Reg Empey MLA

Founded 1905
Headquarters 429 Holywood Road
Belfast, BT4 2LN
Northern Ireland, United Kingdom

Political Ideology Unionism, Centrism, Conservatism
Political Position
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Isaac Butt (6 September 1813 – 5 May 1879) was the founder and first leader of a number of parties and organisations, including the Irish Metropolitan Conservative Society in 1836, the Home Government Association in 1870 and in 1873 the Home Rule League.
..... Read more.
Henry Grattan (July 3, 1746 - June 6, 1820) was a member of the Irish House of Commons and a campaigner for legislative freedom for the Irish Parliament in the late 18th century. He opposed the Act of Union 1800 that merged the Kingdoms of Ireland and Great Britain.
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Arthur Griffith (Irish: Art Ó Gríobhtha; 31 March, 1871 – 12 August, 1922) was the founder and third leader of Sinn Féin.
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Timothy Michael Healy, KC (17 May, 1855 – 26 March, 1931) was an Irish nationalist politician, journalist, author, barrister and one of the most controversial Irish MPs in the Parliament of the United Kingdom, with a career that spanned the period from Charles Stewart
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Daniel O'Connell (6 August, 1775 – 15 May, 1847) (Irish: Dónal Ó Conaill), known as The Liberator or The Emancipator, was Ireland's predominant political leader in the first half of the nineteenth century who championed the cause of the Catholic tenants
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Kevin Christopher O'Higgins (Irish: Caoimhín Críostóir Ó hUigín; June 7, 1892 – July 10, 1927).

Kevin O'Higgins was born in Stradbally, County Laois and was educated at the Jesuit-run Clongowes Wood, at Knockbeg College, at
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The Anglo-Irish Treaty (Irish: An Conradh Angla-Éireannach), officially called the Articles of Agreement for a Treaty Between Great Britain and Ireland
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Constitution of the Irish Free State was the founding legal document of the 1922-1937 Irish Free State. It was enacted with the adoption of the Constitution of the Irish Free State (Saorstát Éireann) Act 1922, of which it formed a part.
..... Read more.
Dual monarchy is a union of two monarchies where the thrones of each monarchy are integrated. The following are examples of dual monarchies, listed alphabetically with the dominant or co-dominant nation first:
  • Austria-Hungary, a dual monarchy that existed from 1867 to 1918.

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The Executive Authority (External Relations) Act, 1936 was an enactment of the Oireachtas (Irish parliament) in 1936. The Act was one of two passed suddenly to deal with the aftermath of the abdication of King Edward VIII as King of Ireland along with his other Commonwealth Realms.
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The Republic of Ireland Act was an enactment of Oireachtas Éireann passed in 1948, which came into force on April 18, 1949[1] and which declared that the official description of the Irish state was to be the Republic of Ireland.
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The Resurrection of Hungary was a book published by Arthur Griffith in 1904 in which he outlined his ideas for an Anglo-Irish dual monarchy. He proposed that the former kingdoms which had created the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland in 1800, namely, the Kingdom
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Irish Political History series
Ulster Loyalism

Terminology
Loyalism
Unionism

Key documents
Belfast Agreement
Government of Ireland Act 1920
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Irish nationalism refers to political and sociological movements and sentiment that embodies a love for Irish culture and language and a sense of pride in the island of Ireland.
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Irish republicanism is an ideology based on the Irish nationalist belief that all of Ireland should be a single independent republic, whether as a unitary state, a federal state or as a confederal arrangement.
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Unionism, in Ireland, is a belief in the desirability of a full constitutional and institutional relationship between Ireland and Great Britain based on the terms and order of government of the Act of Union 1800 which had merged both countries in 1801 to form the United
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