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Southern Ireland
   
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Web libraryoflibrary.com
Southern Ireland
Autonomous region of the UK
?
1921 – 1922 ?
Location of Ireland
Southern Ireland
Capital Dublin
Government Constitutional monarchy
Monarch George V
Chairman
 - First Michael Collins
 - Last W. T. Cosgrave
Legislature Parliament1
 - Upper house Senate
 - Lower house House of Commons
History
 - Establishment 3 May 1921
 - Anglo-Irish Treaty 6 December 1922
1. A Council of Ireland was also envisaged "[w]ith a view to the eventual establishment of a Parliament for the whole of Ireland".

Southern Ireland (Irish: Deisceart Éireann) was the short lived autonomous region (or constituent country) of the United Kingdom established on 3 May 1921 and dissolved on 6 December 1922.[1]

Southern Ireland was established under the Government of Ireland Act 1920 together with its sister region, Northern Ireland. It was envisaged that Southern Ireland would have the following institutions:[2]

It was also envisaged that Southern Ireland would share the following institutions with Northern Ireland:

The Parliament, although legally established, never functioned (for example, it never passed an Act). No Government of Southern Ireland was ever established either. The Council of Ireland was to be established "[w]ith a view to the eventual establishment of a Parliament for the whole of Ireland". However, it never came into being. The notable exception to the failure of the institutions of Southern Ireland was its courts, all of which functioned. Nevertheless given that its most important institutions failed, arguably the autonomous region never achieved de facto existence.

Contents

Home Rule

The Government of Ireland Act, also known as the Fourth Home Rule Act was intended to provide a solution to the problem that had bedevilled Irish politics since the 1880s, namely the conflicting demands of Irish unionists and Irish nationalists. Nationalists wanted a form of Home Rule, believing that Ireland was poorly served by the British government in Westminster and its Irish executive in Dublin Castle. Unionists feared that a nationalist government in Dublin would discriminate against Protestants and would impose tariffs that would unduly hit the northeastern counties of Ireland, which were not only predominantly Protestant but also the only industrial area on an island whose economy was largely agricultural. Extremist unionists imported arms from Imperial Germany and established the Ulster Volunteer Force to prevent Home Rule in Ulster. In response to this, nationalists also imported arms and set up the Irish Volunteers. Partition, which was introduced in the Government of Ireland Act, was intended as a temporary solution to the problem, allowing Northern Ireland and Southern Ireland to be separately governed as regions of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. Ironically, one of those most opposed to this partition settlement was the leader of Irish unionism, Dublin-born Edward Carson, who felt that it was wrong to divide Ireland in two. He felt this would badly affect the position of southern and western unionists.

1921 General election

In reality, however, while Northern Ireland did become a functioning entity, with a parliament and executive that existed until it was prorogued in 1972, Southern Ireland never became a functioning reality. An Irish Republic had been proclaimed by the extra-legal parliament known as Dáil Éireann, formed by Sinn Féin MPs elected from Ireland in the United Kingdom general election in 1918. The first general election to the House of Commons of Southern Ireland in 1921 was used by Sinn Féin to produce a new Dáil, the Second Dáil. Sinn Féin won 124 of the 128 seats, all without a contest. (Four were won by Dublin unionists.) When the new Parliament of Southern Ireland was called into session in June 1921, only the 4 unionist members of the House of Commons of Southern Ireland, and a handful of appointed senators, turned up in the Royal College of Science in Dublin, where the meeting was scheduled to take place.

Treaty and Free State

Northern and Southern Ireland.

It is sometimes said that the most important function that the institutions of Southern Ireland performed was to approve the Anglo-Irish Treaty on 14 January 1922 for the Irish side in accordance with the Treaty. This however is not strictly true. In accordance with the Treaty, the Irish side approved it at: “a meeting summoned for the purpose [of approving the Treaty] of the members elected to sit in the House of Commons of Southern Ireland.” [3] The Treaty did not say that the Treaty was to be approved by the House of Commons of Southern Ireland. Rather, it said it was to be approved by the Irish side by the members elected to sit in that body. The difference is subtle but was fully grasped by those who entered the Treaty. Hence, when that “meeting” was convened, it was convened by Arthur Griffith in his capacity as “Chairman of the Irish Delegation of Plenipotentiaries” (who had signed the Treaty). Notably it was not convened by Lord Fitzalan, the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland who under the Government of Ireland Act 1920 was the office-holder with the entitlement to convene a meeting of the House of Commons of Southern Ireland.

The Provisional Government of Southern Ireland envisaged under the Treaty was constituted on 14 January 1922 at the above-mentioned meeting of members of the Parliament elected for constituencies in Southern Ireland. It took up office two days later when Michael Collins became Chairman of the Provisional Government. Collins took charge of Dublin Castle at a ceremony attended by Viscount Fitzalan of Derwent. The new Government was not an institution of Southern Ireland as envisaged under the Government of Ireland Act. Instead, it was a Government established under the Anglo-Irish Treaty and legislation which implemented it.

Like its sister region Northern Ireland, Southern Ireland was never a "state" (or pejoratively, a statelet).[4] Its constitutional roots remained the Acts of Union, two complementary Acts, one passed by the Parliament of Great Britain, the other by the Parliament of Ireland. With the establishment of the Irish Free State on 6 December 1922 under the terms of the Treaty, Southern Ireland ceased to exist.

References

  1. ^ Statutory Rules & Orders published by authority, 1921 (No. 533); Additional source for 3 May 1921 date: Alvin Jackson, Home Rule - An Irish History, Oxford University Press, 2004, p198; Southern Ireland (like Northern Ireland) did not become a state (or pejoratively, a statelet). Its constitutional roots remained the Act of Union, two complementary Acts, one passed by the Parliament of Great Britain, the other by the Parliament of Ireland.
  2. ^ See: Government of Ireland Act 1920
  3. ^ Anglo-Irish Treaty.
  4. ^ In some circles, Southern Ireland might be described as having been a constituent country of the United Kingdom. However that term is of recent provenance and was not used by the British Government to describe Southern Ireland (or Northern Ireland) in 1921 or 1922.




Index Of Related Pages




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Southern Ireland
Southern Islands
Southern IsolationSouthern Italian
Southern ItalySouthern Italy (European Parliament constituency)
Southern IvySouthern Jaguars
Southern James Bay
Southern Jiangsu Campaign
Southern KalaripayattuSouthern Kern Unified School District
Southern Kiang
Southern Knights
Southern Kurdish
Southern Kuzbass GRES
Southern LNGSouthern Lakes
Southern Lapwing
Southern Leaf-tailed GeckoSouthern Leaf Green Tree Frog
Southern LeagueSouthern League (baseball)
Southern League (ice hockey)
Southern League CupSouthern League Cup (Scotland)
Southern League Cup (Scotland) 1940–41
Southern League Cup (Scotland) 1941–42Southern League Cup (Scotland) 1945–46
Southern League Cup 2008-09
Southern League Division One East
Southern League Division One West
Southern League Neck
Southern League rostersSouthern Lebanon
Southern Lee High School, SanfordSouthern Legal Resource Center
Southern Lehigh High SchoolSouthern Lehigh School District
Southern Leopard Frog
Southern Lesser Bamboo Lemur
Southern LevantSouthern Leyte
Southern Leyte State University
Southern LiangSouthern Life Centre
Southern Limestone Alps
Southern Line, AucklandSouthern Line (Metrorail)
Southern Literary Journal
Southern Literary Journal and Monthly MagazineSouthern Literary Messenger
Southern Little Yellow-eared BatSouthern Living
Southern Local High School (Salineville, Ohio)Southern Local SupervoidSouthern Locomotives Ltd
Southern Long-nosed ArmadilloSouthern Long-nosed Bat
Southern Lord Records
Southern Lord Records discography
Southern Luzon State University
Southern Maalhosmadulhu Atoll
Southern MailSouthern Main Road
Southern Maine CoastSouthern Maine Community CollegeSouthern Malaita languages
Southern Mallee District CouncilSouthern Man
Southern Manifesto
Southern ManitobaSouthern Manitoba Railway
Southern Maori by-election 1922
Southern Marbled NewtSouthern Marsh-orchid
Southern Marsupial MoleSouthern MartinSouthern Martlet
Southern MarylandSouthern Maryland Blue CrabsSouthern Maryland Delegation
Southern Maryland Electric CooperativeSouthern Masked-Weaver
Southern Maya area
Southern Medical UniversitySouthern Melbourne Saints
Southern Methodist Church
Southern Methodist University
Southern Methodist University Press
Southern Methodist University football scandalSouthern Metropolitan Region, Victoria
Southern Michigan
Southern Michigan Athletic ConferenceSouthern Michigan LeagueSouthern Michigan Railroad Society
Southern Michigan Timberwolves
Southern Midlands CouncilSouthern Miladhunmadulhu Atoll
Southern Military Institute
Southern Ming Dynasty
Southern Miss Baseball
Southern Miss BasketballSouthern Miss Golden Eagles
Southern Miss Golden Eagles football seasonsSouthern Miss Softball
Southern Miss Symphony Orchestra
Southern Mississippi To The Top
Southern Mole VoleSouthern Mongolian Democratic Alliance
Southern Moreton Bay Islands (Queensland)
Southern Moreton Bay Islands National ParkSouthern MotorwaySouthern Mountain Cavy
Southern Mountain CranberrySouthern Multimammate Mouse
Southern MuriquiSouthern Museum of Civil War and Locomotive HistorySouthern Museum of Flight
Southern Musical ConventionSouthern MyotisSouthern Maori
Southern Naked-tailed ArmadilloSouthern Nantahala Wilderness
Southern Nash High SchoolSouthern NationalSouthern National Raceway Park
Southern Nations, Nationalities, and People's Region
Southern Natural Gas
Southern Natural PipelineSouthern Nazarene Crimson StormSouthern Nazarene Crimson Storm football
Southern Nazarene Crimson Storm volleyballSouthern Nazarene University
Southern Ndebele languageSouthern Needle-clawed Bushbaby
Southern Negro Youth Congress
Southern NetherlandsSouthern NetworksSouthern Nevada Correctional Center
Southern Nevada Grotto
Southern Nevada Water AuthoritySouthern Nevada Zoological-Botanical ParkSouthern New Caledonian languages
Southern New England Railway
Southern New England School of LawSouthern New England Soccer LeagueSouthern New England Telecommunications
Southern New England TelephoneSouthern New England Trunkline Trail
Southern New Hampshire Fieldhouse
Southern New Hampshire Medical CenterSouthern New Hampshire University
Southern New Jersey Rail Group
Southern Newspapers Inc.
Southern Nigeria ProtectorateSouthern Nigeria Regiment
Southern Nightingale-Wren
Southern NightsSouthern Nights/BasicSouthern Nights (Glen Campbell album)
Southern Nights (song)Southern Nilandhe Atoll
Southern Nilotic languagesSouthern Ningaui
Southern Nomads R.U.F.C.
Southern NorwaySouthern Norway Regional Health Authority

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