Lernzettel: Irish History and Identity Course

📋 Course Outline

  1. Ireland, the UK, and borders
  2. Partition, independence, and sovereignty
  3. Identity, diaspora, and social progress
  4. The Troubles and political violence
  5. Education in Irish history
  6. Trinity College and Catholic restrictions
  7. The Gaeltacht and the Irish language
  8. Saint Patrick’s Day and national symbols

📖 1. Ireland, the UK, and borders

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Great Britain : Great Britain is an island grouping that includes Scotland, England, and Wales.
  • UK : The UK is a state that includes Scotland, England, Wales, and Northern Ireland.
  • British Isles : The British Isles is a geographical set including Ireland, Scotland, England, and Wales, plus Northern Ireland.
  • Republic of Ireland : The Republic of Ireland is the independent part of the island that uses the euro.
  • Northern Ireland : Northern Ireland is the part that belongs to the UK and uses the pound sterling.

📝 Essential Points

  • A border crossing can require different travel documents, because rules differ across the island.
  • Driving conventions and currencies differ between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland.
  • The flag’s green part is linked to Irish nationalism and Catholic identity under British rule.
  • The flag’s white area represents reconciliation between green and Protestant communities.
  • The flag’s orange part represents Northern Ireland and Protestant unionism.

💡 Memory Hook

Green = nationalism, orange = unionism, white = reconciliation.

📖 2. Partition, independence, and sovereignty

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Ulster : Ulster is the historical northern region that became central to the independence and partition debates.
  • Home Rule : Home Rule is a concept of local autonomy where local decision-makers manage issues instead of London.
  • Devolved parliament : A devolved parliament is a partial decentralization where some powers remain in London and others are local.
  • Anglo-Irish Treaty : The Anglo-Irish Treaty is a formal agreement negotiated between British and Irish entities around 1921.
  • Irish Free State : The Irish Free State is the early post-independence state linked to the monarch for some years.

📝 Essential Points

  • Ireland faced centuries of British rule from the 12th century until moves toward independence in the 20th century.
  • Partition in 1920 created separate parliaments for a predominantly Protestant northeast and a predominantly Catholic south and northwest.
  • The Treaty was negotiated around 1921 and the Republic was effectively established in 1922 after signing.
  • The Treaty reduced British military involvement and recognized Irish self-governance to a significant extent.
  • Full separation from the Crown occurred in 1949.

💡 Memory Hook

Partition 1920 + Treaty 1921 → Republic 1922.

📖 3. Identity, diaspora, and social progress

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Diaspora : Diaspora is the dispersion or spread of people from their original homeland to other countries.
  • Dual sovereignty : Dual sovereignty is the idea that the island’s people and institutions align under two different sovereign systems.
  • Dual identities : Dual identities are the coexistence of European and British alignments described for the island.

📝 Essential Points

  • Ireland’s global influence includes a notable diaspora with examples given as the United States and Jamaica.
  • Cost of living in the Republic of Ireland is described as high even though it is among the wealthier EU states.
  • Social progress highlighted includes LGBTQ+ equality and marriage equality with expanded access.
  • The source notes reproductive rights as relatively strong compared with some peers.
  • Industry is contrasted as industrial north versus a historical rural south for economic identity.

💡 Memory Hook

One island, two alignments: European and British, reinforced by diaspora links.

📖 4. The Troubles and political violence

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • The Troubles : The Troubles are described through settings, protagonists, and antagonists tied to political violence in Northern Ireland.
  • Self defense : Self defense is treated as one of the pro-arguments that justifies violence in the debate presented.
  • Violence as retaliation : Violence as retaliation is the idea that violent actions can trigger a repeating cycle of revenge.

📝 Essential Points

  • The document frames a moral stance as “Violence is never justified as a way to right wrongs”.
  • The pro list links self defense and overturning a repressive dictatorship to justification claims.
  • The cons list includes retaliation cycles and high civilian casualties as consequences of violence.
  • Belfast is referenced with an example set in 1971 involving a British soldier and hostile Irish civilians.
  • The Troubles are discussed through how to analyze who acts, who opposes, and what story violence depicts.

💡 Memory Hook

Pro (self defense) vs cons (retaliation + civilians).

📖 5. Education in Irish history

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Hedge schools : Hedge schools are described as informal schooling systems used when official schooling was restricted.
  • Penal laws : Penal laws are legal restrictions used to limit Catholic participation in education.
  • Cistercians : The Cistercians are a monastic order described as coming from France and founding monasteries and training.

📝 Essential Points

  • In ancient Ireland, formal schooling was not customary and informal learning included farming and animal taming.
  • Monasteries are described as among the first schools in Ireland where reading and writing occurred, including Bible study.
  • A monastic school in Armagh is linked to the writing of the Book of Armagh on vellum.
  • Penal laws in 1695 included bans preventing Catholics from becoming teachers and making it illegal to send Catholic children to school.
  • Hedge schools are said to focus on the 3 R’s: reading, writing, and arithmetic.

💡 Memory Hook

3 R’s = Hedge schools: reading, writing, arithmetic.

📖 6. Trinity College and Catholic restrictions

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Letter of toleration : A letter of toleration is described as an archbishop-issued permission needed for a Catholic to enroll at Trinity.
  • Embargo on Trinity College : The embargo is the ban described as keeping Catholics out of Trinity College until it was lifted.
  • James Wyse’s safeguards : James Wyse’s safeguards are described as conditions imposed after permission to enroll at Trinity.

📝 Essential Points

  • Trinity is described as not allowing Catholics to go there, with a later discussion referring to a ban lifted in 1971.
  • An archbishop named John Charles McQuaid is cited as overseeing a hostile stance toward Catholic attendance in living memory.
  • A father of James Wyse applied on his behalf for the archbishop’s letter of toleration to allow enrollment.
  • Safeguards for James Wyse included regular religious duties and avoiding societies spreading ideas contrary to Catholic faith.
  • The embargo against Trinity College is stated as not lifted until 1971.

💡 Memory Hook

Permission first: letter of toleration, then strict safeguards, and the embargo ends in 1971.

📖 7. The Gaeltacht and the Irish language

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Gaeltacht : The Gaeltacht is described as areas of Ireland where Irish is the main language between people.
  • Community language : A community language is the shared everyday language of a region, here specifically Irish in the Gaeltacht.

📝 Essential Points

  • The Gaeltacht uses Irish as the daily language between people.
  • Irish-language services named include local services, school, work, and media.
  • The source names counties for Gaeltacht areas, including Migh and Clarrai.
  • There are 6 offshore Gaeltacht islands mentioned in the material.
  • A key pressure on Irish is the movement of significant numbers of non-speakers into Irish-speaking communities.

💡 Memory Hook

Gaeltacht = Irish daily life + services in Irish.

📖 8. Saint Patrick’s Day and national symbols

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Saint Patrick : Saint Patrick is presented as the patron saint of Ireland known for bringing Christianity to the country.
  • National symbol of pride : A national symbol of pride is a marker of Irish identity that the source links to the color green.

📝 Essential Points

  • Saint Patrick’s Day is said to have been first established in 1631 as a modest religious holiday honoring Ireland’s patron saint.
  • It began in the 1920s as a military parade and shifted to a standard procession in the 1970s.
  • The celebration is described as becoming a full-blown party in the mid-1990s.
  • Green is linked to the Great Irish Rebellion of 1641 and later became a national symbol of pride.
  • The source states it became a public holiday in Ireland because it fell during Lent and an earlier reference gives 1904.

💡 Memory Hook

1631 religious start; 1641 green rebellion origin; mid-1990s big-party era.

📅 Key Dates

DateEvent
12th centuryStart of centuries of British rule discussed
1170sNorman invasion of Ireland timeframe stated
1920Partition with separate parliaments discussed
1921Negotiation of the Anglo-Irish Treaty discussed
1922Republic effectively established after Treaty signing
1944Referenced date tied to Trinity-related material
1949Full separation from the Crown occurred
1971Embargo against Trinity College lifted; Belfast example set in 1971
1695Penal laws restricting Catholic teaching and schooling discussed
1698Penal laws discussed as repealed later

📊 Synthesis Tables

Two Irelands and currencies

PlaceSovereigntyCurrency
Republic of IrelandIndependenteuro
Northern IrelandUKpound

⚠️ Common Pitfalls & Confusions

  1. Confusing the UK and Great Britain can make students wrongly count Northern Ireland as part of Great Britain.
  2. Mixing up the flag colors can swap Irish nationalism (green) with Protestant unionism (orange) instead of using white for reconciliation.
  3. Attributing sovereignty incorrectly may lead students to say the Republic uses £ or Northern Ireland uses €.
  4. Blurring partition dates can cause confusion between partition in 1920 and Treaty negotiation around 1921 with Republic establishment in 1922.
  5. Assuming all violence arguments are accepted can mislead because the source presents “violence is never justified” even while listing pro arguments.
  6. Forgetting that Catholic enrollment at Trinity required a letter of toleration and involved ongoing safeguards after permission.
  7. Thinking Gaeltacht means Irish is used only in schools rather than in daily life between people.

✅ Exam Checklist

  1. Identify what Great Britain includes versus what the UK includes using the exact region lists given.
  2. State which parts of the island use € and £ and explain why border crossings may require different travel documents.
  3. Describe partition (1920) in terms of separate parliaments and the religious majorities mentioned.
  4. Explain how the Anglo-Irish Treaty timeline connects negotiation around 1921, Republic establishment in 1922, and reduced British military involvement.
  5. Define diaspora and link it to Ireland’s global influence with the named example countries.
  6. List at least two social progress items highlighted for the Republic of Ireland (as named).
  7. Summarize the source’s stance on political violence and name two cons about consequences.
  8. Explain the role of hedge schools and what the 3 R’s stand for in the material.
  9. State what penal laws in 1695 restricted and how Catholic schooling later changed via repeals and licensing.
  10. Recall what made Trinity College attendance conditional for Catholics and the year the embargo ended.
  11. Define the Gaeltacht and list at least four Irish-language services mentioned there.
  12. Give the number of offshore Gaeltacht islands stated and name at least two counties listed.
  13. Reconstruct Saint Patrick’s Day evolution using at least two of these anchors: 1631, 1920s, 1970s, mid-1990s, and the link of green to 1641.
  14. Name the Irish daily-language setting in the Gaeltacht and one factor that pressures Irish as a community language.

Teste dein Wissen

Teste dein Wissen zu Irish History and Identity Course mit 11 Multiple-Choice-Fragen mit detaillierten Korrekturen.

1. Which place is part of the United Kingdom rather than part of Great Britain?

2. What is the primary geographical distinction of the British Isles?

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Mit Karteikarten lernen

Merke dir die Schlüsselkonzepte von Irish History and Identity Course mit 9 interaktiven Karteikarten.

Ireland, UK, and borders

Different rules and currencies apply across the border.

Great Britain Label

Includes Scotland, England, Wales

Partition and independence

Partition created two parliaments; independence was established in 1922.

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