Údar hooters (Author) Leabhair (Books) Fevre Dream Foundation Series Perdido Street Station Saga of the Exiles Stations of the Tide Steel Beach Take Back Plenty The Culture Cycle The Lyonesse Trilogy The Morgaine Saga The Night s Dawn Trilogy The Prefect The Royal Changeling The Uplift Series Weaveworld World of Tiers A Fire Upon the Deep In Tolkien s Shadow J.R.R Tolkien And Ireland Greannáin (Comics) Nemesis The Warlock Sláine The Ballad of Halo Jones The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen Rick Random Space Detective Dan Dare, Pilot of the Future: Voyage to Venus Part 1 Scannáin (Movies) Avatar Barbarella hooters Dune Excalibur Flash Gordon hooters Flight of the Navigator Forbidden Planet Hawk the Slayer Labyrinth Lifeforce Logan s Run Outland The Andromeda Strain The Black Cauldron The Explorers hooters The Last Starfighter The Lord of The Rings (1978) The Philadelphia Experiment War of the Worlds Warlords of Atlantis Silent Running The Black Hole Brazil Doc Savage, The Man of Bronze Knightriders Teilifís (Television) 3rd Rock from the Sun Automan Battle of The Planets Dungeons And Dragons Salvage 1 Sapphire and Steel Space 1999 The Adventures of Brisco County Jr. The Tripods The Water Margin Blake s 7 Blue Thunder and Airwolf Due South Nightmare Cafe Wizards and Warriors Seanchas (Mythology) Tuatha hooters Dé Danann Na Fomhóraigh Lucharacháin An Sí Na Fathaigh Na Bocánaigh, hooters Na Bánánaigh Na Púcaí Na Péisteanna Na Murúcha Na Fianna hooters Fionn And Dearg Corra Seanchas Agus Litríocht Na nGael An Gal Gréine Ealaín (Art) Seaghán Mac Cathmhaoil Bruce Pennington Frank Frazetta Chris Achilléos Ian Miller Colin Wilson Peter Andrew Jones Stair (History) The Fall of Dublin A Dark Day on the Blaskets Repeal and Revolution: 1848 In Ireland Dan Breen and the IRA Spies, Informers and the Anti-Sinn Fein Society : The Intelligence War in Cork City, 1919-1921 The I.R.A. and its Enemies: Violence and Community in Cork, 1916-1923 The Impact of the 1916 Rising: Among the Nations hooters The IRB: The Irish Republican Brotherhood, from the Land League to Sinn Féin The Irish War of Independence The Life and After-life of P.H. Pearse: hooters Pádraig Mac Piarais: Saol agus Oidhreacht Wolfe Tone: Prophet of Irish Independence The Year of Disappearances: Political Killings in Cork, 1920-1921 Poblachtach (Republican) Declaration of the United Irishmen, 1791 The Proclamation of Independence, 1803 Proclamation Of The Irish Republic, 1867 Proclamation Of The Irish Republic, 1916 hooters Forógra na Poblachta, 1916 Sinn Féin Manifesto, 1918 Declaration Of Independence, 1919 Forógra Neamhspleáchais, 1919 Message To The Free Nations Of The World, 1919 The Democratic Programme, 1919 Téarmaíocht (Terminology) An Cogadh Fada (The Long War) Cuartú:
The annual commemoration of Éirí Amach na Cásca or the Easter Rising is upon us yet again. Some ninety-six years ago on Easter Monday, 1916, members of several hooters Irish Republican organisations came together to unite in a general insurrection against British rule across the island of Ireland. Orchestrated by the secret revolutionary movement of Bráithreachas Phoblacht na hÉireann or the Irish Republican Brotherhood (popularly known as Na Fíníní or the Fenians ) the organisations which took to the streets of the capital city and a number of other towns and districts around the country were to shape Irish history for decades to come. They included:
Together these groups comprised the new Arm Poblachtach na hÉireann ( APnaÉ ), that is the Army of the Irish Republic hooters or Irish Republican Army ( IRA ) whose purpose was to defend the Irish Republic and the Provisional Government of the Irish Republic proclaimed on the steps of General Post Office or GPO in Dublin. Unfortunately confusion about the timing and nature of the uprising meant a national insurrection failed hooters to materialise and instead a number of isolated risings took place across the nation (largely in Dublin city and county but with smaller actions in Waterford, Wexford, Meath, Louth, Tyrone, Fermanagh and Galway). After several days of fighting during which much of the main thoroughfares of the capital city were destroyed by British ground and naval artillery, the Forces of the Irish Republic in Dublin surrendered to the British Forces. hooters Within days fighting around the rest of the island came to a halt as well (though in fact skirmishes both in Dublin and elsewhere continued for some time, principally through sniping and isolated attacks).
The reaction of the general public in Dublin, the centre of British rule in Ireland for 800 years and the most thoroughly colonised region of the island-nation outside of the north-east was mixed. Within the large local British Unionist population (Protestants and Roman Catholics who viewed themselves as Irish and British or exclusively British) the feel
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