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The History of Ireland Our Stories The History of Ireland is a Hand-crafted range of Jewellery that portrays the history of Ireland in a series of historical panels evocative of the panels on the Celtic High Crosses which were such a distinctive expression of Irish Christian Art up to medieval times.
What the Symbols mean
Question Mark The Unknown past, Symbolised by the question mark
St Patrick, Irelands patron saint, changed the course of history early in the 5th century when he began his
St Patrick
mission of converting Ireland to Christian religion. St Patrick has a special importance too as the author of the first document known to have been written in Ireland, he thus makes the transition from oral to a written literature.
Round Tower From the 6th century onwards, as the Irish people embraced Christianity, great monastic centres were established all over the country. Each site centred around a Round tower. Probably originally intended as bell towers, they were soon needed for the storage food and as places of refuge in times of invasion and persecution.
The Vikings [
From the 9th to the 11th century the Vikings made repeated attacks around the coast od Ireland. An attempt to gain control of the whole country was defeated by Brian Boru at the battle of Clontarf in 1014 however the Norsemen retained the towns they had established, notably Dublin, Wexford, Waterford Cork and Limerick.

Norman Invaders [
In the 12th Century the invaders were Norman, Flemish and Norman-Welsh, and their language and customs were French.
Their "over-lord" was the French speaking Henry Angevin, who had, among his many titles, the important one of Henry II of England. This never became a 'Norman Conquest' but was used later as an excuse by the tudor monarchs of England in their attempts at conquest.
Silver History of Ireland Booch
Beautiful Silver Brooch Click here For more
[
The first Dublin Castle was built on the order of King ("for the custody of our treasure ... for the administration of justice and if need be the defence of the city") between 1204 and 1224. It became the centre of Anglo Norman, and later, English power, and a symbol that increasingly provoked hostility of the native Irish. Nowadays it is the scene of important state and international functions.
Dublin Castle
William of Orange [
Protestant King William defeated his father in law, Catholic James II at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690. In Europe this was seen as an important setback to French King Louis XIV and in England it meant the end of the Stuart Monarchy. In Ireland the victory assured a Protestant ascendancy which would last for more than two centuries and is the cornerstone of the Irish problem today.
The act of Union [[[{
In 1800 the Irish Parliament was abolished and direct rule from London began. All Ireland had benefited from a modest prosperoty under Grattan's Paliament and nobody wanted union. It was forced through by bribery on a grand scale, because England feared French Invasion through Ireland. The cross of St. Patrick was added to the Union Jack.
The Potato Blight [{
The Potato crops failed repeatedly during the the 1840's causing widespread famine. The London government failed to alleviate the suffering, resulting in great bitterness towards the English nation and the ruling landlord classes. The famine was a watershed for the Irish nation, cahnging forever it's outlook and dispersing a large proporiton of the popultion around the world.
Emmigration {
Before the Famine the Irish had been reluctant to emigrate, in the decades after the famine Irish emigration figures rose dramatically . Most went to the USA, some to Canada, and the bitterness felt by the Irish in America as well as those left at home had much to do with the subsequent hostile relations between England and Ireland.
The Easter Rising
The Republic of Ireland was proclaimed from the General Post Office at the start of the Easter Rising, in 1916. The building was almost destroyed by fire and the rising was militarily a failure. The subsequent execution of the leaders of the Rising provoked great anger, the Easter Rising thus triggered the War of Independence which eventually brought about the setting up of the modern Irish State.
By the treaty of 1921, which ended the war of Independence, six of the counties of Ulster were separated from the rest of Ireland and became a province of the UK under the title 'Northern Ireland'. The 26 counties became 'the Irish Free State' and in 1948 the Irish Free State became the 'Republic of Ireland'.
The Republic of Ireland
Ireland quo vadis?...
The question mark symbolises the unknown future.
Ireland quo Vadis?
Click here to return to the History of Ireland Collection.



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