The Church of Ireland and the Third Home Rule Bill

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The third Home Rule crisis dominated Irish politics between 1910 and 1918. General elections bookend a period coloured by hugely dramatic and controversial events that still resonate today, such as Ulster Day, the Larne Gun-running, the Easter Rising, the Somme offensive and the Conscription Crisis. The Church of Ireland, as the largest Protestant church in Ireland, played a key role in many of these events. Scholes provides the first comprehensive study of the Church in this period. He explores in detail the complex relationship between the Church of Ireland and Irish Unionism at an official and popular level, the Church's leading role in Ulster resistance to Home Rule, her reaction to the outbreak of the Great War and the Easter Rising, and the difficulties posed to the Church by the possibility of partition. Andrew Scholes demonstrates that the Church of Ireland played a more prominent role in Ulster resistance than previous historians have allowed. He suggests that the Church of Ireland's political influence was tied to the unity of Irish Unionism, and was weakened when the dispute over partition within Irish Unionism was replicated within the Church. Previously neglected sources are used to build a narrative that takes account of the actions of Archbishops Crozier and Bernard and Bishop D'arcy, as well as the importance of the Church's General and Diocesan synod meetings. This high political point of view is complemented by a 'bottom up' study of local clergy and laity, through an examination of parochial records. The book is essential reading for historians of the third Home Rule crisis and their students, and will interest any general reader interested in the history of Ireland and the role of religion in this period.

Author(s): Andrew Scholes
Series: New Directions in Irish History Series
Publisher: Irish Academic Press
Year: 2009

Language: English
Pages: 288
City: Dublin