Jff
I believe it is unclear how much support Scottish independence has. Whether the referendum produces a yes vote or not, Scotland will retain the monarchy.
Edinburgh has never ceased to be its capital, by the way. It is there that the Parliament is situated, and HM The Queen spends a couple of weeks at her formal residence there - The Palace of Holyroodhouse - each year, holding investitures, garden partuies etc. (That's distinct from her annual summer holiday at Balmoral - a private residence.)
You are quite correct about Eire -I simplified, I'll admit.
but split the country in half to protect the Protestant minority in Northern Ireland
I would quibble slightly on that point.
Six counties - a third of the island remained british. But there was little choice.
In 1914, just before the First World war broke out there was a mutiny at the Curragh Barracks outside Dublin. Officers in the British Army, right up to the most senior, refused to impose a settlement on the north. The war intervened, but then there was a vicious civil war from 1919 to 1922ish. I don't think incorporating "Ulster" into the Republic would have worked at all.
Has there not been some suggestion recently that de Valera was a British agent? I seem to recall a book.
Phil
I believe it is unclear how much support Scottish independence has. Whether the referendum produces a yes vote or not, Scotland will retain the monarchy.
Edinburgh has never ceased to be its capital, by the way. It is there that the Parliament is situated, and HM The Queen spends a couple of weeks at her formal residence there - The Palace of Holyroodhouse - each year, holding investitures, garden partuies etc. (That's distinct from her annual summer holiday at Balmoral - a private residence.)
You are quite correct about Eire -I simplified, I'll admit.
but split the country in half to protect the Protestant minority in Northern Ireland
I would quibble slightly on that point.
Six counties - a third of the island remained british. But there was little choice.
In 1914, just before the First World war broke out there was a mutiny at the Curragh Barracks outside Dublin. Officers in the British Army, right up to the most senior, refused to impose a settlement on the north. The war intervened, but then there was a vicious civil war from 1919 to 1922ish. I don't think incorporating "Ulster" into the Republic would have worked at all.
Has there not been some suggestion recently that de Valera was a British agent? I seem to recall a book.
Phil
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