1916 in Ireland

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Template:Short description Template:Use Hiberno-English Template:Use dmy dates Template:YearInIrelandNav Events from the year 1916 in Ireland.

Events

File:Birth of the Irish Republic.jpg
Birth of the Irish Republic by Walter Paget: the General Post Office during the Easter Rising.
File:Eamon de valera kilmainham cell.JPG
Kilmainham Gaol cell of Éamon de Valera.
  • 17 May – Thomas O'Dwyer, Roman Catholic Bishop of Limerick, refused a request to discipline two of his curates who expressed republican sympathies. He reminded General Maxwell that he had shown no mercy to those who surrendered.[2]
  • 21 May – Daylight saving time began for the first time throughout the United Kingdom as people put their clocks forward one hour. The purpose was to reduce the number of evening hours, to save fuel.
  • 26 June – Roger Casement went on trial at the Royal Courts of Justice on a charge of treason. He had been stripped of his knighthood.
  • 1 July – The Battle of the Somme began in France. The 36th Ulster Division, which contained many Ulster Volunteers, lost 5,500 men in the first two days.[3]
  • 23 July – Thousands attended an open-air meeting at the Phoenix Park in Dublin to discuss the British government's Irish partition proposals. It was the first open-air meeting since martial law was proclaimed.
  • 3 August – Roger Casement was hanged for high treason at Pentonville Prison in London.
  • 19 August – The Irish Times in Dublin issued a 264-page handbook detailing the events of the Easter Rising; a second edition was published by the end of the year.[4]
  • 1 October – Time in Ireland: Dublin Mean Time (25 minutes behind Greenwich Mean Time) was made the same as British time from 2Template:Nbspam today under the terms of the Time (Ireland) Act, 1916.
  • 29 October – John Redmond demanded the abolition of martial law, the release of suspected persons, and that Irish prisoners be treated as political prisoners.
  • 3 November – Railway steamer Template:SS and coalship SS Retriever collided and sank in Carlingford Lough, County Down, with the loss of 94 lives.[5]
  • 5 November – Honan Chapel, Cork, a product of the Irish Arts and Crafts movement, was dedicated.
  • 18 November – The Battle of the Somme ended after 141 days, stopped by foul weather and with thousands of Irish casualties.
  • 21 December – In the British House of Commons, it was announced that all Irish prisoners were to be released.
  • 25 December – The last group of Irish prisoners, 460 men from Reading Gaol, arrived in Dublin. Seán T. O'Kelly and Arthur Griffith were among those released.

Arts and literature

Sport

Association football

Gaelic games

Births

Deaths

References

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  4. Sinn Fein Rebellion Handbook, Easter, 1916: a complete and connected narrative of the Rising, with detailed accounts of the fighting at all points in Dublin and in the country.
  5. Tragedy in Carlingford Lough.
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