Mostly taken from my
“Timeline of the Pretanic Isles, in context”, this focuses on the history of
republicanism in Ireland and outside events immediately affecting that
direction of that.
UNITED IRISH
(when Irish
republicanism was Protestant)
1778 –
Establishment of the first Irish Volunteers, which remain as a force until
1793; in the beginning the members are almost entirely Protestant and
Dissenter, with Protestant Ascendancy leaders, but gradually Catholics are
admitted as well.
1782 – Henry
Grattan persuades the London Parliament to grant the Dublin Parliament greater
powers.
1784-1786 – Third
wave of Whiteboy activity in Ireland.
1784 –
Organization of the Catholic Defenders and of the Protestant (Anglican) Peep
O'Day Boys in Co. Armagh.
1789-1794 –
French Revolution.
1791 –
Publication of Thomas Paine’s Rights of
Man.
Society of United Irishmen founded by Theobald Wolfe Tone
and Thomas Russell, both from the Established Church of Ireland, at the
invitation of a group of Belfast Presbyterians.
1792 – Two groups
calling themselves the Friends of the People Society are organized in London
and in Edinburgh respectively, the latter by Thomas Muir, under the inspiration
of Thomas Paine.
1795 – United
Irishmen change their goal to complete sovereignty.
The Peep O’Day Boys reorganize as the Orange Order to oppose
both the United Irishmen and the proposed Union of the Dublin Parliament with
that of London; membership is limited to members of the Church of Ireland.
1797 –
Organization of the United Englishmen.
Rising of the United Scotsmen.
1798 – First
Rising of the United Irishmen, under Tone.
It includes the short period of the Republic of Connacht. After the defeat of the main forces, those
left continue as guerrillas in some places until 1804.
1800 – United
Irish Rising in Newfoundland.
1801 – Act of
Union, uniting the Parliaments of Great Britain and Ireland. The realm is now known as the United Kingdom
of Great Britain and Ireland.
1803 – Second
Rising of the United Irishmen, under Robert Emmet.
YOUNG IRELAND
1817 – The Ribbon
Society first makes its presence felt in the countryside of Ireland. Their activities continue past mid-century.
1822 – The Royal
Irish Constabulary (RIC) is established.
1823 – Daniel
O’Connell establishes the Catholic Association in Dublin for emancipation from
the Penal Laws.
1829 – The Catholic
Relief Act passed this year (there have been others in previous years) removes
most of the remaining Penal Laws.
1830-1836 – The
Tithe War in Ireland against the Church of Ireland, primarily supported by the
Ribbonmen.
1834 – Presbyterians,
Episcopalians, and other “Dissenters” first admitted to the Orange Order.
1836 –
Organization in New York City of the Ancient Order of Hibernians (AOH), which
later spreads to Ireland.
1840 - O'Connell
founds the Repeal Association with an aim toward repealing the Union of
Parliaments of 1800.
1841 – Repeal of the
Union Movement is formed; Young Ireland Movement is later formed for more
radical goals and actions.
1845-1849 – The Great
Irish Potato Famine. Due to a blight on
the potato crop, the staple of the Irish diet, between 1 1/2to 2 million Irish
starve to death even while enough food to feed the entire country twice over is
exported from the country by the corporate interests which control the island’s
trade, with another 1 million emigrating to other countries.
1847 – The Irish
Confederation is organized, with Young Irelanders as its backbone.
1848 – Young
Ireland Rising, part of the Springtime of Nations, the revolts in France, Austria, Hungary, Bohemia, Venetia, Italy, Sicily, Rome, Baden-Wurttemberg, Bavaria, Saxony, Prussia, Denmark, Poland, Lithuania, Schleswig, Wallachia, Moldavia, and Rumania.
FENIANS
1858 – Jeremiah
O'Donovan Rossa begins organizing the Phoenix National and Literary Society,
which later merges with the IRB.
The Fenian Brotherhood (FB) is organized in America and the Irish
Republican Brotherhood (IRB) in Ireland.
1862-1865 – The
American Civil War. Immigrant Irish,
many of them republican, fight on both sides of the war, mostly for the Union.
1866 – FB splits into the O'Mahony (or Presidential) Wing and the Roberts (or Senate) Wing. The O'Mahony Wing is later known as the Savage Wing.
1866-1871 – The Fenian Raids into Canada by the U.S.-based and FB-sponsored Irish Republican Army. The first of these in 1866 led directly to the formation of the Dominion of Canada, uniting the previously independent colonies of British North America.
1871 – The Church
of Ireland is at last disestablished by Parliament.
1873 – Home Rule
League founded.
1876 – The CnG,
the IRB, and the Australian Irish community establish the Revolutionary
Directory, with three representatives each from the CnG and IRB, plus one from
the Australian Irish expat community.
1879 – Irish Land
League founded.
1880 – Fenian
Brotherhood finally collapses.
1882 – Irish
National League reorganized as the Irish Parliamentary Party (IPP); Irish
Unionist Party founded in opposition.
1882-1883 –
Campaign of the Invincibles, led by O’Donovan Rossa.
1884 – Gaelic
Athletic Association (GAA) founded.
1889 – The
Socialist International is organized in Paris.
1892 – John
Redmond assumes leadership of IPP.
1893 – Gaelic
League founded by Douglas Hyde, a Protestant from County Roscommon.
1896 – Irish
Socialist Republican Party founded by James Connolly.
1899-1902 –
Nationalist and Unionist Irish and Irish-Americans fight on the side of the
Afrikaaners against the British during the Second Boer War in the Irish Transvaal Brigade and the Second Irish Brigade.
1900 – Maud Gonne organizes Inginidhe na hEireann to promote Irish culture and nationalism among Irish women.
1901 – The United
Irish League of America is founded to support the goals of the Irish
Parliamentary Party.
1905 – Sinn Fein Party
founded. Ulster Unionist Council
founded.
1907 – The Ancient Order of
Hibernians splits between the AOH (Irish-American Alliance), mostly in America
and tied to Clan-na-Gael (and known simply as AOH-American Alliance in Ireland),
and AOH (Board of Erin), mostly in Ireland, which came to support the IPP.
IRISH VOLUNTEERS
1908 – Irish
Transport and General Workers Union (ITGWU) founded by James Larkin.
1909 – Na Fianna
Eireann founded by Constance Markievicz and Bulmer Hobson to promote nationalist ideals among boys and adolescent young men.
James Larkin founds the Irish Transport and General Workers Union (ITGWU).
1910 – Clan na Gael Girl Guides founded by the Kelly sisters May and Elizabeth with the same purpose for girls and adolescent young women as Na Fianna Eireann for boys.
1911 – Delia Larkin, her brother James, and Rose Hackett organize the Irish Women Workers Union (IWWU) in Dublin.
1913 – Ulster Volunteers founded by Edward Carson and James Craig
under the Ulster Unionist Council. Irish
National Volunteer Corps (INVC) is founded by John Redmond in response to
Carson and Craig. Irish Citizen Army
founded by Jack White, James Larkin, and James Connolly. The Hibernian Rifles are also started by J.
J. Scollan of AOH (AA) this year.
1914-1919 - The
Great War, also known as the First World War.
1914 – INVC splits into the “National
Volunteers” under Redmond, who supports Great Britain during WWI, and the “Irish
Volunteers” under Eoin MacNeill. Cumann
na mBan is founded by Kathleen Clarke, Shora MacMahon, and others, with Jennie Wyse-Power
is elected President; two years later CMB officially becomes the women’s
auxilary of the Irish Volunteers. The Citizen Army Scouts youth adjunct to ICA is organized by Seamus MacGowan based on his group the Irish National Guard, a breakaway from the Fianna Eireann, with help from Constance Markievicz and Michael Mallin.
1916 – The Easter
Rising by the Provisional Government of the Irish Republic (“Saorstat Eireann”)
and the Army of the Irish Republic composed of the Irish Volunteers, Irish
Citizen Army, Fianna Eireann, Cumann na Bann, AOH’s Hibernian Rifles, and a single company (Craughwell, Galway) of the National Volunteers. Though most of the major action takes place in the City of Dublin, provincial units rise in Cos. Louth, Meath, Wexford, Galway, and Cork, with members of Cumann na mBan providing support in every area of operation and every post or garrison inside Dublin City.
After the Rising, the Friends of Irish Freedom is founded in
America to support the republican prisoners-of-war from the Easter Rising in
the aftermath of the sixteen executions which follow.
1919-1922 – Irish
War of Independence, with the Irish republican side directed mostly from behind
the scenes by the IRB under its President, Michael Collins.
1919 – Irish Volunteers
officially become the Irish Republican Army, and includes a Scottish Brigade.
1920 – The RIC
organizes the RIC Reserve Force (Black and Tans), the Auxiliary Division
(Auxies), and the Ulster Special Constabulary (A-, B-, and C- Specials, USC) to
provide support against the IRA.
1921 –
Anglo-Irish Treaty; Partition of Ireland into Northern Ireland and the Irish
Free State or “Saorstat Eireann”. The
Supreme Council of the IRB, with one exception (Liam Lynch) votes to accept the
Treaty. The CnG does likewise; however,
it splits into a Devoy wing and a McGarrity wing called Clan na Gael
Reorganized.
1922-1923 – Irish
Civil War.
1922 – The IRA
divides into the Free Staters and the Irregulars, both using the names IRA
until the Free State forces officially change their English designation to
Irish Defense Forces; however, both continue using the Irish designation
Óglaigh na hÉireann. Redmondites
returning from service with the British army on the continent are recruited en
masse into the IDF. The Royal Ulster
Constabulary is established in Northeast Ulster. Michael Collins dies in a firefight in County
Cork.
IRISH REPUBLICAN ARMY
1923 – The IRA
reorganizes itself as a clandestine organization, allied with Sinn Fein as its
political arm. Pro-Treaty former members
of Sinn Fein under William Cosgrave form the Cumann na nGaedheal.
1924 – The IRB
votes to dissolve, after which the Devoy wing of CnG does likewise; the
McGarrity wing, however, continues on as the sole CnG.
1925 – The IRA
severs its relationship with Sinn Fein.
1926 – CnG
formally associates with the reorganized IRA.
Eamon DeValera establishes the Fianna Fail to contest
elections, which later separates completely from the IRA. The A- and C-Specials of the USC are
disbanded.
1927 – The London
government changes its name to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern
Ireland.
1929 - Roddy Connolly organizes the Workers Defense Corps, which is proscribed two years later.
1931 – Peadar
O’Donnell and others organize Saor Eire as a left-leaning nationalist political
party, but the effort fizzles.
1932 – Hundreds
of working-class Catholics and Protestants across Northeast Ulster unite to
form the Outdoor Workers Relief Committee; in spite of massive assaults by the
B-Specials on Shankhill Road and Falls Road, the resulting strike is successful
and the movement spreads. Richard
Mulcahy and others form the Army Comrades Association, made up of former IRA
men who supported the Treaty side during the Civil War, to provide support for
former Free State soldiers and to protect Cumann meetings from attack by
members of the IRA.
1933 – Eoin
O'Duffy is expelled from his post as head of the Garda Síochána, then takes
over the ACA and changes its name to the National Guard (aka Blueshirts). When that is banned a few months later, the
former ACA members, Cumann na nGaedheal, and National Centre Party band
together to form Fine Gael.
1934 – O’Donnell
and his allies reorganize under the name Republican Congress and are expelled
from the IRA, which splits down the middle.
The RC eventually gains adherents even in the Shankill section of
Belfast, and includes a delegation from Shankhill calling themselves the James Connolly
Club in its march at Bodenstown this year, but collapses two years later due to
lack of funds.
The RC included as its armed wing a revived Irish Citizen Army, which split into two factions the following year, both of which faded with the parent organization.
1935 – O’Duffy
loses control of Fine Gael and withdraws from it, founding the National
Corporate Party (aka Greenshirts).
1936-1939 –
Republicans and loyalists fight in the Spanish Civil War in the same unit of
the International Brigades (many in the Connolly Column), while Blueshirts and
Greenshirts under O’Duffy fight on the side of Franco’s Nationalists.
1939-1945 – The Second
World War.
1939-1940 – IRA’s
Sabotage Campaign in England.
1942-1944 – IRA’s
Northern Campaign in the Six Counties.
1946 – On the
heels of the Second World War, IRA leader Sean MacBride organizes the leftist
republican Clann na Poblachta.
1949 - Brendan O'Boyle, formerly of IRA's Northern Command, organizes Laochra Uladh, which ended with his death in action in 1955.
1950 – An Irish
Republican Brotherhood is formed in Dublin and disbanded by Cathal Goulding the
next year.
1951 – Liam Kelly
organizes Saor Uladh after being expelled from the IRA. Raymond O'Cianain's Arm na Saoirse is absorbed into IRA.
1953 – Kelly
establishes Fianna Uladh as the political wing of Saor Uladh.
1955 - The Christle Groups forms around its eponymous founder, Joe Christle, after he is expelled from IRA. The group allies with Saor Uladh.
BORDER CAMPAIGN
1956-1962 – IRA’s
Border Campaign.
1956 – IRA
publishes its first Green Book, in which individual members are referred to as
Guerrillas.
Ian Paisley forms the Ulster Protection Action (UPA).
1957 – Richard
Behel founds the Saor Eire Action Group.
1966 – Gusty Spence establishes the (new) Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF).
UPA (1956) becomes the Protestant Unionist Party (PUP).
Ian Paisley forms the Ulster Constitution Defense Committee (UCDC) and its paramilitary arm, the Ulster Protestant Volunteers (UPV). The UPV dissolves in 1969.
William McGrath organizes the loyalist paramilitary Tara.
1967 – Northern
Ireland Civil Rights Association is organized.
Saor Eire, with a Trotskyite orientation, is organized by
former IRA members headed by ex-Dublin Brigade OC Frank Keane. Not the same as Saor Eire Action Group.
THE TROUBLES
1969-1998 – The
Troubles.
1969 – The Battle
of the Bogside.
The IRA splits into two, the Official Irish Republican Army (OIRA) and the Reorganized IRA following the “Provisional” Army Council (later called
the Provisional IRA or PIRA).
Foundation in the USA of the Irish Northern Aid Committee
(NORAID) by Martin Galvin.
John McKeague forms the Shankill Defense Association (SDA), the major forerunner to the later UDA.
1970 – A split in
republican ranks over policy in Northeast Ulster and the turn toward Marxism-Leninism
results in an Official Sinn Fein and a Provisional Sinn Fein.
The Ulster Constabulary's B-Specials are dissolved and most former members join the new
Ulster Defense Regiment (UDR).
George Green organizes the Ulster Special Constabulary Association (USCA) as a pressure group then paramilitary from former members of the B-Specials. It goes defunct by 1977.
The small loyalist paramilitary Protestant Task Force (PTF) forms. It disbands in 1976.
1971 – The
Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) succeeds the PUP (1966).
Beginning of internment of both republican and loyalist
suspects in the cages at Long Kesh.
Provos wishing to carry out sectarian attacks against Protestants organize the Red Flag Avengers (RFA) in Belfast, and remain active thru 1976.
The Ulster Defense Association (UDA) forms as an umbrella for groups such as the SDA, with the Ulster Freedom Fighters (UFF) as its paramilitary arm.
Billy Hull organizes the Loyalist Association of Workers (LAW) to work within the trade unions. It ceases to exist in mid-1974.
The Irish Citizen Army (2) forms in Belfast and Newry, but dies out by the mid-1970s.
1972 – The 1st Battalion of the Royal Parachute Regiment fires on a NICRA civil rights march
in the city of Derry, killing fourteen and wounding many others, an incident
now known as Bloody Sunday.
John McKeague organizes the (new) Red Hand Commando (RHC), largely made up of personnel from his former group, the SDA. Later in the year, it affiliates with UVF but remains a separate organization.
The Army Council of the Official IRA declares a unilateral ceasefire.
Tinnelly's Brigade forms in south Co. Down out of OIRA volunteers opposed to the Official Army Council's ceasefire. It remains active for two years.
Bob Marno organizes the Orange Volunteers (OV1) paramilitary vigilante group from militant members of the Orange Order. It is defunct by the 1980s.
William Craig forms the Vanguard Unionist Progressive Party (VUPP), or Ulster Vanguard, from dissidents of the UUP, with a paramilitary wing, the Ulster Volunteer Service Corps (UVSC).
Peter Brush organizes the loyalist paramilitary Down Orange Welfare (DOW), but it is defunct by the end of 1977.
1973 – Harry West organizes the United Ulster Unionist Council (UUUC), with the UUP, DUP, and VUUP as the main member organizations, with several others such as the LAW and the DOW.
The Ulster Army Council (UAC) forms as an umbrella for loyalist paramilitaries. Its members are UDA, UVF, RHC, UVSC, OV (1), DOW, and USCA.
The Ulster Citizen Army (UCA) forms from members of UDA who want to pursue a less anti-Catholic and more left wing loyalist ideology, but it doesn't last the year.
The Sunningdale Agreement attempts to establish a power-sharing Northern Ireland Executive and a cross-border Council of Ireland. It is supported by the SDLP, the UUP, and the Alliance Party. It is opposed by republicans, loyalists, and all other unionists.
1973-1978 –
Activities of the South Derry Independent Republican Unit, which includes Francie
Hughes, Dominic McGlinchey, Thomas McElwee, Joe Sheridan, Ian Milne, et al.
1974 – Three
simultaneous bombings in Dublin and another in Monaghan one and a half hours
later, the work of the UVF, kill 33 and wound over 300.
Seamus Costello organizes the Irish Republican Socialist
Party (IRSP) and the Irish National Liberation Army (INLA).
Harry Murray forms the Ulster Workers Council (UWC) to replace the defunct LAW.
The Ulster Workers Council Strike destroys the Sunningdale
Agreement.
In the wake of the strike, the UAC reconstitutes as the Ulster Loyalist Central Co-ordinating Committee (ULCCC). It includes the members of its predecessor and later the USC (1977).
The UVSC collapses later in the year.
The Armagh People's Republican Army (APRA) is founded in Co. Armagh and remains active into 1977.
1975 – A group
from Saor Eire breaks away, calling itself Saoirse Eire, when the former
decides to dissolve itself.
An independent
republican outfit called the South Armagh Republican Action Force (SARAF) becomes
active and remains so for the next three years.
Near the end of the year, secret talks take place between
the ULCCC and the PIRA Army Council
through intermediaries Desmond Boal and Sean MacBride, with the top leaders on
both sides fully informed; the talks eventually reach an agreement to a mutual
ceasefire and joint demand for British Army withdrawal, but are scuttled by a
second workers strike orchestrated by Paisley for unrelated reasons.
1976 – Under
recommendation from the Gardiner Committee, British Secretary of State Merlyn
Rees orders an end to Special Category Status for political prisoners in
Northern Ireland beginning 1 March. Kieran Nugent, the first prisoner to arrive
in the H-Blocks at Long Kesh under the new rules, refuses to wear prison
clothes, beginning the blanket protest, which many loyalists join.
1977 – Official
Sinn Fein becomes Sinn Fein-The Workers’ Party.
The Provos issue a new Green
Book which refers to members as Volunteers, revives the term Oglaigh na
h’Eireann, and reorganizes the order of battle from brigades and battalions
into smaller Active Service Units.
Frank McManus, Fergus MacAteer, and John Turnley establish the Irish Independence Party (IIP), which is largely a merger of the Unity Party and the Nationalist Party.
The United Unionist Action Council (UUAC), a subcommittee of the UUUC (1973), establishes the loyalist vigilante group Ulster Service Corps (USC).
1978 – Beginning
of the no wash protest and later the dirty protest in the republican wing of
the H-blocks and of Armagh Women's Prison, where many of the inmates have
already joined the blanket protest.
VUPP (1972) dissolves.
UDA chairman Andy Trie initiates the organization of the New Ulster Political Research Group (NUPRG), with Glen Barr as chairman.
1979 –
Progressive Unionist Party (PUP) is organized in the Shankill as the political arm of
the UVF.
1981 – The Hunger
Strike for political status takes places in the republican wing of the H-blocks
at Long Kesh, with seven PIRA and three INLA prisoners dying.
The Ulster Democratic Party (UDP) is organized as the political
arm of the UDA/UFF.
The loyalist paramilitary Tara collapses at the end of the year due to seizure of its major arms cache and involvement of its leader, McGrath, in the Kincora scandal.
1982 – SF-WP
becomes simply the Workers Party.
1983 - The Catholic Reaction Force of INLA dissidents forms in Co. Armagh.
1986 – The Gerry
Adams wing of the Provisional Republican Movement launches a successful coup
d’etat against the national leadership, which then forms Republican Sinn Fein (RSF) and the Continuity IRA (CIRA) to oppose Adams’ abandonment of abstentionism.
The DUP founds Ulster Resistance in opposition to the
Anglo-Irish agreement.
Persons expelled or forced to resign from the INLA form the
Irish People’s Liberation Organization (IPLO), which serves mostly as a vehicle for
criminal profit.
About a hundred Provo prisoners in the H-Blocks resign in protest over the movement's abandonment of abstentionism, and later in the year many of these form the League of Communist Republicans (LCR), which last about five years.
The Ulster Movement for Self-Determination forms, calling for an independent Ulster including the Six Counties of Northern Ireland, plus Cos. Donegal, Monaghan, and Cavan in the Republic of Ireland. It dissolves into the UIC in 1988.
1987 - Formation
in America of the National Irish Freedom Committee (NIFC) by Michael Flannery, George
Harrison, Joe Stynes and others, to provide American support for RSF.
Dessie O'Hare forms the Irish Revolutionary Brigade (IRB) as a splinter from INLA.
Revolutionary Struggle, a small leftist republican outfit with paramilitary capability, forms in Dublin.
1988 – The Ulster Independence Movement (UIM) forms in Northern Ireland, initially as the Ulster Independence Committee (UIC) until 1994.
1989 - At the end of the year, the Irish National Congress (INC) is organized to commemorate the Easter Rising, but after that continues as a non-party, non-sectarian vehicle to campaign on various left republican issues.
1991 – The Combined Loyalist Military Command (CLMC) forms as an umbrella group for UDA, UVF, and RHC. Its governing board includes liaisons from those paramilitaries as well as from UDP and PUP.
1992 – The UDR is
amalgamated with the Royal Irish Regiment. The IPLO is wiped out by PIRA after
a number of clashes.
1994 - The Irish National Republican Army organizes this year, but later dissolves to join the CIRA.
The CLMC,
led by Gusty Spence, announces a cease-fire.
1996 – Billy
Wright secedes from UVF and organizes the Loyalist Volunteer Force (LVF).
Frank Curry, expelled from the RHC, and other dissidents loyalists begin operating under the name Red Hand Defenders (RHD), but they don't really organize until an influx of dissident loyalists from UDA and LVF opposed to the GFA join them in 1998.
1997 – A group of
OIRA members secede to form the Official Republican Movement over the direction
the Workers’ Party is then taking.
THE GFA AND AFTER
1998 – The PIRA
and the INLA both announce cease-fires, ending The Troubles.
The Good Friday Agreement (GFA) is signed by the United
Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland, Sinn Fein, UUP, DUP, SDLP, Alliance, PUP,
UDP, the Labour Coalition (in Northern Ireland), and the cross-community
Northern Ireland Women’s Coalition.
The Real IRA (RIRA) forms under Michael McKevitt from PIRA dissidents opposed to the GFA, with an allied political arm, 32 County Sovereignty Movement (32CSM).
The CnG splits into Republican CnG and Provisional CnG factions; eventually both fade into virtual nonexistence. A group calling itself by the old name Fenian Brotherhood later organizes hoping to replace the two dying organizations, but its efforts never amount to much.
Dissident loyalists opposed to the GFA from the Orange Volunteers. Members are believed to come from UDA, LVF, and the Orange Order.
Formation in America of the Irish Freedom Committee (IFC), based
on the former Chicago camp of NIFC, to support the 32CSM.
A bombing carried out by RIRA in Omagh, Co. Tyrone, kills
29, including one woman pregnant with twins, and injures 220.
2000 – The UIM (1988) dissolves, with most members joining David Kerr's new Ulster Third Way (U3W), publisher of Ulster Nation. U3W, loosely affiliated with the neo-Confederate movement League of the South in the U.S., dissolves in 2005.
2001 – The RUC is incorporated into the Police Service of Northern
Ireland (PSNI).
The magazine The
Blanket is founded in Belfast to provide alternative views from across the
political spectrum to not only events in the Northeast and the rest of Ireland,
but in the rest of the world as well. It is published in print and online.
The UDP dissolves near the end of the year.
2002 – At the beginning of the year, the Ulster Political Research Group (UPRG) is organized to replace the UDP.
32CSM/RIRA
dissidents, including Michael McKevitt and Bernadette Sands-McKevitt, renounce
violence and along with others form the New Republican Forum.
2005 – Former
members of the CIRA form the Oglaigh Na hEireann (Continuity ONH or ONH1), but it disappears by 2009.
The PIRA disarms.
Disaffected republicans in the Belfast area. mostly ex-Provos, form the paramilitary Saoirse na hÉireann (SNH).
2006 – Dissidents
from PIRA, INLA, and CIRA form the Irish Republican Liberation Army and the
Continuity Liberation Movement.
Dissidents from PIRA form an Independent Republican Unit, modelled on
the one from South Derry in the early days of the Troubles.
Republican
socialist dissidents from Sinn Fein form “eirigi”.
The Republican Defense Army (RDA) breaks away from PIRA.
2007 – A group
calling itself the Real Ulster Freedom Fighters appears.
The UDA/UFF and the UVF both announce the demilitarization
of their respective groups. The UDA's East Antrim Brigade breaks away from its parent unit, but continues to use the name UDA in its title.
The Republican Network for Unity (RNU) forms to oppose the PRM’s
support for the PSNI.
The Republican Defense Association forms from volunteers expelled from the 2006 RDA.
The (new) Irish Republican Brotherhood forms in Dublin.
2008 – The
Republican Defense Association and Republican Defense Army are formed in
Northeast Ulster. The Blanket ceases publication.
The Republican Action Against Drugs (RAAD) forms in Derry
from former PIRA volunteers.
Saor Uladh forms in West Belfast and North Armagh.
The print and online magazine The Blanket is replaced by The Pensive Quill.
2009 – The Irish
National Liberation Army disarms.
The UVF announce they have destroyed their entire armament while the RHC and UDA announce they have destroyed a large part of their arsenals and will continue until they are all gone.
A split in the RIRA leads to the formation of Oglaigh na
hEireann (Real ONH or ONH2), a name available since ONH1 has by this time
ceased to exist.
The 1916 Societies begin to form around the slogan, "One Ireland, One Vote".
The Real Continuity IRA (RCIRA) breaks away from CIRA and allies with RSF.
The 1916 Societies form to push for Irish Unity as outlined in the Proclamation of 1916.
2010 – The Official IRA decommissions its arms.
2011 – The PIRA
dissolves.
The Occupy movement begins at Liberty Square in Manhattan,
then spreads world-wide, including Dublin, Belfast, Galway, Cork, Letterkenney,
Limerick, and Waterford.
2012 – The RIRA, RAAD, and disaffected former Provos in East Tyrone come together in summer as the New
Irish Republican Army (New IRA or NIRA).
2014 – Gerry
Adams, current leader of Sinn Fein, former COS of PIRA, former commander of
PIRA’s Northern Command, and former leader of the Belfast Brigade’s security
unit, is arrested in connection with the murder of Jean McConville, a widowed
mother of ten killed in 1972, a few days after the arrest of Ivor Bell, OC of
the Belfast Brigade at the time of the murder. He is subsequently released.
2015 - The IRSP publishes a paper from an internal discussion declaring that the CIRA, RIRA, and ONH should end their armed struggle.
Action
Against Drugs, made up of former Provos, announces its presence with the
assassination of former Provo and ex-DAAD member Kevin McGuigan and formally in
the Irish News.
A series of unfortunate events forces the PSNI to admit that not only does the PIRA still exist, but that it is still armed.
2016 - The political party Saoradh, supported by the New IRA, is established.
2018 - The ONH (Real ONH or ONH2) announces an end to its armed campaign.