Home Rule: The Third Home Rule Bill
The Third Home Rule Bill
In 1912 the Third Home Rule Bill passed the House of Commons. The most notable difference from the bill of 1893 was that it would have eventually given control of the police to Ireland. A tremendous outcry arose in Protestant Ulster, which feared Roman Catholic domination. Private armies—the Ulster Volunteers (in the North) and the Irish Volunteers (in the South)—were raised, and civil war threatened if the bill became law. In 1914, Commons again passed the bill, but the House of Lords excluded Ulster from its provisions. The Commons voted to allow Ulster to vote itself out of Home Rule for six years. At the outbreak of World War I the bill was passed once again with the proviso that it should not go into effect until after the war. The law never took effect.
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- Home Rule in Contemporary Northern Ireland
- The Irish Free State and the Fourth Home Rule Bill
- The Third Home Rule Bill
- The Second Home Rule Bill
- The First Home Rule Bill
- Origins of the Home Rule Movement
- Bibliography
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