Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. The Curragh incident of 20 March 1914, sometimes known as the Curragh mutiny, occurred in the Curragh, County Kildare, Ireland. The Curragh Camp was then the main base for the British Army in Ireland, which at the time still formed part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.

  3. Mar 3, 2014 · A proto-mutiny took place in Ireland on March 20th, 1914. In the early years of the 20th century Ireland seemed to be moving towards civil war. Nationalists in the mainly Roman Catholic areas of most of the country were demanding more independence from Great Britain, while Protestants in the north, in Ulster, threatened violent resistance if ...

  4. The Curragh Incident, which occurred on March 20th, 1914, is unique in modern British history. It is the only occasion since the seventeenth century in which the British tradition of military neutrality in political matters has been broken.

  5. The Curragh mutiny. The effectiveness of the Ulster unionist movement’s opposition (1912-14) to the granting of self-government to Ireland by Britain’s Liberal government was heightened by the ...

  6. 1 day ago · A mutiny at the British military centre on the Curragh plain near Dublin. In 1914 the British commander there, General Sir Arthur Paget, on the instructions of Colonel Seely, the Secretary of State for War, informed his officers that military action might be necessary against private armies in Ulster.

  7. The Curragh Incident. In 1914, Home Rule for Ireland was about to become law. In Ulster, the Ulster Volunteers were threatening to rebel against this ruling, and the British Government contemplated using military action against them. Early on the morning of 20th March, the Commander-in-Chief in Ireland, Sir Arthur Paget issued a strongly worded ...

  8. This Curragh Incident, which caused intense and prolonged excitement in March 1914, and nearly upset the Asquith Government, had more than momentary importance in connection with the Ulster Movement. It proved to demonstration the intense sympathy with the loyalist cause that pervaded the Army.

  1. People also search for