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1798
RESULTS - Coggle Diagram
1798
RESULTS
INSPIRED PHYSICAL FORCE
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23 July, 1803; a riot broke out on Thomas Street. The Lord Chief Justice of Ireland was dragged from his carriage and hacked to death.
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Over 100 years later, Countess Markievicz studied this rising while plans were being made for the 1916 Rising.
Young Irelanders, including William Smith O'Brien, attacked the RIC in Ballingarry, Co. Tipperary.
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On 5 March 1867, risings took place in Dublin, Cork city and Limerick. The largest of these engagements took place at Tallaght where the Fenians were eventually driven off by the RIC.
Even though this Rising failed, the IRB continued to exist and later organised 1916 Rising.
Following the 1798 Rebellion, many believed that a republic would only be gained through the use of physical force.
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The United Irishmen influenced later generations to fight and died for a republic e.g. the 1916 Rising
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In response to the 1798 Rebellion, the Act of Union (1800) closed the Irish parliament
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Politicians like Daniel O’Connell and Charles Stewart Parnell would spend the next 100 years trying to restore this parliament in Dublin.
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