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The Easter Proclamation, officially called but rarely referred to as the Proclamation of the Republic, was a document read by Padraig Pearse at the start of the Easter Rising in Ireland in April 1916, in which a supposed republican "Provisional Government" claimed the right to proclaim Irish independence from the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. The reading of the proclamation outside the General Post Office (GPO) in Sackville Street (now called O'Connell Street), Dublin's main thoroughfare and the world's widest georgian street, marked the beginning of the Rising. The proclamation was modelled on a similar independence proclamation issued during the 1803 rebellion by Irish rebel Robert Emmet. right Easter Proclamation, read by Pádraig Pearse outside the GPO at the start of the Easter Rising, 1916.
Having read the proclamation to bemusement and derision from shoppers and passers-by, Pearse and some leaders seized the GPO and made it their military and symbolic headquarters, flying the new flag of the 'republic' (a green flag with the words 'Irish Republic' emblazoned across it) from the flag-pole instead of the Union Jack which had flown over the GPO. The flag of the military unit that seized the GPO, E Company, a green, white and orange tricolour was also flown on a lower flag-pole. The GPO, the Easter Proclamation and the tricolour (which later came to be seen as the flag of the republic, replacing the original green flag, which is now on display in the National Museum of Ireland) are the three most indentifiable symbols of the Easter Rising, alongside the leaders, such as Pearse, Tom Clarke, James Connolly and others.
1 Principles of the Proclamation
Though the Rising proved a military disaster, the principles of the Proclamation to varying degrees influenced the thinking of later generations of Irish politicians. The document consisted of a number of assertions:
- a claim that the Rising's leaders, though unelected, spoke for Ireland (a standard claim made by Irish insurrectionary movements);
- a claim that the Rising marked another wave of attempts to achieve independence through force of arms;
- a declaration of "the right of the people of Ireland to the ownership of Ireland", a statement seen by some contemporaries as quasi-socialist and which some conservatives found troublesome (similar language in later declarations, notably the Democratic Programme adopted by the First Dáil in 1919Events January January 1 Edsel Ford succeeds his father as head of the Ford Motor Company January 5 Spartacist uprising Socialist demonstrations in Berlin turn into attempted communist revolution with Spartacist League in the forefront January 9 Spartacus was deleted or toned down);
- a declaration that the form of government of the declared Irish Republic was to be a republic (though subsequently it was revealed that some of the leaders countenanced having a German prince, Prince Joachim, son of Kaiser Wilhelm IIWilhelm II of Prussia and Germany, Friedrich Wilhelm Viktor Albert von Hohenzollern ( January 27, 1859 June 4, 1941) was the last German Emperor Kaiser and the last King Konig of Prussia from 1888 1918. He was born in Berlin to Crown Prince Friedrich and as 'King of Ireland');
- a guarantee of "religious and civil liberty, equal rights and equal opportunities to all its citizens", the first mention of gender equality, given that Ireland like most states had not yet given women the vote;
- a statement that the new republic promised to cherish "all the children of the nation equally" (though often mis-interpreted as referring to Irish children and their rights, it actually didn't mean children at all but people of all ages, who were seen as 'children of the nation').
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