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Irish Republican Army (1917–22) : ウィキペディア英語版
Irish Republican Army (1917–22)

The Irish Republican Army (IRA) ((アイルランド語:Óglaigh na hÉireann)) was an Irish republican revolutionary military organisation. The ancestor to many groups also known as the Irish Republican Army, it was descended from the Irish Volunteers, an organisation established on 25 November 1913 that staged the Easter Rising in April 1916. In 1919, the Irish Republic that had been proclaimed during the Easter Rising was formally established by an elected assembly (Dáil Éireann), and the Irish Volunteers were recognised by Dáil Éireann as its legitimate army. Thereafter, the IRA waged a guerrilla campaign against British rule in Ireland in the 1919–21 Irish War of Independence.
Following the signing in 1921 of the Anglo-Irish Treaty, which ended the War of Independence, a split occurred within the IRA. Members who supported the treaty formed the nucleus of the Irish National Army founded by IRA leader Michael Collins. However, much of the IRA was opposed to the treaty. The anti-treaty IRA fought a civil war against their former comrades in 1922–23, with the intention of creating a fully independent all-Ireland republic. Having lost the civil war, this group remained in existence, with the intention of overthrowing both the Irish Free State and Northern Ireland and achieving the Irish Republic proclaimed in 1916.
==Origins==

The Irish Volunteers, founded in 1913, staged the Easter Rising, which aimed at ending British rule in Ireland, in 1916. Following the suppression of the Rising, thousands of Volunteers were imprisoned or interned, leading to the break-up of the organisation. It was reorganized in 1917 following the release of first the internees and then the prisoners. At the army convention held in Dublin in October 1917, Éamon de Valera was elected president, Michael Collins Director for Organisation and Cathal Brugha Chairman of the Resident Executive, which in effect made him Chief of Staff.
Following the success of Sinn Féin in the general election of 1918 and the setting up of the First Dáil (the legislature of the Irish Republic), Volunteers commenced military action against the Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC), the paramilitary police force in Ireland, and subsequently against the British Army. It began with the Soloheadbeg Ambush, when members of the Third Tipperary Brigade led by Séamus Robinson, Seán Treacy, Dan Breen and Seán Hogan, seized a quantity of gelignite, killing two RIC constables in the process. The Dáil leadership worried that the Volunteers would not accept its authority, given that, under their own constitution, they were bound to obey ''their'' own executive and no other body. In August 1919, Brugha proposed to the Dáil that the Volunteers be asked to swear allegiance to the Dáil, but another year passed before the Volunteers took an oath of allegiance to the Irish Republic and its government, "throughout August 1920". During this time, the Volunteers gradually became known as the Irish Republican Army (IRA).
A power struggle continued between Brugha and Collins, both cabinet ministers, over who had the greater influence. Brugha was nominally the superior as Minister for Defence, but Collins's powerbase came from his position as Director of Organisation of the IRA and from his membership on the Supreme Council of the IRB. De Valera resented Collins's clear power and influence, which he saw as coming more from the secretive IRB than from his position as a Teachta Dála (TD) and minister in the Aireacht. Brugha and de Valera both urged the IRA to undertake larger, more conventional military actions for the propaganda effect, but were ignored by Collins and Mulcahy. Brugha at one stage proposed the assassination of the entire British cabinet. This was also discounted due to its presumed negative effect on British public opinion. Moreover, many members of the Dáil, notably Arthur Griffith did not approve of IRA violence and would have preferred a campaign of passive resistance to British rule. The Dáil belatedly accepted responsibility for IRA actions in April 1921, just three months before the end of the Irish War of Independence.
In practice, the IRA was commanded by Collins, with Richard Mulcahy as second in command. These men were able to issue orders and directives to IRA guerrilla units around the country and at times to send arms and organisers to specific areas. However, because of the localised and irregular character of the war, they were only able to exert limited control over local IRA commanders such as Tom Barry, Liam Lynch in Cork and Seán Mac Eoin in Longford.
The IRA claimed a total strength of 70,000, but only about 3,000 were actively engaged in fighting against the Crown.〔Cottrell, Peter ''The Anglo-Irish War The Troubles of 1913-1922'', London: Osprey, 2006 page 28.〕 The IRA distrusted those Irishmen who had fought in the British Army during the First World War as potential informers, but there were a number of exceptions such as Emmet Dalton, Tom Barry and Martin Doyle.〔Cottrell, Peter ''The Anglo-Irish War The Troubles of 1913-1922'', London: Osprey, 2006 page 28.〕 The IRA divided its members into three classes, namely "unreliable", "reliable" and "active".〔Hart, Peter "The Social Structure of the Irish Republican Army, 1916-1923" pages 207-231 from ''The Historical Journal'', Volume 42, Issue # 1 March 999 page 209.〕 The "unreliable" members were those who nominally IRA members, but did not do very much for the struggle, "reliable" members played a supporting role in the war while the "active" men who were engaged in full-time fighting.〔Hart, Peter "The Social Structure of the Irish Republican Army, 1916-1923" pages 207-231 from ''The Historical Journal'', Volume 42, Issue # 1 March 1999 page 209.〕 Of the IRA brigades only about one to two thirds were considered to be "reliable" while those considered "active" were even smaller.〔Hart, Peter "The Social Structure of the Irish Republican Army, 1916-1923" pages 207-231 from ''The Historical Journal'', Volume 42, Issue # 1 March 1999 page 209.〕 A disproportionate number of the "active" IRA men were teachers; medical students; shoe-makers and boot-makers; those engaged in building trades like painters, carpenters, bricklayers, etc; draper's assistants; and creamery workers.〔Hart, Peter "The Social Structure of the Irish Republican Army, 1916-1923" pages 207-231 from ''The Historical Journal'', Volume 42, Issue # 1 March 1999 page 210.〕 The historian Peter Hart wrote "...the guerrillas were disproportionately skilled, trained and urban".〔Hart, Peter "The Social Structure of the Irish Republican Army, 1916-1923" pages 207-231 from ''The Historical Journal'', Volume 42, Issue # 1 March 1999 page 212.〕 Farmers and fishermen tended to be underrepresented in the IRA.〔Hart, Peter "The Social Structure of the Irish Republican Army, 1916-1923" pages 207-231 from ''The Historical Journal'', Volume 42, Issue # 1 March 999 pages 211-212.〕 Those Irish engaged in white-collar trade or skilled laborers were more likely to be involved in cultural nationalist groups like the Gaelic League than farmers or fishermen, and thus to have a stronger sense of Irish nationalism.〔Hart, Peter "The Social Structure of the Irish Republican Army, 1916-1923" pages 207-231 from ''The Historical Journal'', Volume 42, Issue # 1 March 1999 page 226.〕 Furthermore, the authority of the Crown tended to be stronger in towns and cities than in the countryside and as such those engaged in Irish nationalist activities in urban areas were much more likely to come into conflict with the Crown, thus leading to a greater chance of radicalisation.〔Hart, Peter "The Social Structure of the Irish Republican Army, 1916-1923" pages 207-231 from ''The Historical Journal'', Volume 42, Issue # 1 March 1999 page 227.〕 Of the "active" IRA members, three-quarters were in their late teens or early 20s and only 5% of the "active" men were 40 or older.〔Hart, Peter "The Social Structure of the Irish Republican Army, 1916-1923" pages 207-231 from ''The Historical Journal'', Volume 42, Issue # 1 March 1999 page 216.〕 The "active" members were overwhelmingly single men with only 4% being married or engaged in a relationship.〔Hart, Peter "The Social Structure of the Irish Republican Army, 1916-1923" pages 207-231 from ''The Historical Journal'', Volume 42, Issue # 1 March 1999 pages 216-217.〕 Women were active in the republican movement, but almost no women fought with the IRA whose "active" members were almost entirely male.〔Hart, Peter "The Social Structure of the Irish Republican Army, 1916-1923" pages 207-231 from ''The Historical Journal'', Volume 42, Issue # 1 March 1999 pages 217-218.〕 The IRA was not a sectarian group and went out of its way to proclaim it was open to all Irishmen, but its membership was largely Catholic with virtually no Protestants serving as "active" IRA men.〔Hart, Peter "The Social Structure of the Irish Republican Army, 1916-1923" pages 207-231 from ''The Historical Journal'', Volume 42, Issue # 1 March 1999 page 218.〕 Hart wrote that in his study of the IRA membership that he found only three Protestants serving as "active" IRA men between 1919-21.〔Hart, Peter "The Social Structure of the Irish Republican Army, 1916-1923" pages 207-231 from ''The Historical Journal'', Volume 42, Issue # 1 March 1999 page 218.〕 The majority of those serving in the IRA were practicing Catholics, but there was a minority of "pagans" as atheists or non-practicing Catholics were known in Ireland.〔Hart, Peter "The Social Structure of the Irish Republican Army, 1916-1923" pages 207-231 from ''The Historical Journal'', Volume 42, Issue # 1 March 1999 page 218.〕 The majority of the IRA men serving in metropolitan Britain were permanent residents with very few sent over from Ireland.〔Hart, Peter "The Social Structure of the Irish Republican Army, 1916-1923" pages 207-231 from ''The Historical Journal'', Volume 42, Issue # 1 March 1999 pages 217-218.〕 The majority of the IRA men operating in Britain were Irish-born, but there a substantial minority who were British-born, something that made them especially insistent on asserting their Irish identity.〔Hart, Peter "The Social Structure of the Irish Republican Army, 1916-1923" pages 207-231 from ''The Historical Journal'', Volume 42, Issue # 1 March 1999 page 218.〕

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