The
City of
Dublin can trace its origin back more than 1000 years, and for much of this time it has been
Ireland's principal city and the
cultural,
educational and
industrial centre of the country.
Founding and early history
Main articles: History of Dublin: Earliest times to 795
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1988: This 'Dublin Millennium'
fifty pence coin was minted, even though it was realised that Dublin had existed for over 1,000 years.
The earliest reference to Dublin is sometimes said to appear in the writings of
Claudius Ptolemaeus (Ptolemy), the Egyptian-Greek astronomer and cartographer, around the year A.D.
140, who refers to a settlement called '
Eblana'. This would seem to give Dublin a just claim to nearly two thousand years of antiquity, as the settlement must have existed a considerable time before Ptolemy became aware of it. Recently, however, doubt has been cast on the identification of Eblana with Dublin, and the similarity of the two names is now thought to be coincidental.
Beginning in the
9th and
10th century, there were two settlements where the modern city stands. The
Viking settlement of about[
[1]]
841 was known as ''Dyflin'', from the
Irish ''Duiblinn'' (or "Black Pool", referring to a dark tidal pool where the
River Poddle entered the
Liffey on the site of the Castle Gardens at the rear of
Dublin Castle), and a
Gaelic settlement, ''Áth Cliath'' ("ford of hurdles") was further up river. The Celtic settlement's name is still used as the Irish name of the modern city, while the modern English name came from the Viking settlement of Dyflin, which derived its name from the Irish Duiblinn. The Vikings, or Ostmen as they called themselves, ruled Dublin for almost three centuries, though they were expelled in
902 only to return in
917 and notwithstanding their defeat by the Irish High King
Brian Boru at the
battle of Clontarf in 1014. It is now thought that the Viking settlement was preceded by a Christian ecclesiastical settlement known as Duiblinn, from which Dyflin took its name. ''See Also
The Kings of Dublin''.
Viking Dublin had a large
slave market.
Thralls were captured and sold, not only by the Norse but also by warring Irish chiefs. This nominally ended with the adoption of the
Brehon Laws, but actually continued for a further century.
Dublin celebrated its millennium in
1988 with the slogan ‘'Dublin's great in '88’. The city is far older than that, but in that year, the Norse King Glun Iarainn recognised Mael Seachlainn II Mor (the
High King of Ireland), and agreed to pay taxes and accept
Brehon Law. That date was celebrated, but might not be accurate: in
989 (not
988), Mael Seachlainn laid
siege to the city for 20 days and captured it. This was not his first attack on the city.
Dublin became the centre of English power in Ireland after the
12th century Norman conquest of the southern half of Ireland (
Munster and
Leinster), replacing
Tara in
Meath — seat of the Gaelic
High Kings of Ireland — as the focal point of Ireland's polity. Over time, however, many of the Anglo-Norman conquerors were absorbed into the Irish culture, adopting the Irish language and customs, leaving only a small area around Dublin, known as
the Pale, under direct English control.
Medieval Dublin

Christ Church Cathedral (exterior)
After the
Hiberno-Norman taking of Dublin in
1171, many of the city’s
Norse inhabitants left the old city, which was on the south side of the river Liffey and built their own settlement on the north side, known as Ostmantown or "Oxmantown". Dublin became the capital of the English
Lordship of Ireland from 1171 onwards and was peopled extensively with settlers from
England and
Wales. The rural area around the city, as far north as
Drogheda, also saw extensive English settlement. In the 14th century, this area was fortified against the increasingly assertive Native Irish – becoming known as the Pale. In Dublin itself, English rule was centred on
Dublin Castle. The city was also the seat of the
Parliament of Ireland, which was composed of representatives of the English community in Ireland. Important buildings that remain from this time include
St Patrick's Cathedral,
Christchurch Cathedral and
St Audeon's Church, all of which are within a kilometre of each other. The last surviving section of Dublin's medieval walls overlook St Audeon's onto Cook St.
The inhabitants of the Pale developed an identity familiar from other settler-colonists of a beleaguered enclave of civilisation surrounded by barbarous natives. The siege mentality of medieval Dubliners is best illustrated by their annual pilgrimage to the area called Fiodh Chuilinn, or Holly Wood ( rendered in English as Cullenswood) in
Ranelagh, where in
1209, 500 recent settlers from
Bristol had been massacred by the O’Toole clan during a fair. Every year on "Black Monday", the Dublin citizens would march out of the city to the spot where the atrocity had happened and raise a black banner in the direction of the mountains to challenge the Irish to battle in a gesture of symbolic defiance. This was still so dangerous until the 17th century that the participants had to be guarded by the city militia and a stockade against, "the mountain enemy".
Medieval Dublin was a tightly knit place of around 5-10,000- people, intimate enough for every newly married citizen to be escorted by the mayor to the city bullring to kiss the enclosure for good luck. It was also very small in area, an enclave hugging the south side of the Liffey of no more than three square kilometres. Outside the city walls were suburbs such as
the Liberties, on the lands of the Archbishop of Dublin, and
Irishtown, where Gaelic Irish were supposed to live, having been expelled from the city proper by a 15th century law. Although the native Irish were not supposed to live in the city and its environs, many did so and by the 16th century, English accounts complain that
Irish Gaelic was starting to rival English as the everyday language of the Pale.
Life in Medieval Dublin was very precarious. In
1348, the city was hit by the
Black Death – a lethal
bubonic plague that ravaged Europe in the mid-14th century. In Dublin, victims of the disease were buried in mass graves in an area still known as "Blackpitts". The plague recurred regularly in city until its last major outbreak in 1649. The city was also the scene of constant warfare, both
endemic low level violence and as a battleground in major wars. Throughout the middle ages, it paid protection money or "black rent" to the neighbouring Irish clans to avoid their predatory raids. In
1314, an invading Scottish army burned the city’s suburbs. As English interest in maintaining their Irish colony waned, the defence of Dublin from the surrounding Irish was left to the Fitzgerald Earls of Kildare, who dominated Irish politics until the 16th century. However, this dynasty often pursued their own agenda. In
1487, during the English
Wars of the Roses, the Fitzgeralds occupied the city with the aid of troops from
Burgundy and proclaimed the
Yorkist Lambert Simnel to be
King of England. In
1536, the same dynasty, led by
Silken Thomas, who was angry at the imprisonment of Garret Fitzgerald, Earl of Kildare, besieged
Dublin Castle.
Henry VIII sent a large army to destroy the Fitzgeralds and replace them with English administrators. This was the beginning of a much closer, though not always happy, relationship between Dublin and the English Crown.
Colonial Dublin

Dublin in 1610 - reprint of 1896
Dublin and its inhabitants were transformed by the upheavals of the 16th and 17th centuries in Ireland. These saw the first thorough
English conquest of the whole island under the
Tudor dynasty. While the
Old English community of Dublin and the Pale were happy with the conquest and disarmament of the native Irish, they were deeply alienated by the
Protestant reformation that had taken place in England, being all almost all
Roman Catholics. In addition, they were angered by being forced to pay for the English garrisons of the country through an extra-parliamentary tax known as "
cess". Several Dubliners were executed for taking part in the
Second Desmond Rebellion in the 1580s. The Mayoress of Dublin,
Margaret Ball died in captivity in Dublin Castle for her Catholic sympathies in 1584 and a Catholic Archbishop,
Dermot O'Hurley was hanged outside the city walls in the same year.
In
1592,
Elizabeth I opened
Trinity College Dublin (located at that time outside the city on its eastern side) as a Protestant University for the Irish gentry. However, the important Dublin families spurned it and sent their sons instead to
Catholic Universities on continental Europe.
The Dublin community's discontent was deepened by the events of the
Nine Years War of the
1590s, when English soldiers were required by decree to be housed by the townsmen of Dublin and they spread disease and forced up the price of food. The wounded lay in stalls in the streets, in the absence of a proper hospital. To compound dissafection in the city, in
1597, the English Army's gunpowder store in
Winetavern Street exploded accidentally, killing nearly 200 Dubliners. It should be noted, however, that the Pale community, however dissatisfied they were with English government, remained hostile to the Gaelic Irish rebels led by
Hugh O'Neill.
As a result of these tensions, the English authorities came to see Dubliners as unreliable and encouraged the
settlement there of Protestants from England. These "New English" became the basis of the English administration in Ireland until the 19th century.
Protestants became a majority in Dublin in the 1640s, when thousands of them fled there to escape the
Irish Rebellion of 1641. When the city was subsequently threatened by Irish Catholic forces, the Catholic Dubliners were expelled from the city by its English garrison. In the 1640s, the city was besieged twice during the
Irish Confederate Wars, in
1646 and
1649. However on both occasions the attackers were driven off before a lengthy siege could develop. In
1649, on the second of these occasions, a mixed force of Irish Confederates and English Royalists were routed by Dublin's English Parliamentarian garrison in the
battle of Rathmines, fought on the city's southern outskirts.
In 1650s after the
Cromwellian conquest of Ireland, Catholics were banned from dwelling within the city limits under the vengeful
Cromwellian settlement but this law was not strictly enforced. Ultimately, this religious discrimination led to the
Old English community abandoning their English roots and coming to see themselves as part of the native Irish community.
By the end of the seventeenth century, Dublin was the capital of the English run
Kingdom of Ireland – ruled by the Protestant New English minority. Dublin (along with parts of
Ulster) was the only part of Ireland in 1700 where Protestants were a majority. In the next century it became larger, more peaceful and prosperous than at any time in its previous history.
From a Medieval to a Georgian City
''See Also
Georgian Dublin''
]]
By the beginning of the
18th century the English had established control and imposed the harsh
Penal Laws on the Catholic majority of Ireland's population. In Dublin however the
Protestant Ascendancy was thriving, and the city expanded rapidly from the 17th century onward. By 1700, the population had surpassed 60,000, making it the second largest city, after
London, in the
British Empire. Under the
Restoration,
Ormonde, the then
Lord Deputy of Ireland made the first step toward modernising Dublin by ordering that the houses along the
river Liffey had to face the river and have high quality frontages. This was in contrast to the earlier period, when Dublin faced away from the river, often using it as a rubbish dump.
Dublin started the 18th century as, in terms of street layout, a
medieval city akin to
Paris. In the course of the
eighteenth century (as Paris would in the
nineteenth century) it underwent a major rebuilding, with the
Wide Streets Commission demolishing many of the narrow medieval streets and replacing them with large Georgian streets. Among the famous streets to appear following this redesign were ''Sackville Street'' (now called
O'Connell Street),
Dame Street, ''Westmoreland Street'' and ''D'Olier Street'', all built following the demolition of narrow medieval streets and their amalgamation. Five major Georgian squares were also laid out; ''Rutland Square'' (now called
Parnell Square) and ''Mountjoy Square'' on the northside, and ''Merrion Square'', ''Fitzwilliam Square'' and ''Saint Stephen's Green'', all on the south of the
River Liffey. Though initially the most prosperous residences of peers were located on the northside, in places like
Henrietta Street and Rutland Square, the decision of the
Earl of Kildare (Ireland's premier peer, later made ''Duke of Leinster''), to build his new townhouse, ''Kildare House'' (later renamed
Leinster House after he was made
Duke of Leinster) on the southside, led to a rush from peers to build new houses on the southside, in or around the three major southern squares. The massive northside houses ending up becoming tenements, into which large numbers of poor people moved, often being exploited by landlords, who packed in entire families into each large Georgian room. Only the area of the old city named
Temple Bar (located between Dame Street and the river Liffey) and the area around
Grafton Street survived with their narrow medieval street pattern intact.
For all its
Enlightenment sophistication in fields such as architecture and music (
Handel's "Messiah" was first performed there in Fishamble street), 18th century Dublin remained decidedly rough around the edges. Its slum population rapidly increased - fed by the mounting rural migration to the city - housed mostly in the north and south-west quarters of the city. Rival gangs known as the "Liberty Boys" -mostly weavers from
the Liberties - and the "Ormonde Boys" - butchers from Ormonde quay on the northside - fought bloody street battles with each other, sometimes heavily armed and with numerous fatalities. It was also common for the Dublin crowds to hold violent demonstrations outside the
Irish Parliament when the members passed unpopular laws.
One of the effects of continued rural migration to Dublin was that its demographic balance was again altered, Catholics becoming the majority in the city again in the late 18th century.
Rebellion, Union and Catholic Emancipation

'The old Irish Houses of Parliament'
Built in the 1720s, the building served as the seat of The House of Commons and House of Lords until 1800. It is now a branch of the Bank of Ireland.
Until
1800 the city housed an independent (though still exclusively
Anglican)
Irish Parliament, and as mentioned it was during this period that much of the great
Georgian buildings of Dublin were built. By the late 18th century, Irish Protestants - the descendants of British settlers - had come to see Ireland as their native country, and the Irish Parliament successfully agitated for increased autonomy and better terms of trade with Britain. Liberals began to talk of repealing the
Penal Law and ending discrimination against Catholics. ''(See
Ireland 1691-1801)''
However, under the influence of the American and French revolutions, some Irish radicals went a step further and formed the
United Irishmen to create an independent, non-sectarian and democratic republic. United Irish leaders in Dublin included
Napper Tandy,
Oliver Bond and
Edward Fitzgerald.
Wolfe Tone, the leader of the movement, was also from Dublin. The United Irishmen planned to take Dublin in street rising in
1798, but their leaders were arrested and the city occupied by a large British military presence shortly before the rebels were to assemble. There was some local fighting in the city's outskirts - such as
Rathfarnham, but the city itself remained firmly under control during the
1798 rebellion.
The
Protestant Ascendancy was shocked by the events of the 1790s, as was the British government. In response to them, in
1801 under the
Irish Act of Union, which merged the Kingdom of Ireland with the
Kingdom of Great Britain to form the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland the
Irish Parliament voted itself out of existence and Dublin lost much of its political influence. Though the city's growth continued, it suffered financially from the loss of parliament and more directly from the loss of the income that would come with the arrival of hundreds of peers and MPs and thousands of servants to the capital for sessions of parliament and the social season of the viceregal court in
Dublin Castle. Within a short few years, many of the finest mansions, including Leinster House, Powerscourt House and Aldborough House, once owned by peers who spent much of their year in the capital, were for sale. Many of the city's once elegant Georgian neighbourhoods rapidly became slums. In 1803,
Robert Emmet, the brother of one of the United Irish leaders launched another rebellion in the city, however, it was put down easily and Emmet himself was hanged.
In
1829 Irish Catholics recovered full citizenship of the United Kingdom. This was partly as a result of agitation by
Daniel O'Connell, who organised mass rallies for
Catholic Emancipation in Dublin among other places. O'Connell also campaigned unsuccessfully for a restoration of Irish legislative autonomy. O'Connell was later elected
Lord Mayor of Dublin, and is remembered among
trade unionists in the city to this day for calling on the
British army to suppress a
strike during his tenure.
Late 19th Century
After Emancipation and with the gradual extension of the right to vote in British politics,
Irish nationalists (mainly Catholics) gained control of Dublin's municipal government with the reform of local government in 1840
Daniel O'Connell being the first Catholic Mayor in 150 years. This prompted many of Dublin's Protestant and
Unionist upper classes to move out of the city proper to new suburbs such as
Ballsbridge,
Rathmines and
Rathgar - which are still distinguished by their graceful
Victorian architecture and by originally
loyalist organisations like the
Royal Dublin Society. A new railway also connected Dublin with the middle class suburb of
Dún Laoghaire, then called Kingstown.
Dublin, unlike
Belfast in the north, did not experience the full effect of the
industrial revolution and as a result, unemployment was always high in the city. Industries like the
Guinness brewery,
Jameson Distillery, and Jacob's biscuit factory provided the most stable employment. New
working class suburbs grew up in
Kilmainham and
Inchicore around them. Another major employer was the
Tram system, run by a private company - the
Dublin United Tramway Company .
In 1867, the
Irish Republican Brotherhood or 'Fenians', attempted an insurrection aimed at the ending of British rule in Ireland. However, the rebellion was badly organised and failed to get off the ground. In Dublin, fighting was confined to the suburb of
Tallaght, where several hundred Fenians made a failed attack on the
Royal Irish Constabulary barracks.
The failure of this rebellion did not mark the end of nationalist violence however. In 1882, an offshoot of the Fenians, who called themselves the
Irish National Invincibles, assassinated two prominent members of the British administration with surgical knives in the
Phoenix Park. The incident is known as the
Phoenix Park murders.
Monto
''See Also
Monto''

1888 German map of Dublin
Paradoxically, although Dublin declined in terms of wealth and importance declined after the
Act of Union, it grew steadily in size throughout the 19th century. By 1900, the population was over 400,000. While the city grew, so did its level of poverty. Though described as "the second city of the (British) Empire" its large number of tenements became infamous, being mentioned by writers such as
James Joyce. An area called ''Monto'' (in or around ''Montgomery Street'' off Sackville Street) became infamous also as the British Empire's biggest red light district, its financial viability aided by the number of
British Army barracks and hence soldiers in the city, notably the ''Royal Barracks'' (later
Collins Barracks and now one of the locations of Ireland's National Museum). ''Monto'' finally closed in the mid 1920s, following a campaign against prostitution by the Roman Catholic
Legion of Mary, its financial viability having already been seriously undermined by the withdrawal of soldiers from the city following the
Anglo-Irish Treaty (December
1921) and the establishment of the
Irish Free State (
6 December 1922).
The Lockout

Statue of James Larkin on O'Connell Street (
Oisín Kelly 1977)
In
1913, Dublin experienced one of the largest and most bitter labour disputes ever seen in Britain or Ireland - known as
the Lockout.
James Larkin, a militant
syndicalist trade unionist, founded the Irish Transport and General Worker's Union (ITGWU) and tried to win improvements in wages and conditions by the use of sympathetic strikes. In response,
William Martin Murphy who owned the Dublin Tram Company, organised a cartel of employers who agreed to sack any ITGWU members and to make other employees agree not to join it. Larkin in turn called the Tram workers out on strike, which was followed by the sacking, or "lockout" of any workers in Dublin who would not resign from the union. Within a month, 25,000 workers were either on strike or locked out. Demonstrations during the dispute were marked by vicious rioting with the
Dublin Metropolitan Police, which left 3 people dead and hundreds more injured.
James Connolly in response founded the
Irish Citizen Army to defend strikers from the police. The lockout lasted for six months, after which most workers, many of whose families were starving, resigned from the union and returned to work.
The End of British Rule

An Irish War of Independence memorial in Dublin
In
1914, afer nearly three decades of agitation, Ireland seemed on the brink of
Home Rule (or self government), however, instead of a peaceful handover from direct British rule to limited Irish autonomy, Ireland and Dublin saw nearly ten years of political violence and instability that eventually resulted in a much more complete break with Britain than Home Rule would have represented. By 1923, Dublin was the capital of the
Irish Free State, an all but independent Irish state, governing 26 of Ireland's 32 counties.
Howth Gun Running 1914
Unionists, predominantly concentrated in
Ulster, though also with concentrations in Dublin (
Edward Carson the Unionist leader was a Dublin man), resisted the introduction of Home Rule and founded the
Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) - a private army - to this end. In response, nationalists founded their own army, the
Irish Volunteers to make sure Home Rule became a reality. In April 1914, thousands of German weapons were imported by the UVF into the north (see
Larne gunrunning). When the Irish Volunteers attempted to do the same in July, at
Howth, near Dublin, British troops from the Scottish Borderers regiment tried to seize their arms, but were unsuccessful. The soldiers were jeered by Dublin crowds when they returned to the city centre and they retaliated by opening fire on a crowd at
Bachelor's Walk (along the quays), killing three people. Ireland appeared to be on the brink of civil war by the time the Home Rule Bill was actually passed in September 1914. However the outbreak of
World War I led to its postponement.
John Redmond, the leader of the
Irish Parliamentary Party called on nationalists to show their gratitude by joining the British Army. Thousands of Dubliners did so (particularly those from working class areas, where unemployment was high) and many died in the war. This caused split in the Volunteers. The majority, who followed Redmond's leadership formed the
National Volunteers. A militant minority kept the title of Irish Volunteers, some of whom were now prepared to fight against, rather than with British forces for Irish independence.
Easter Rising 1916
In April
1916 about 1250 armed
Irish republicans under
Padraig Pearse staged what became known as the
Easter Rising in Dublin in pursuit not of Home Rule but of an Irish Republic. One of the rebels' first acts was to declare this Republic to be in existence. The rebels were composed of Irish Volunteers and the much smaller
Irish Citizen Army under
James Connolly. The rising saw rebel forces take over strongpoints in the city, including the
Four Courts,
Stephen's Green, Bolands Mill, the South Dublin Union and Jacobs Biscuit Factory and establishing their headquarters at the
General Post Office in
O'Connell street. They held for a week until they were forced to surrender to British troops. The British deployed artillery to bombard the rebels into submission, sailing a
gunboat named the Helga up the Liffey and stationing field guns at
Cabra,
Phibsborough and Prussia street. Much of the city centre was destroyed by shell fire and around 450 people, about half of them civilians, were killed, with another 1,500 injured. Fierce combat took place along the grand canal at Mount street, where British troops were repeatedly ambushed and suffered heavy casualties. In addition, the rebellion was marked by a wave of
looting and lawlessness by Dublin's slum population and many of the city centre's shops were ransacked. The rebel commander,
Patrick Pearse surrendered after a week, in order to avoid further civilian casualties. Initially, the rebellion was very unpopular in Dublin, due to the amount of death and destruction it caused and due to the fact that many Dubliners had relatives serving in the British Army.
Though the rebellion was relatively easily suppressed by the
British military and initially faced with the hostility of most Irish people, public opinion swung gradually but decisively behind the rebels, after 16 of their leaders were executed by the British military in the aftermath of the Rising. In December
1918 the party now taken over by the rebels,
Sinn Féin, won an overwhelming majority of Irish parliamentary seats. Instead of taking their seats in the
British House of Commons, they assembled in the
Lord Mayor of Dublin's residence and proclaimed the
Irish Republic to be in existence and themselves
Dáil Éireann (the Assembly of Ireland) -its parliament.
War of Independence 1919-21
Between
1919 and
1921 Ireland experienced the
Irish War of Independence -a guerrilla conflict between the British forces and the Irish Volunteers, now reconstituted as the
Irish Republican Army. The Dublin
IRA units waged an
urban guerrilla campaign against police and the British army in the city. In 1919, the violence began with small numbers of IRA men (known as "
the Squad") under
Michael Collins assassinating police detectives in the city. By late 1920, this had expanded into much more intensive operations, including regular gun and grenade attack on British troops. The IRA in Dublin tried to carry out three shooting or bombing attacks a day. Such was the regularity of attacks on British patrols, that the Camden-Aungier streets area (running from the military barracks at Portobello to
Dublin Castle) was nicknamed the "
Dardanelles" (site of the
Gallipoli campaign) by British soldiers.
The conflict produced many tragic incidents in the city, of which a number are still remembered today. In September 1920, 18 year old IRA man
Kevin Barry was captured during an ambush on Church street in the north city in which three British soldiers were killed. Barry was hanged for murder on November 1, despite a campaign for leniency because of his youth. Another celebrated republican martyr was IRA gunman
Sean Treacy, who was killed in a shoot out on Talbot street in October 1920 after a prolonged manhunt for him. The British forces, in particular the
Black and Tans, often retaliated to IRA actions with brutality of their own. One example of this was the Black and Tans burning of the town of
Balbriggan, just north of Dublin in September 1920 and the "
Drumcondra murders" of February 1921, when
Auxiliary Division troops murdered two suspected IRA men in city's northern suburb.
The bloodiest single day of these "troubles" (as they were known at the time) in Dublin was
Bloody Sunday on November 21,
1920, when the
Michael Collins' "Squad" assassinated 18 British agents (see
Cairo gang) around the city in the early hours of the morning. The British forces retaliated by opening fire on a
Gaelic football crowd in
Croke Park in the afternoon, killing 14 civilians and wounding 65. In the evening, three republican activists were arrested and killed in Dublin Castle.
In response to the escalating violence, the British troops mounted a number of major operations in Dublin to try and locate IRA members. From January 15-17 1921, they cordoned off an area of the north inner city bounded by Capel st, Church st and North King st, allowing no one in or out and searching house to house for weapons and suspects. In February they repeated the process in the Mountjoy Square and then the Kildare st/Nassau st areas. However, these curfews produced few results. The largest singe IRA operation in Dublin during the conflict came on May 25, 1921, the IRA Dublin Brigade burned down the
The Custom House, one of Dublin's finest buildings, which housed the headquarters of local government in Ireland. However, the British were soon alerted and surrounded the building. Five IRA men were killed and over 80 captured in the operation, which was a publicity coup but a military disaster for the IRA.
Civil War, 1922-23
Following a truce (declared on July 11, 1921), a negotiated peace known as the
Anglo-Irish Treaty between Britain and Ireland was signed. It created a self-governing twenty-six county Irish state, known as the
Irish Free State. However it also disestablished the Irish Republic, which many in the nationalist movement and the IRA in particular felt they were bound by oath to uphold. This triggered the outbreak of the
Irish Civil War of 1922-23, when the intransigent republicans took up arms against those who had accepted a compromise with the British. The Civil war began in Dublin, where Anti-Treaty forces under
Rory O'Connor took over the
Four Courts and several other building in April 1922, hoping to provoke the British into re-starting the fighting. This put the Free State, led by Michael Collins and
Arthur Griffith into the dilemma of facing British military re-occupation or fighting their own former comrades in the Four Courts.
After some prevarication and after
Winston Churchill had actually ordered British troops to assault the rebels, Collins decided he had to act and borrowed British artillery to shell the republicans in the Four Courts. They surrendered after a two day (28 -30 June 1922) artillery bombardment by Free State troops but some of their IRA comrades occupied
O'Connell Street, which saw street fighting for another week before the Free State army secured the capital. (See
Battle of Dublin). Over 60 combatants were killed in the fighting, including senior republicans,
Cathal Brugha and
Harry Boland. About 250 civilians are also thought to have been killed or injured, but the total has never been accurately counted.
Oscar Traynor conducted some guerrilla operations south of the city until his capture in late July 1922.
Ernie O'Malley, the republican commander for the province of
Leinster was captured after a shootout in the
Ballsbridge area in November 1922. On December 6 1922, the IRA assassinated
Sean Hales a member of Parliament as he was leaving
Leinster House in Dublin city centre, in reprisal for the executions of their prisoners by the Free State. The following day, the four leaders of the republicans in the Four Courts (Rory O'Connor,
Liam Mellows, Dick Barret and
Joe McKelvey) were
executed in revenge. Dublin was relatively quiet thereafter, although
guerrilla war raged in the provinces. The new Free State government eventually suppressed this insurrection by mid
1923. In April, Frank Aiken, IRA chief of staff, ordered the anti-treaty forces to dump their arms and go home. The civil war left a permanent strain of bitterness in Irish politics that did much to sour the achievement of national independence.
Independence
Dublin had suffered severely in the period 1916-1922. It was the scene of a week's heavy street fighting in 1916 and again on the outbreak of the
civil war in 1922.
Many of Dublin's finest buildings were destroyed at this time; the historic General Post Office (GPO) was a bombed out shell after the 1916 Rising;
James Gandon's
Custom House was burned by the
IRA in the War of Independence, while one of Gandon's surviving masterpieces, the
Four Courts had been seized by republicans and bombarded by the pro-treaty army. (Republicans in response senselessly booby trapped the
Irish Public Records Office, destroying one thousand years of archives). The new state set itself up as best it could. Its
Governor-General was installed in the former
Viceregal Lodge, residence of the British
Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, because it was thought to be one of the few places where he was not in danger from republican assassins. Parliament was set up temporarily in the Duke of Leinster's old palace,
Leinster House, where it has remained ever since. Over time, the GPO, Custom House and Four Courts were rebuilt. While major schemes were proposed for Dublin, no major remodelling took place initially.
The "Emergency"
Main articles: The Emergency
Ireland was officially neutral during the
Second World War (see
Irish neutrality during World War II) . So much so that it was not even called "the war" in Irish discourse, but "
The Emergency". Although Dublin escaped the mass bombing of the war due to
Ireland's neutrality, the
German air-force bombed Dublin on
May 31,
1941, and hit the North Wall – a working-class district in the north inner city – killing 34 Irish civilians and wounding another 90.
[2] The bombing was declared accidental, although many suspected that the bombing was deliberate revenge for
de Valera's decision to send fire engines to aid the people of
Belfast following major bombing in that city. One faction of the IRA hoped to take advantage of the war by getting German help and invading
Northern Ireland. In December 1939 they
successfully stole almost all the
Irish Army's reserve ammunition in a raid on the Magazine Fort in Dublin's
Phoenix Park. In retaliation, De Valera interned the IRA's members and executed several of them. The war years also saw rationing imposed on Dublin and the temporary enlargement of the small
Jewish community by
Jews who fled there from Nazi persecution.
Tackling the Tenements
The first efforts to tackle Dublin's extensive slum areas came on the foundation of the Iveagh Trust in 1891, and the Dublin Artisan Dwellings Company, but these could only help several thousand families. The main focus by government in 1900-1914 was in building 40,000 cottages for rural workers. Some public planning for the city was made in the first years of the
Irish Free State and then effected after
1932, when
Eamon de Valera came to power. With greater finances available, and lower wages due to the
Great Depression, major changes began to take place. A scheme of replacing tenements with decent housing for Dublin's poor began. Some new suburbs such as
Marino and
Crumlin were built but Dublin's inner city slums remained.
It was not until the 1960s that substantial progress was made in removing Dublin's tenements, with thousands of Dublin's working class population being moved to suburban
housing estates around the edge of the city. The success of this project was mixed. Although the tenements were largely removed, such was the urgency of the providing new housing that little planning went into the building of the new public housing. New and growing suburbs like
Tallaght,
Coolock and
Ballymun instantly acquired huge populations, of up to 50,000 people in Tallaght's case, without any provision of shops, public transport or employment. As a result, for several decades, these places became by-words for crime, drug abuse and unemployment. In recent years, such problems have eased somewhat, with the advent of Ireland's so-called '
Celtic Tiger' economic boom. Tallaght in particular has become far more socially mixed and now has very extensive commercial, transport and leisure facilities. Ballymun, Ireland's only high rise housing scheme, has been largely demolished and re-built in recent years.
Ironically however, given Ireland's new found economic prosperity, and consequent immigration, there is once again a housing shortage in the city. Increased employment has led to a rapid rise in the city's population. As a result, prices for bought and rented accommodation have risen sharply, leading to many younger Dubliners leaving the city to buy cheaper accommodation in counties
Meath,
Louth,
Kildare and
Wicklow, while still commuting daily to Dublin. This has arguably impacted negatively on the quality of life in the city - leading to severe traffic problems, long commuting times and
urban sprawl.
Destruction of Georgian Dublin in the 1960s
:''See also'':
Development and preservation in Dublin

Nelson's Pillar on O'Connell Street -destroyed 1966
As part of the building programme that also cleared the inner city slums, from the 1950s onwards, historic
Georgian Dublin came under concerted attack by Irish Government's development policies. Whole swathes of 18th century houses were demolished, notably in Fitzwilliam street and St Stephen's Green, to make way for utilitarian office blocks and government departments. Much of this development was fuelled by property developers and speculators keen to cash in on the buoyant property markets of the 1960s, late 70s and 1980s. Many schemes were built by Government supporters with the intention of profitably letting to highly desirable State tenants such as government departments and State agencies. It has been proven that many buildings were approved by government ministers personally connected with the developers involved - often to the detriment of the taxpayer and the proper planning and preservation of Dublin city.
Some of this development was also encouraged by Ireland's dominant nationalist ideology of that era, which wanted to wipe away all physical reminders of Ireland's colonial past. An extreme example of this kind of thinking was the destruction by the IRA of
Nelson's Pillar in
O'Connell Street in
1966. This statue of the famous British admiral was a Dublin landmark for a century, but was blown up by a small bomb shortly before the 50 year commemorations of the
Easter Rising. In
2003, the Pillar was replaced as a landmark by the
Dublin Spire which was erected on the same spot. A 120 m tall tapered metal pole, it is the tallest structure of Dublin city centre, visible for miles. It was assembled from seven pieces with the largest
crane available in Ireland. It is the tallest sculpture in the world
Far from the destructive practices of the 1960s diminishing as time went on, if anything they got steadily worse, with the concrete office blocks of earlier times being replaced with the idea of Georgian pastiche or replica offices in place of original 18th century stock. Whole swaths of Harcourt Street and St. Stephen's Green were demolished and rebuilt in such a fashion in the 1970s and 1980s, as were parts of Parnell Square, Kildare St., North Great George's St. and many other areas around the city. Many saw this practice as an 'easy way out' for planners; a venerable Georgian front was maintained, whilst 'progress' was allowed to continue unhindered.
This planning policy was pursued by Dublin Corporation until around 1990, when the forces of conservationisim finally took hold.
However, it was not only sites associated with the British presence in Ireland that fell victim to Irish developers.
Wood Quay—where the oldest remains of Viking Dublin were located was also demolished, and replaced with the Headquarters of Dublin's local government, though not without a long and acrimonious planning struggle between the government and preservationists. More recently there has been a similar controversy over plans to build the M50 motorway through the site of
Carrickmines Castle—part of the Pale's southern frontier in medieval times. It has recently been alleged that much controversial building work in Dublin—over green spaces as well as historic buildings—was allowed as a result of bribery and patronage of politicians by developers. Since the late
1990s, there have been a series of tribunals set up to investigate corruption in Dublin's planning process.
Northern Troubles
Dublin was mostly unaffected by
the Troubles (a civil conflict that raged in
Northern Ireland from 1969 to the late 1990s), with the exception of several bombings in the early seventies, in particular one on Talbot street in 1974. The
Dublin and Monaghan Bombings on
May 17 1974 were a series of
terrorist attacks on
Dublin and
Monaghan in the
Republic of Ireland which left 33 people dead (26 of them in Dublin), and almost 300 injured, the largest number of casualties in any single day in the Troubles. Although no organization claimed responsibility for the attacks at the time,
loyalist paramilitaries from Northern Ireland (in particular the
Ulster Volunteer Force) were widely blamed. In 1993 the Ulster Volunteer Force admitted they carried out the attacks. It has been widely speculated that the bombers were aided by members of the British security forces.
Other occasions when the Northern conflict impacted on Dublin were 1972, when angry crowds burned down the British Embassy in Dublin in protest at the shooting of 13 civilians in Derry on
Bloody Sunday (1972) by British troops, and 1981, when
Anti H-Block Irish republican protesters tried to storm the new British Embassy in
Ballsbridge in response to the IRA
hunger strikes of that year. After several hours violent rioting with
Gardaí, the protesters were dispersed.
Other, more peaceful and larger demonstrations were held in the 1990s in Dublin, calling for the end of the
Provisional IRA campaign in the North. The largest of these took place in 1993, when up to 20,000 people demonstrated in
O'Connell Street after the IRA killed two children with a bomb in
Warrington in northern England. Similar demonstrations occurred in 1995 and 1996 when the IRA ended its ceasefire, called in 1994, by bombing London and Manchester. Most recently on
25 February 2006 rioting broke out between Gardaí and a group of
Irish Republicans protesting the march of a "
Love Ulster", loyalist parade in
O'Connell Street. The small group of political activists were joined by hundreds of local youths and running battles continued on O'Connell Street for almost three hours, where three shops were looted. The marchers themselves were bussed to Kildare street for a token march past
Dáil Éireann which prompted some 200 or so rioters to move from O'Connell street to the Nassau street area, setting cars alight, attacking property, including the headquarters of the
Progressive Democrats, before dispersing.
:''See also -
2006 Dublin riots''
Regeneration of Dublin
Since the 1980s, there has been a greater awareness among Dublin's planners of the need to preserve Dublin's architectural heritage. Preservation orders have been put on most of Dublin's Georgian neighbourhoods. The new awareness was also reflected in the development of
Temple Bar, the last surviving part of Dublin that contained its original medieval street plan. In the 1970s,
Córas Iompair Éireann (CIÉ), the state transport company, bought up many of the buildings in this area, with a view to building a large modern central bus station on the site with a shopping centre attached. However, most of the buildings had been rented by artists, producing a sudden and unexpected appearance of a 'cultural quarter' that earned comparisons with Paris's
Left Bank. The vibrancy of the Temple Bar area led to demands for its preservation. By the late 1980s, the bus station plans were abandoned and a master plan was put in place to maintain the Temple Bar's position as Dublin's cultural heartland, with large-scale government support. That process has been a mixed success. While the medieval street plan has survived, rents have rocketed, forcing the artists elsewhere. They have been replaced by restaurants and bars which draw thousands of tourists but which has been criticised for over commercialisation and excessive alcohol consumption. Also, in the late 1980s the Grafton and Henry street areas were pedestrianised.
However, the real transformation of Dublin has occurred since the late 1990s, when the so called '
Celtic Tiger' economic boom took effect. The city, previously full of derelict sites, has seen a building boom - especially the construction of new office blocks and apartments. The most visually spectacular of these developments is the
International Financial Services Centre (IFSC)- a financial district almost a kilometre long situated along the North quays. While the former tramways had been torn up in the 1950s in favour of buses, the new
Luas tram service started in 2004. Though slow to develop,
Dublin Airport had become the
17th busiest international airport by
2006.
Heroin Problem
In the 1970s, '80s and '90s, Dublin suffered a serious wave of drug addiction and associated crime throughout its working class areas. The introduction of the drug
heroin into the inner city in the late 1970s accentuated social problems associated with unemployment, poor housing and poverty. These problems were twofold. Firstly, heroin addiction caused a wave of petty crime such as muggings, robbery and so forth as addicts tried to secure money for their next 'fix'. This made many of the affected areas all but un-inhabitable for the rest of the population. In addition, many addicts ultimately died from diseases such as
AIDS and
hepatitis caused by sharing needles. Secondly, the drug trade saw the establishment of serious organised crime syndicates in the city, whose use of violence led to many murders being committed. The most notorious of these killings was that of the journalist
Veronica Guerin in 1996, who was killed by criminals she was investigating for a Sunday newspaper. The drugs problem led to a widespread anti-drugs movement, which peaked in the mid-1990s, whose members tried to force drug dealers out of their neighbourhoods. Some quarters accused anti-drugs activists of being
vigilantes, or a front for
Sinn Féin and the
Provisional IRA.
Although, the problem of hard drugs in Dublin has now been controlled somewhat, through
methadone programmes for addicts and better economic prospects for young people, it is by no means a thing of the past. Most recently, heroin has been suplemented by the introduction of
cocaine, including its derivative
crack cocaine.
Immigration
Dublin was traditionally a city of emigration, with high unemployment forcing many of its inhabitants to leave Ireland for other countries, notably Britain and the United States. However, the last decade has seen this process reversed dramatically, with the Irish economic boom attracting immigrants from all over the world. The largest single group to arrive in the city has been returned Irish emigrants, but there has also been very large immigration from other nationalities. Dublin is now home to substantial communities of
Chinese,
Nigerians,
Russians,
Romanians and many others - especially from
Africa and
eastern Europe. After the accession of several eastern European countries in to the
European Union in 2004, eastern European became the single largest immigrant group in Dublin.
Poland is the most common single point of origin, with well over 100,000 young Poles having arrived in Ireland since late 2004. The majority of them are concentrated in Dublin.
Notes
Dublin City Council & its Millennium
''Peritia: Journal of the Mediæval Academy of Ireland'' Volume 5 (1986) ''The Slave Trade of Dublin, Ninth to Twelfth Centuries'' - Poul Holm
Dublin's Tram system was discontinued in the 1950s and its tracks taken up. However in the early 2000s, a new tram system called the
Luas was installed at great expense. It was opened in 2004.
External links
★
Model map of Medieval Dublin