Later, the Irish ***, 42 of them (Ireland has 48 states) became independent, and established the Irish **** and the country.
The United Kingdom also changed its name to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, which it remains to this day.
The Irish are a bit like the Mongolians in China. Mongolia is independent, and Inner Mongolia is Chinese territory. That's how the relationship works.
Northern Ireland is pro-British, Southern Ireland wants to be independent, is then controlled by two political parties like the two regions, in fact, they are Irish, and all live on the island of Ireland, Ireland has been ruled by the British for hundreds of years before independence, there are a number of Irish aristocrats have been oriented to the United Kingdom, and they are opposed to independence.
Question 2: Does Ireland belong to Britain? Ireland was an integral part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland until 1922.On December 29, 1937, Ireland adopted a new Irish constitution.The Irish **** and State Act, passed on April 1, 1949, finally abolished the monarchy and gave all the powers of the king to the president, making Ireland a **** and State. After the declaration of **** and State in April 1949, it automatically withdrew from the British Commonwealth.It was added to the *** United Nations in 1955 and joined the European Economic **** Community in 1973.It is not part of the United Kingdom. It is not part of Britain. Due to historical, ethnic and other reasons, such as England, Northern Ireland, Wales, Scotland, four countries to form the United Kingdom, the capital is still in the capital of England, London, the main body is still England, so it is customary to call the United Kingdom. on January 1, 1801, merged with Ireland; on April 12, 1922, the Anglo-Irish Treaty came into force, the southern part of Ireland out of its rule, and the establishment of an independent state; the United Kingdom is divided into England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. England is divided into 43 counties, with 29 districts and 3 special jurisdictions under Scotland, 26 districts under Northern Ireland and 22 districts under Wales. The Scottish and Welsh assemblies and their administrations are fully responsible for local affairs, while foreign affairs, defense, general economic and monetary policy, employment policy, and social security remain under the control of the central government. In addition, Britain has 12 overseas territories. before the 16th century, Britain was an obscure island nation, however, by the 19th century, it became the world's number one power. With colonies in almost every corner of the globe, the sun shone 24 hours a day on Britain's territories, which is why it was also known as the "Empire of the Sunset".
Question 3: Is Ireland and Britain one country? 1, Ireland is an independent country
2, Northern Ireland, Scotland, Wales and England belong to four different regions of the United Kingdom, all of which are British territories.
3, the full name of the UK as we usually call it is: the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
4, Scotland, Wales and England belong to the British Isles, and Northern Ireland and Ireland belong to the island of Ireland.
5, as for Northern Ireland and Ireland why separate, please refer to the following information:
3000 BC European mainland immigrants began to settle on the island of Ireland. In 432 A.D., St. Patrick came here to spread Christianity and Roman culture. 12 century into the feudal society. 1169 by the British invasion. 1171 British King Henry II to establish the right to rule over Ireland. 1541 from the King of England became the King of Ireland. 1800 signed the treaty of alliance between Ireland and Britain, the establishment of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, was completely annexed by the British. 1916, the outbreak of the "Easter" protests against the British in Dublin, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. In 1916 the Easter Rising broke out in Dublin. With the upsurge of the Irish national independence movement, Britain *** and Ireland signed the Anglo-Irish Treaty in December 1921, which allowed the 26 counties in the south of Ireland to set up a "Free State" and enjoy the right of self-government. The 6 northern counties (now Northern Ireland) were still returned to Britain. 1937, the Irish constitution declared the "Free State" as a **** and state, but still remained in the British Commonwealth. 21 December 1948, the Irish parliament passed a law declaring the secession of Ireland from the British Commonwealth. 18 April 1949, the British recognized Ireland's independence, but refused to return the 6 northern counties. After Ireland's independence, successive Irish *** have made it their stated policy to realize the unity of North and South Ireland.
Question 4: Does Ireland belong to Britain? Only the six counties of Northern Ireland on the island of Ireland were divided into Britain, the Northern Ireland part of the UK.
The rest of the area belongs to Ireland*** and the State and is independent
Question 5: Are Britain and Ireland one country? The south of Ireland is an independent country, the Irish **** and State. Ireland is a Western European country, west of the Atlantic Ocean east of the Irish Sea (Muir éireann), and the United Kingdom across the sea, Ireland for North America to Europe. The Irish belong to the Celts, the descendants of the first generation of inhabitants of the European continent. It has a history of more than 5,000 years. It is very beautiful and charming. Although Ireland has its own language, Gaelic (Gaeilge), it is the only English-speaking country in Europe other than Britain. Ireland*** and the country became independent from British colonial rule in 1922 and is a peaceful and quiet country. The north of Ireland, known as Northern Ireland, still belongs to Britain. As a result, the country of Ireland*** and is different from Northern Ireland, which is often seen on television news as a violent conflict-ridden country. Northern Ireland is a region of the United Kingdom located in the northeast of the island of Ireland, covering an area of 14,139 square kilometers, with a population of 1,685,000 (2001 survey results) and a capital city of Belfast.
Northern Ireland (Northern Ireland) is a region of the United Kingdom, located in the northeast of the island of Ireland. It is known as the Green Kingdom, under the jurisdiction of the United Kingdom ***, the capital city of Belfast (Belfast). Here the natural scenery is beautiful, fresh air, vast green grassland and countless green mountains and green water outlines the North Ireland's unique "green" as the main line of the natural landscape. Along the coastline of Northern Ireland to the north, the busy seaport and has hundreds of years of history of the old castle interplay, modern vitality and historical heritage in this harmonious coexistence. It is bordered by Ireland in the west and south, the Atlantic Ocean in the north and the Irish Sea in the southeast. The area is 14,000 square kilometers. It is divided into 26 districts. The population is 1.583 million (1989), mainly Irish. The capital is Belfast. The terrain is low and flat in the middle and mountainous in the surroundings. The main rivers are the Bann. Lough Neagh, with an area of 396 square kilometers, is the largest lake in Britain and is a glacial lake. In 1801, the island of Ireland was transferred to the United Kingdom, and in 1921 the 26 southern counties formed the Free State, and in 1937 the **** and State was established, while the six northern counties remained with the United Kingdom, and Northern Ireland was called Northern Ireland, becoming an integral part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Agriculture is dominated by livestock farming, with about 85% of agricultural income coming from livestock and livestock products, and the main agricultural products are wheat, oats, potatoes and flax. Industry to machinery, shipbuilding, textiles, electrical equipment, the production of linen fabrics is extremely prestigious. Road network is dense, the railroad line north to Londonderry, south to Dublin (Ireland *** and the national capital). Belfast is the main transportation and industrial and commercial city.
A few centuries ago, the British annexed Ireland, followed by a large number of colonization and massacre of the local population, forcing many Irish people to exile in North America, so that in the early 20th century, when the southern part of Ireland became independent, the number of British in the north of Ireland exceeded that of the Irish, so that later Northern Ireland voted on the future of Northern Ireland, is of course a majority of the British asked to stay in the United Kingdom. And Ireland is an independent country. Ireland is located in the south-central part of the island of Ireland in the western part of Europe, west of the Atlantic Ocean, northeast of the United Kingdom and Northern Ireland border, east of the Irish Sea and the United Kingdom, the coastline is 3169 kilometers long, the central part of the hills and plains, the coast is mostly upland; the longest river Shannon River is about 370 kilometers long, and the largest lakes for the Lough Corrib. The island of Ireland is one of the largest islands in the British Isles, it is 475 kilometers long north-south, east-west width of 275 kilometers, the entire island area of 84,000 square kilometers, of which 5 / 6 of the area belongs to the Irish **** and the country. Ireland's land by the central plains and the ring around the coastal mountains constitute, like a steep edge of the basin, the north and south high in the middle of the low; central plains accounted for more than half of the total area of the country, the elevation of 30 to 120 meters above sea level, between the elevation of 200 to 300 meters of the low hills, this area is covered by lush forests, green fields, is the ideal grassland pastures. The eastern and northern mountain ranges are 700 to 900 meters above sea level, and the southern mountain ranges are between 700 and 1,000 meters above sea level; the southwestern coast has steep cliffs and jagged rocks. The mountains are full of caves and dark streams; the coastal mountains have been eroded for a long time, and the mountains are divided into wide valleys, which is conducive to the transportation between the interior and the coast. Ireland's coastline of more than 3,000 kilometers, its eastern coast is relatively straight, the lack of natural harbors; west and south of the coastline crisscrossing, rolling, extremely varied.
Question 6: What is the relationship between Ireland and the United Kingdom Answers are as follows:
1, Ireland is an independent country
2, Northern Ireland, Scotland, Wales, and England belong to the United Kingdom's four different regions, are British territory.
3, the full name of the UK as we usually call it is: the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
4, Scotland, Wales and England belong to the British Isles, and Northern Ireland and Ireland belong to the island of Ireland.
5, as for Northern Ireland and Ireland why separate, please refer to the following information:
3000 BC European mainland immigrants began to settle on the island of Ireland. In 432 A.D., St. Patrick came here to spread Christianity and Roman culture. 12 century into the feudal society. 1169 by the British invasion. 1171 British King Henry II to establish the right to rule over Ireland. 1541 from the King of England became the King of Ireland. 1800 signed the treaty of alliance between Ireland and Britain, the establishment of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, was completely annexed by the United Kingdom. 1916, the outbreak of the "Easter" protests against the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Dublin. In 1916 the Easter Rising broke out in Dublin. With the upsurge of the Irish national independence movement, Britain *** and Ireland signed the Anglo-Irish Treaty in December 1921, which allowed the 26 counties in the south of Ireland to set up a "Free State" and enjoy the right of self-government. In 1937, the Irish Constitution declared the "Free State" to be a *** and state, but it remained in the British Commonwealth. on December 21, 1948, the Irish Parliament passed a law declaring the secession of Ireland from the British Commonwealth. on April 18, 1949, the British recognized the independence of Ireland but refused to return the northern six counties. County. After Ireland's independence, successive Irish *** have made it their stated policy to realize the unity of North and South Ireland.
Question 7: Does Britain include Ireland? The United Kingdom is made up of England, Scotland and Wales on the island of Great Britain, and Northern Ireland in the northeast of the island of Ireland*** So the United Kingdom does not include Ireland
Question 8: What is the relationship between the United Kingdom and Ireland? History of Ireland
Ireland was inhabited more than 7,000 years ago, and for more than 7,000 years she has been subjected to many invasions and invasions, with the result that she has developed her rich and complex lineage and traditions. The first settlers were mainly hunters from Britain who brought with them a Mesolithic culture. Farmers, who followed them around 3000 B.C., raised animals and cultivated the land. After these Neolithic settlers, around 2000 BC, came prospectors and metal makers.
By the 6th century BC, wave after wave of Celtic invaders from Europe began to reach Ireland. While the Celts never unified Ireland politically, they did unify its culture and language.
In the 5th century AD, Christendom began to enter Ireland. Traditionally, this has been attributed to St? Patrick, although there is evidence that there were Christians on the island of Ireland long before his arrival. Unlike most Western European countries, Ireland never experienced the barbaric invasions of the early Middle Ages, and so Irish art, scholarship and culture, centered on the monasteries, flourished as never before in the 6th and 7th centuries. During that period before 800 AD, Irish monks brought Christianity to much of Europe.
Between the 9th and 10th centuries, Ireland was frequently attacked by Scandinavians. But they were also traders, contributing to the enrichment of Dublin, Cork and Waterford.1014 The Scandinavians were attacked at Clontarf by the Irish king Brian? Brian Boru, after which the Scandinavian influence faded.
In the 12th century, Normans, who had previously settled in Scotland and Wales, arrived in Ireland. At this time, Ireland was already on the road to establishing a state ruled centrally by a single monarch, and the arrival of these people disrupted this process. The Normans soon assumed control of much of Ireland, areas that were later placed under the political influence of the Scottish kings.
Over the next 400 years, the Normans and their descendants became increasingly influential in Ireland. However, much of the country remained in Irish hands, and by the early 16th century there was widespread fear in England that English influence was in danger of disintegrating, partly because of Gaelic incursions and partly because of the gradual Gaelicization of the Norman settlers.
The gradual decline of Gaelic Ireland
The religious changes in England during this time had a significant impact on Ireland. What came to be known as Old English Ireland, the descendants of the Norman settlers, was largely hostile to the Protestant Reformation, which had already led to the establishment of an Irish (English) state religion. In addition, Ireland, as an island close to both Britain and mainland Europe, was in a central strategic position and thus likely to become a stronghold for English dissatisfiers or foreign enemies. This gave the solution of the Irish question an urgency not seen for centuries.
As a reaction to religious differences and to the introduction of new settlers from Britain by the King of England, the Gaelic people launched a series of rebellions in Ireland. Their revolts were eventually suppressed, and by 1603 the last Gaelic fortress, Ulster, was also brought under the rule of the King of England. The Ulster Plantation, which later brought many English and Scottish settlers to Ulster, had a lasting impact on the religious and political landscape of the province. Ireland's political history in the 17th century is closely linked to events in England and Scotland, including the Civil War, Oliver Cromwell? Cromwell's Rebellion, the Restoration of Charles II, and the Glorious Revolution (1688) that placed William and Mary on the throne of England. The Old English and Gaelic Irish of the Old Religion, on the one hand, and the New Scots of the Protestant Religion (including other new settlers), on the other, began to struggle for supremacy, and throughout this period, after innumerable uproarious battles, the dust settled at the battles of Boinay (1690) and Aughrim (1691). The Old English and Gaelic Irish were defeated, and subsequently most of their leaders and followers ('wild geese') left Ireland to pursue their military, religious or commercial careers abroad. The Protestants, who became the state religion, monopolized political power and land ownership, and instituted penal codes that discriminated against the Old Religion (Catholicism).
The Eighteenth Century
Ireland's economy gained a great ...... >>
Question 9: What are England, Scotland, and Ireland all related to? The full name of the United Kingdom is the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland referred to as the United Kingdom.
The whole territory consists of most of the islands of the British Isles near the northwestern coast of the European continent, across the North Sea, the Strait of Dover and the English Channel and the European mainland, is an island country. The total length of the coastline is 11,000 kilometers. The eastern island of Great Britain is the largest island in the archipelago, and is the most important land of the United Kingdom.
It consists of three regions: Scotland in the north, England in the south and center, and Wales in the southwest. According to archaeological discoveries, the island of Great Britain was inhabited by humans 3,500 years ago, and in the middle of the 5th century, a large number of Germans invaded Great Britain from Northern Europe, becoming the ancestors of the present-day English. The Celts fled into the western and northern mountains, and fled to Ireland, where they are the ancestors of the Welsh, Scots and Irish.
Christianity began to spread to Great Britain in the 6th century AD. In the middle of the fifteenth century, the British aristocracy fought a 30-year civil war for the throne of the "Rose". In the mid-15th century, the British nobility fought a 30-year "Rose" civil war for the throne. The "Tudor Dynasty" was established. During the First World War, Britain and Germany became belligerents. As a result of the anti-German sentiment of the British people, King George V ordered in 1919 that the "Hanoverian dynasty", which had a German color, be renamed the "Windsor dynasty".
In the middle of the 18th century, an industrial revolution took place in Britain as a result of political, economic and technological maturity. With the invention of the steam engine, the use of a variety of machines, to the mid-nineteenth century, the Victorian period, Britain became the world's most advanced industrialized countries, in the production and trade in the face of the world's first, everywhere to implement the gunboat policy, to seize the hegemony of the sea, the invasion of the colonies, and a large number of raiding the wealth of other countries. The British Empire dominated the world, in the overseas control of the territory throughout Europe, Asia, the United States, Africa, Australia, known as the "Sunset Empire".
By the end of the 19th century, due to the rise of the United States, Germany and other countries, as well as a variety of other reasons, the United Kingdom gradually lost the advantage. Later in the Second World War was severely traumatized, the British Empire declined. The 26 southern counties of the island of Ireland, which was originally part of the mainland, seceded from the United Kingdom in 1921, and overseas colonies also declared their independence after World War II. The British Empire gradually evolved into a loosely organized Commonwealth.
Question 10: What is the relationship between Ireland, Scotland and the United Kingdom . England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, these four countries have their own constitutional monarchy, the monarch is the Queen, working in the House of Lords, there is no real power, but the release of the Constitution must be through the House of Lords, the establishment of the Constitution was established by the House of Commons, the House of Commons is exclusive to the location of the Parliament for England, England's parliamentary power is the greatest, and the Parliament of the other three countries can not participate in defense, foreign affairs, the Constitution of these important England's Parliament is the most powerful. The parliaments of the other three countries that are not England can only make decisions about local *** regulations. For example, taxes on houses, when children go to school, the age for free health care, etc. And so on and so forth. So you can see that when it comes to major events the UK represents 4 countries, such as the Olympics. When it comes to smaller events or times they each represent their own country, such as the World Cup. Lastly, Ireland is a completely different country. Ireland's national policies and electoral system are determined by their own country and have nothing to do with the UK at all. It's like the feeling of England and France. I hope the owner is satisfied