Why the Troubles started in Northern Ireland

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  • čas přidán 18. 04. 2023
  • The complicated history of Northern Ireland is hotly contested. The bloody 30-year conflict known as the Troubles caused thousands of deaths, with deep divisions across Northern Ireland, and the situation remains highly divisive to this day. This four-part series will examine the entire history of the Troubles, from the causes of the conflict to the long and difficult peace negotiations. In this first episode, we take an in depth look at the origin of the Troubles. Though the conflict began in earnest in 1969, the divisions that caused it can be traced back centuries.
    Watch the rest of our Troubles series:
    Episode 1 - Origins: • Why the Troubles start...
    Episode 2 - Escalation: • How the Troubles becam...
    Episode 3 - Division: • Living through the Tro...
    Episode 4 - Peace: • How do you end a 30-ye...
    Behind the scenes of our exhibition - • Designing the Troubles...
    IWM's free exhibition 'Northern Ireland: Living with the Troubles' opens at IWM North on 22 March 2024. Plan your visit: www.iwm.org.uk/events/norther...
    Explore and licence the film clips used in this video from IWM Film: film.iwmcollections.org.uk/my...
    Follow IWM on social media:
    Twitter: / i_w_m​
    Instagram: / imperialwarmuseums
    Facebook: / iwm.london

Komentáře • 1,3K

  • @meab12
    @meab12 Před rokem +1093

    I'm an Irishman. I bear no ill will towards British people, be that British soldiers (who were just trying to do their job), or Ulster Unionists and Loyalists. All I want is there to be lasting peace in Northern Ireland. Some of the best people I've ever met have been British, from both England and Northern Ireland. Not one single life should have been lost over this conflict. Live and let live.

    • @mickeencrua
      @mickeencrua Před rokem +126

      @maeb 12: Look at the social history of Northern Ireland between 1921 and 1969 and then think about, "Live and let live".

    • @meab12
      @meab12 Před rokem +143

      @mickeencrua ok. Is it revenge that you want ?
      If you had a problem with what happened in the past, do you think mistreating people today will fix it, or cause further conflict?

    • @nightly4303
      @nightly4303 Před rokem +71

      @@mickeencrua History is important because it allows us to look back in the past and learn from our mistakes, not to fuel hatred to inevitably make the same mistakes again.

    • @dtrueblue6322
      @dtrueblue6322 Před rokem +1

      @@mickeencrua you look at the history from 1969 and tell me to live and let live.. bombs outside McDonalds murdering women and children responsible for over 90% of innocent deaths in the province! I’ll take no lectures from you sonny.. nor will we forget.

    • @jixuscrixus1967
      @jixuscrixus1967 Před rokem +74

      The days of empire are long gone, Britannia doesn’t rule the waves, Westminster doesn’t rule in Hong Kong, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, India or any African countries but it’s ok for them to govern the six counties in Ireland….

  • @kaysmith8992
    @kaysmith8992 Před rokem +198

    This is why I will never understand those who say History is not important. We are constantly dealing with the aftermath of things that happened centuries even 1000 years ago.

    • @user-op9yy5xh4j
      @user-op9yy5xh4j Před 4 měsíci

      Everyone who do not learn history but learn everything about celebrities is plain and simple.moron ....
      Everyone should know and learn history ....
      History and finance is most important subject for every person today ....

    • @Taffy064
      @Taffy064 Před 2 měsíci +5

      Absolutely, as George Santayan wrote," Those who forget history are condemned to repeat it".

    • @ojjuiceman
      @ojjuiceman Před měsícem +1

      @@Taffy064 see I never like that quote...
      Because truth be told we never solve our problems. We just fight a war and whoever survives, we say they were correct..
      Well the problems that caused these wars often go unsolved and it just butterfly effects into more conflict..

    • @jackspring7709
      @jackspring7709 Před měsícem +3

      Those who say history is not important are the ignorant but also, more importantly, those who have a vested interest in making sure we don't know our, or anyone else's, history. Our political class plays a big role in that.

    • @Killakrab007
      @Killakrab007 Před měsícem

      Who says that

  • @user-xq6xu3fo8c
    @user-xq6xu3fo8c Před 4 měsíci +111

    The struggle of Irish people against the British empire, resonated with many people of the Commonwealth far and wide
    My dad when we lived in Pakistan was so moved by the martyrdom of Bobby Sands, that he wrote a poem about it

    • @Irishman0855
      @Irishman0855 Před 2 měsíci +5

      That’s nice to hear brother💚

    • @annewatson8113
      @annewatson8113 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Pity could have married and had children and a lovely life instead of dying for what just wish n . Ireland could move on its like ground hog day will always be Protestants and catholic’s too many bitter people will never change 😢

    • @jagcat123
      @jagcat123 Před měsícem +1

      Sands was just a puppet for the provo leadership...... martyrdom don't make me laugh

    • @conradblack779
      @conradblack779 Před měsícem +6

      ⁠@@annewatson8113he gave his life for his country and to free his people of British oppression he did not die in vein,his actions have led us to the point where Republicans are now in power and it’s only a matter of time until Ireland is reunited, the Protestant community is dying off while the catholic community is thriving. Very soon the catholics will have the overwhelming majority and trigger a border poll for unification and the Protestants will not be able to stop it. The change in the north of Ireland has been incredible in just the last 20 years alone in another 20 years there will be no such thing as Northern Ireland

    • @MollySpiegelman
      @MollySpiegelman Před 27 dny +1

      I would love to read that poem

  • @robsmithadventures1537
    @robsmithadventures1537 Před rokem +598

    I am Irish and I found this video even-handed and fair. A fairly robust introduction to the conflict.

    • @tomclarke9622
      @tomclarke9622 Před rokem

      Largely agree but they did ignore the setting up of the Irish Dáil in 1919 and the creation of a shadow state - and rather focused too much on the theoretical Southern Irish government. Basically not recognising the legitimacy of the pre Free State Dáil.

    • @mitchdaytonam3
      @mitchdaytonam3 Před rokem +34

      Agreed, it’s nice when documentaries state facts rather than try and force an agenda.

    • @EastAsiaCreativeMedia
      @EastAsiaCreativeMedia Před rokem

      Britain and their minions are thieves of Irish lands that is why Mountbatten got his just desserts

    • @MrOdsplut
      @MrOdsplut Před rokem +16

      I am British and so did I.

    • @stretfordender11
      @stretfordender11 Před rokem +5

      It doesn’t explain that there was no country called Ireland before any conquests happened. It doesn’t explain there has never been one country that has spanned the entire island unless it was under the UK.

  • @chazthehoon
    @chazthehoon Před rokem +190

    Classic behaviour from the British, and I am British. We need to own up to the darker parts of our country's history and learn from it. Ireland is an awesome country and I wish them a bright future!

    • @joelbilly1355
      @joelbilly1355 Před rokem

      Start by jailing the British soldiers who shot unarmed civilians dead on the streets of Britain

    • @Chips-Dubbo
      @Chips-Dubbo Před rokem +35

      people need to acknowledge the countless good things the UK has done too

    • @robertbruce1887
      @robertbruce1887 Před rokem +9

      Charles: that is very good of of you to wish that.

    • @stretfordender11
      @stretfordender11 Před rokem

      There has never been one country that has spanned that islands. The country of Ireland only exists because it was part of the Uk. Before that it was just war mongering tribes.

    • @brucegibbins3792
      @brucegibbins3792 Před rokem +8

      @@Chips-Dubbo please name three.

  • @djpokeeffe8019
    @djpokeeffe8019 Před rokem +273

    King George V opened the first Northern Ireland parliament and gave a rather good speech encouraging the majority to treat all people of all faiths with justice and moderation. It’s a tragedy that his audience, who claimed to be loyal to him, vociferously rejected his advice.

    • @r.williamcomm7693
      @r.williamcomm7693 Před rokem +14

      Thank you for that info. I never knew that. As an American w/some Irish ancestry I never really understood what was happening in the 1970s & 80s or why it was so important to those who didn’t want to be governed by the UK.
      You seem to have a firm understanding so may I ask you: Was there a 2 class system that excluded Nationalist Catholics? What type of discrimination did they face? Was it discrimination that was established by law or was it the result of UK supporters excluding the Nationalist Catholics from good jobs & business? Last, was it so widespread that nearly everyone in both groups stuck to their own kind or did most not have strong feelings either way & have friendships with both Protestants & Catholics while radicals on the edge fought? I completely understand if you don’t have time nor energy to answer. I’m embarrassed that I know so little about it.
      😀 🇺🇸 🇮🇪 🇬🇧 🍀

    • @PAL617
      @PAL617 Před rokem +3

      @@r.williamcomm7693 the documentary series on here actually fully explains and answers, most if not all of, your questions😊😊

    • @themasterofpuppet1
      @themasterofpuppet1 Před rokem +25

      @@r.williamcomm7693 In Northern Ireland the vote was given to ratepayers, those who owned property, rented social housing or owned businesses. This meant many had no vote and business owners often had multiple votes. It was not a democratic system where every adult had a right to vote. This also impacted Protestant working class people, of course, but due to the nature of the discrimination in other areas, it was not nearly as impactful as it was against the Catholic community, which was the intention.
      Catholics in Northern Ireland were then often discriminated against by the mostly Protestant capitalist class in terms of employment. This discrimination was aided by law as you often had to declare your religion on job applications. The law also had no protections to ensure this did not happen. This impacted Catholics ability to find gainful employment, buy property or gain capital to start businesses, impacting their ability to gain a vote, their democratic right.
      Catholics were also barred from attending state schools until a certain point, by which time most Catholic communities had their own Church maintained institutions, further separating the two communities.
      In many constituencies, especially in the West of the Bann (Derry, Tyrone, Fermanagh) which have always had a strong Catholic community or majority, the boundary lines were gerrymandered to further reduce the impact of the already weakened Catholic voting population. This was especially prominent in Derry City, where the city corporation was ran by a small Unionist/Protestant minority, despite being a majority Nationalist/Catholic, City.
      In housing, social housing or renting, Catholics often faced discrimination in gaining property to let. Councils would often refuse social housing to Catholic families who needed it or evict those already living in social housing to make way for Protestant families. This led to "Sit-ins" where civil rights activists would squat in the property of evicted Catholic families to help them keep their home. This discrimination in housing, again, led to the Catholic vote being diminished.
      All of this was done to silence the voice of a (sizeable) minority community in order to maintain Northern Ireland's position in the UK. "A Protestant county for Protestant people." As it was supposed to be.
      The Civil Rights movement began at the end of the 60s, inspired by movement in the US. It's aims were to bring an end to the discrimination people faced in the North, "One man, One Vote," was a popular slogan. The organisation leading this movement was the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association (NICRA) it was a cross community group of peaceful protestors and activists. This group was proscribed by the government in Stormont. This proscription allowed the RUC (police) to violently attack peaceful demonstrations with impunity. These attacks often led to riots, which continued the cycle of violence. It was this injustice against those attempting to create a more just society that lit the powderkeg, that started "The Troubles." Which is a disgustingly condescending name.

    • @timothydexter4027
      @timothydexter4027 Před rokem +1

      @@donalkinsella4380 There's millions of Irish over here. You end your occupation maybe we end ours. Truthfully though, I don't want them to leave; you can have the Scouse instead.

    • @karlheinzvonkroemann2217
      @karlheinzvonkroemann2217 Před 10 měsíci

      Talk is cheap and he needed soldiers to fight in WW1 for the British and the stupid Irish did. Too many of them.

  • @AngryIlluminati
    @AngryIlluminati Před 9 měsíci +245

    "Complicated" is an understatement. Imagine living near the border with so many different factions fighting for the different causes and beliefs. Your literal neighbor could be an enemy, ally or potentially both.

    • @Irish-Gael-sg4lv
      @Irish-Gael-sg4lv Před 8 měsíci +17

      Not true. Communities did not mix. You knew all of your neighbours. Towns and communities were incredibly close knit, nobody got in, nobody got out. You were either Irish, or an enemy of the Irish, it was that simple. Of course there were informers but as a whole it was pretty black and white

    • @joprocter4573
      @joprocter4573 Před 7 měsíci

      Border quieter than city's..

    • @joprocter4573
      @joprocter4573 Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@Irish-Gael-sg4lvaphreid faith education route from birth like a markist thought machine by time an adult and groomed in same propaganda never sharing life with fellow citizens

    • @jmastaskills
      @jmastaskills Před 6 měsíci +1

      Sounds like the balkans.

    • @BoleDaPole
      @BoleDaPole Před 6 měsíci +12

      It's not complicated at all.
      Britain is a shell of its former self and should give back the Irish land it stole back to Ireland.

  • @wataboutya9310
    @wataboutya9310 Před rokem +216

    I was born in Northern Ireland in 1956. I remember my world changing in that summer of 1969.

    • @jrjrjj7497
      @jrjrjj7497 Před rokem +21

      Bet you have some mad stories my man

    • @lowerywkd1
      @lowerywkd1 Před rokem +67

      Did you get your first real 6 string?

    • @JustSoRadicaL
      @JustSoRadicaL Před rokem +12

      @@lowerywkd1 I bet back then they were selling them at the five and dime

    • @sloughlin721
      @sloughlin721 Před rokem +20

      It wasn’t that bad according to Bryan Adams

    • @jrsun
      @jrsun Před rokem +6

      @@lowerywkd1 you guys really turned it into a bryan adams joke

  • @ardakolimsky7107
    @ardakolimsky7107 Před rokem +104

    I was ignorant when I first went to NI. A typical product of our education system.
    I went to University afterwards and studied the Empire, with a particular emphasis on Ireland as a colony.
    This is a decent potted history - though in an attempt to avoid seeming biased. it skirts around important facts.
    Having said that, everyone in Britain should see this.

    • @vurtigoneiii275
      @vurtigoneiii275 Před rokem +7

      >I went to University afterwards and studied the Empire, with a particular emphasis on Ireland as a colony.
      If you're referring to Ireland as a colony of the British Empire, then you mustn't have studied very hard at all. The concept of the British Empire came much later and Ireland wasn't deemed a colony.

    • @manmaje3596
      @manmaje3596 Před rokem +2

      @@vurtigoneiii275 It was the kingdom of Ireland.

    • @Rabhadh
      @Rabhadh Před rokem +18

      @@vurtigoneiii275 Ireland was the first colony and was exploited as such

    • @Hideyoshi1991
      @Hideyoshi1991 Před rokem +5

      @@vurtigoneiii275 If only someone had told Britain that.

    • @sunnyjim1355
      @sunnyjim1355 Před rokem +5

      @@manmaje3596 There was never such a thing as the "kingdom of Ireland", ever.

  • @gaius_enceladus
    @gaius_enceladus Před rokem +81

    I'm a New Zealander but my grandfather was from Kent.
    I'm hugely saddened by everything that the Irish have been subjected to.
    I absolutely *love* them.

    • @damienflinter4585
      @damienflinter4585 Před rokem +19

      We have never been at war with English people..just the Brutish Vampire and its occupying armies.

    • @Randy-Snorton
      @Randy-Snorton Před rokem +11

      Most English actually sympathised with the Irish struggle at 1st but then the IRA started blowing up pubs and public UK areas (a lot of the time they laid black wreaths as a warning) but unfortunately innocents did get killed and it changed opinions

    • @jrjrjj7497
      @jrjrjj7497 Před rokem +10

      @BrianT well said mate, new Zealander in the comments has no idea about my country and what’s best for it. I always say if you want to be Irish so bad move down to Dublin or Donegal😂bet half the fellas who hate the brits probably claim UK benefits

    • @angrydoggy9170
      @angrydoggy9170 Před rokem +4

      @@BrianT-jj3ei It’s easy to get people on your side if you can provide them and their families with the means to survive. Especially if you’re blocking access to basic commodities to anyone on the opposite side.

    • @hellajeff5613
      @hellajeff5613 Před rokem +2

      @@jrjrjj7497 It would be in their interest. The average person living in the Borderland region of ROI (with not a single city within it) has a higher disposable income than the average disposable income of people living in NI (with two large cities inside the area).
      Source: CSO of Ireland and NI respectively.

  • @dkexpat2755
    @dkexpat2755 Před rokem +5

    I found this channel yesterday, and I am legit more excited than i ever was at christmas as a child :D

  • @SafetySpooon
    @SafetySpooon Před 9 měsíci +4

    I am pleasantly surprised by the very even-handedness of this video. Very informative; thank you!

  • @kenharris5390
    @kenharris5390 Před rokem +259

    I would have liked to have seen a bit about the reign of terror of the Black and Tans, a period in Irish history that had a profound effect on the course of the conflict.

    • @TheScaryTruthCatalyst
      @TheScaryTruthCatalyst Před rokem +50

      The Black and Tans were no more terrible than the IRA of the time. However modern republican mythology demands a 'super villan'...

    • @patricktalbot8980
      @patricktalbot8980 Před rokem

      The IRA killed more civilians during that trouble then the black and tans. Black and tans is an excuse by Irish nationalists when they blow up 20 civilians

    • @jimcazador6057
      @jimcazador6057 Před rokem +12

      Actually the Black and Tans were fully supported by the RIC, virtually everyone a Catholic.

    • @Oluinneachain
      @Oluinneachain Před rokem +112

      @@TheScaryTruthCatalyst did the IRA “ of the time”(1920-21) routinely harass, arrest and abuse fellow citizens? Do you hold a branch of the UK’s state apparatus to the same standards as an insurgent paramilitary ? The “Black and Tans” were a branch of the British state ( auxiliary police force) and should have been subject to standards of conduct appropriate to consensual policing as the UK government deemed the population of Ireland to be UK citizens/subjects but for some reason it was acceptable to the UK government that its police forces in one part of the UK could operate in a manner not acceptable on the “mainland “.

    • @llYossarian
      @llYossarian Před rokem +3

      Like watching a Berlin wall documentary then saying you wished there'd been more about the assassination of Franz Ferdinand...

  • @Katmando376
    @Katmando376 Před rokem +30

    One of the Internees was an 80 year old man who told the arresting Officer " I am honoured that you think I'm a thorn in the side of the British establishment but I have to say I have not been active in the IRA for over 50 years!"

  • @pekkapikkuinen6896
    @pekkapikkuinen6896 Před rokem +12

    Very Exciting to get a series of this subject!

    • @nigeh5326
      @nigeh5326 Před rokem +4

      Look up Peter Taylor Northern Ireland on CZcams he is a journalist who covered the troubles for years.
      He made 4 documentaries about the different events and sides.
      Recommended 👍

  • @kev643
    @kev643 Před rokem +48

    It is such a pity that the Westminster government had not introduced a Good Friday type government in Northern Ireland in the early 60s.The discrimination in jobs and housing was not allowed to be mentioned in the House of Commons. Now we have equality and the peace must be preserved.

    • @stevenconfident5883
      @stevenconfident5883 Před rokem +15

      Actually, if you go back to the last British general in charge of Ireland, during the war of independence, he literally predicted that would be Civil War in one memo to Westminster. He asked them to stop referring to protestant as to loyalist as in his own words, they were loyal only to themselves, and we turn against the empire, if it’s suited them, just as they did in 1914, when they literally except the guns from the Kaiser begin in the chain of events that led to the Easter rise in the war of independence partition, and eventually the troubles.

    • @windexhero9757
      @windexhero9757 Před rokem +3

      There was an attempt in the 1970s with the Sunningdale Agreement. It was somewhat similar though they were to vague when first presenting it. Which means both sides heard what they wanted to hear, and not the compromise they would have to make. While it started out popular, unionists eventually turned against it as it gave nationalists too much in their opinion.

    • @MoanTheCelts
      @MoanTheCelts Před rokem +1

      Wouldn’t have been considered acceptable until the late 80s, unfortunately.

    • @blackskull842
      @blackskull842 Před rokem

      Irish Republicans have created a narrative whereby a few bits of discrimination (which were absolutely wrong) is taken as fact across the board. This is an absolute myth and anyone taking a tour between majority Catholic and Protestant areas of NI would see it for themselves. And it’s not a recent thing either. My family didn’t get a silver spoon in their mouth for being Protestant. They got no more nor less than their Catholic neighbours.

    • @jmccullough662
      @jmccullough662 Před 5 měsíci +3

      The Northern Ireland Constitution Act (1973) contains about 90% of what is included in the Belfast (Good Friday) Agreement, 1988.

  • @TheKalihiMan
    @TheKalihiMan Před rokem +102

    One thing that has always impressed me about Irish Republicans is their unwavering solidarity with other anticolonial struggles throughout the world. They have consistently stood with the people of Palestine against Israeli colonialism and the people of South Africa against Apartheid, and some have even expressed support for my own country of Hawaiʻi in the face of foreign occupation (which is doubly impressive when you consider the very prominent use of the Union Jack on our flag). The Irish, more than any other people in Europe, are intimately familiar with the effects of colonialism as both the first and last outpost of British imperialism.

    • @MrBannystar
      @MrBannystar Před rokem

      Sure, so much so that De Valera sent a note of condolence to the Nazi Germany government after the death of the moustachioed one.

    • @raymondhaskin9449
      @raymondhaskin9449 Před rokem

      My guy, the Irish literally colonised America and stole the land from the native people.
      Irish generals like Phil Sheridan launched scorched earth attacks on native villages.

    • @Charlie25068
      @Charlie25068 Před 9 měsíci

      The Irish are now considered too white and too European and therefore Ireland is being re colonised yet again

    • @ASMShadatHossain-te6ox
      @ASMShadatHossain-te6ox Před 5 měsíci

      One-day Ulster will have a free society under union men and women.

    • @lifes2short4aname
      @lifes2short4aname Před 2 měsíci

      You think hawaii is a country?

  • @franckcolomb5579
    @franckcolomb5579 Před rokem +50

    I took an amazing guided tour with 2 guides in this area.
    Both were convicted during the troubles from both communities.
    The walking tour was amazing with both sides explaining their ( still) very conflicting views. I recommend this experience to anyone visiting Belfast

    • @ATLmodK
      @ATLmodK Před 11 měsíci +2

      I took the blackcab tour from a person who had lived in Ballymurphy and had been 10 when the Troubles began. It was excellent

    • @johnnotrealname8168
      @johnnotrealname8168 Před 6 měsíci +1

      There is a journal article on this. I read it around the time this comment was made ironically.

  • @isaaccoote2874
    @isaaccoote2874 Před rokem +126

    What an intriguing piece, and it couldn't have been released at a better time. Love the channel you guys!

    • @Brian-bp5pe
      @Brian-bp5pe Před rokem +1

      Have you ever been to Cootehill, Isaac?

    • @isaaccoote2874
      @isaaccoote2874 Před rokem +2

      ​@@Brian-bp5pe No, I have not been fortunate enough yet to visit outside of my home country. I did happen to look into this Cootehill and the towns history and honestly it looks beautiful and rich with history that happens to share my last name. I must thank you for introducing me to it. Very cool.

    • @DaveSCameron
      @DaveSCameron Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@Brian-bp5pe☘️

  • @TC.C
    @TC.C Před rokem +7

    Thank you for this video. I learned lot from it!

  • @Scout1134
    @Scout1134 Před rokem +143

    I found this to be very informative and helped me as an American understand this very complex issue. From comments I understand it is well balanced. Well done. We must study history to help our current world.

    • @conormeehan3347
      @conormeehan3347 Před 11 měsíci

      It's not that complex really, the British stole our land and persecuted our people, just like they did in many other parts of the world.

  • @spudgun4321
    @spudgun4321 Před rokem +104

    Mr Murray is a bit economical with the actual details, when it comes to his description of the UDR, "there may have been collision" the UDR was used as a training organisation, arms repository, and an intelligence source by the UDA the UFF the Red Hand Commandos.
    The UDR, bar the first 12 to 18 months of the regiments existsbce, had a 3% catholic participation and those 3% were regularly threatened and abused. It was a protestant / unionist force that replaced the B-Specials, to keep the Catholic and or nationalist population "in their place"
    The video, all in all, is a good start for people to begin to learn about the troubles, but I do feel a considerable amount of rose tinted glasses are used.

    • @scottessery100
      @scottessery100 Před rokem +2

      and resulted in the IRA planting bombs in mainland England including a bin in Manchester that killed a child and his dad

    • @1916jamesconnolly
      @1916jamesconnolly Před rokem

      Good Comment. If you hated Catholics but didn't want to possibly go to Prison by joining the UVF then you joined the Loyalist UDR. It give yourself a hint of respectability. Killers with with Government issue weaponry, training and access to Brit Army intelligence files.

    • @icemanire5467
      @icemanire5467 Před rokem

      They also took part in the Miami Showband murders, some of them blew themselves up. They also took part in the Dublin/Monaghan bombings. Capt. Robert Nairac seems to have been complicit in both.

    • @blackskull842
      @blackskull842 Před rokem +1

      This attack on the UDR is as biased as it is inaccurate. Apart from the absolutely spurious linkage of it to Loyalist Paramilitaries like some systemic issue, the real reason for an extremely low Roman Catholic membership was that those brave members found themselves top of PIRA hitlists. The same reason for the RUC having low Roman Catholic membership, they became hated prime targets for Irish Republicans.
      Then the perversity of “they’re a sectarian force, look at the membership” started.
      Can’t have it both ways. The IRA caused that, they created the effect. And then their political buddies in SF cried wolf about it.

    • @jackbell6294
      @jackbell6294 Před rokem +1

      If there was so much collusion between the udr and loyalist paramilitaries then why were loyalist paramilitaries so poor at killing ira suspects? The vast majority of people killed by loyalist terrorists were catholic civilians. If loyalist paramilitaries were being fed information from security forces then why would they waste their time killing innocent people when they could have been killing the ira, who were also killing innocent people? Although undoubtedly there was collusion between both groups by some scum within the udr, the level of collusion was limited to a tiny majority, who were shunned by their colleagues within the udr.

  • @fredorico41
    @fredorico41 Před rokem +57

    Very interesting, I didn't know the tensions went that far back, thankyou for such a great channel, all the best from Australia 🦘

    • @Mugdorna
      @Mugdorna Před rokem +8

      Tensions go back before the Tudors

    • @gary637
      @gary637 Před rokem

      You couldn't go one week without hearing an Irish Republican talk about 800 years of oppression. They're still angry about stuff from history.

    • @ardri31
      @ardri31 Před rokem +6

      Better part of 1000 years

    • @joodebritannia6345
      @joodebritannia6345 Před 11 měsíci +1

      It started when the Anglo-Normans invaded Ireland in 1169

  • @doberski6855
    @doberski6855 Před rokem +94

    'Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it.' A very old much used quote, but thank you for this video. Looking forward to watching the rest of the series.

    • @eoin79
      @eoin79 Před rokem +16

      The British aren't taught history in their schools much beyond the medieval kings, Dunkirk and D-Day. So if you're a British person wanting to get a leg up on the sins of Britain and its empire, the British Imperial War Museum might not be the best place to start.

    • @joprocter4573
      @joprocter4573 Před rokem

      Irish tend to believe only their version of everything.

    • @Chips-Dubbo
      @Chips-Dubbo Před rokem +2

      ​@@eoin79 The UK is one of the most educated countries in the world. People in the UK know more about the empire than people in third world countries with no good schools and education

    • @padraigpearse1551
      @padraigpearse1551 Před rokem +12

      ​@Obvious Troll as an irishman from the North with family in England I wholeheartedly disagree. In regards to Ireland, none of my family in England were taught about Ireland in any detail and what they were taught was HEAVILY biased. For example, my cousin's daughter was taught that the British army were sent into the North because of PIRA bombings. This is interesting since the PIRA weren't formed until four or so months AFTER the British army were sent in.

    • @dod4004
      @dod4004 Před rokem +2

      @@padraigpearse1551 you won't like this one bit but I genuinely don't say this to wind you up...
      Whereas it's fairly easy to cover a comprehensive history of Ireland from primary school through to secondary school, that's simply not possible for the UK. Whereas most nations which were once part of the British Empire can concentrate on their own bit of history, British children would need to master all of it. A quarter of the globe from the late 1500s onwards. Indian children will learn about the Doctrine of Lapse. South Africans the Jameson Raid. Australians the Eureka Rebellion. New Zealanders the Maori Wars. Irish the Easter Rising. But British children would need to cover all of it. It's just not possible.

  • @mop4232
    @mop4232 Před rokem +50

    American born in 86 here. My knowledge of the troubles pretty much involves either u2 or punk rock and that's about it. This was absolutely fascinating. Looking forward to the rest of the series.

    • @mito88
      @mito88 Před rokem +5

      I can't believe the news today

    • @JS-uq7iy
      @JS-uq7iy Před rokem +16

      If U2 are you're source of knowledge on it i suggest forgetting everything, they are incredibly biased and more often than not wrong

    • @noodlyappendage6729
      @noodlyappendage6729 Před rokem +6

      Don’t take too much from it. It’s not totally accurate.

    • @Mugdorna
      @Mugdorna Před rokem

      A very history of the centuries long conflict would be the "Lions Led by Donkeys" podcast. They did a 3 parter on the subject.

    • @markwebster4996
      @markwebster4996 Před rokem +10

      If the historians here are to be believed, nothing and no one is entirely accurate. Its too opinionated and complex. Like it or not U2 reached more people than any other source regarding the conflicts. Certainly in the US thats what most people would think of unless they are student of history.

  • @johnmchugh8049
    @johnmchugh8049 Před rokem +14

    My dad was off the boat Protestant English and my mom is third generation Irish catholic American - the troubles have always broken my heart - I pray for our father to heal both peoples

    • @boudroux1
      @boudroux1 Před rokem

      My dad is a McHugh, family is in Georgia.

  • @INTUITIVENORSK2303
    @INTUITIVENORSK2303 Před 3 měsíci +3

    An interesting documentary.
    We must never forget history & we should never deny any of it, specifically the bad parts.
    For in remembering & acknowledging our troubled history & other troubling global history, it will hopefully remind & help us, to never repeat the same wrongs again.

  • @Vatniks_are_clowns
    @Vatniks_are_clowns Před rokem +3

    Thank you for the video! Very intriguing stuff.

  • @garthmcguigan2357
    @garthmcguigan2357 Před rokem +60

    I have a lot of experience in this particular field, this has been an even handed reflection on what the history is within the constraints of a CZcams video. It highlights much of what is still going on to this day, but this is such a complex story, my hope is that the people of Ireland and Northern Ireland can move forward peacefully, no matter how political opinion goes for or against them

    • @DaveSCameron
      @DaveSCameron Před 11 měsíci

      Try and imagine Germany winning #WW2 then in later years giving us back our sovereign freedom but holding on to Kent... ☘️😊

  • @helenmurray9299
    @helenmurray9299 Před rokem +12

    Excellent video, well presented. Looking forward to more.

  • @pierdyIion
    @pierdyIion Před 5 měsíci +1

    super informative thanks!

  • @MsTinkerbelle87
    @MsTinkerbelle87 Před 9 měsíci

    This is really helpful, thank you! Grew up like this but not really understanding why it was like this! Ta!

  • @Kolossus_
    @Kolossus_ Před 7 měsíci +10

    As an American with no real knowledge om this, it's pretty sad to see the level of violence and hatred that has come from this centuries long struggle.

    • @alikamal3464
      @alikamal3464 Před měsícem

      The violence is officially over but the tribalism is still in the air over there. I went on holiday there and they took me up to these big walls like you see in Israeal/ Palestine. The walls divide different tribes. It's not uncommon for projectiles or hand thrown missiles and petrol bombs over. Some of the house backing up to these walls are cover in huge cages around their homes to use as a kind of shield. It really is insane but the people who live in these zones do not want these wall removed or there will be hell. Thankfully these encounters are not as common as they once were. The guide said it doesn't take very much for it to kick off and it's usually youths who start it.

  • @gagfails4985
    @gagfails4985 Před 10 měsíci +5

    Our day will come ❤ united IRELAND ❤

  • @joshhowe7795
    @joshhowe7795 Před rokem +14

    Even though there was a potato blight, which caused the potato crop to fail, it is hard to call this a famine as there was still food available. However, as mentioned in the video this food was taken by Brittan for profit.

    • @blackskull842
      @blackskull842 Před rokem +3

      Lesser known fact: potatoes aren’t sectarian, they didn’t discriminate between Catholic and Protestant. Just one for the wee myth builders to think about.

    • @hellajeff5613
      @hellajeff5613 Před rokem +5

      @@blackskull842 You completely miss the significance of the Famine. The people who were enserfed to the land were the native who had been subjugated and their land enclosed and divided up for colonist landlords. The people were put in the position where they were reliant on a weak constantly failing crop on their tiny plots of land was because of British landlordism. It wasn't just some random tragedy, it devastated the native people because of the society imposed upon them not coincidentally to it.

    • @timothydexter4027
      @timothydexter4027 Před rokem

      ​@@hellajeff5613 Gavelkind ended the century prior. The large population led to famine. That's why Cottier classes got wiped out.

    • @timothydexter4027
      @timothydexter4027 Před rokem

      Most famines technically have enough food. I don't think that you understand the logistical limitation of the day. Food exported from the East couldn't have made it to the South West.

  • @duffman543
    @duffman543 Před 9 měsíci +15

    Although it's implied, i think that it is worth highlighting how the ulster plantations involved the taking of land from the indigenous population, to be given to the planters. In effect, stripping much of the resources of this region, and political power, from the original ulster dwellers.

  • @jackthebassman1
    @jackthebassman1 Před 8 měsíci +44

    Like the majority of the English, I had no understanding of the political situation in Northern Ireland, it wasn’t until a Scottish friend who was actually Protestant said before I joined in condemning the IRA I should research the political situation there. That made me aware of how extremely unfair the catholic population were treated and moderated my view. Thank you Imperial War Museum for what I am certain is an excellent and unbiased report.

    • @SuperM789
      @SuperM789 Před 7 měsíci

      terrorist supporter

    • @joprocter4573
      @joprocter4573 Před 7 měsíci

      Should research how life was for ppl in Republic of Ireland very coldhouse for non catholics

    • @RazorMouth
      @RazorMouth Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@@joprocter4573

    • @invisibleman4827
      @invisibleman4827 Před 5 měsíci

      You can condemn the IRA regardless. There's zero need to have some credentials as an historian before condemning a group that forced their own people into becoming human bombs ISIS-style (Patsy Gillespie, for example).

    • @garethpaul8136
      @garethpaul8136 Před 4 měsíci

      Working and lower class Protestant's were no better treated than Catholics, this misconception that it was only the Catholic community that was discriminated against was peddled by Irish republicans as an excuse for the IRA to wage war against the British.

  • @liamevans1630
    @liamevans1630 Před rokem +12

    Speaking as an Irish republican, this is a surprisingly honest and historically correct video.
    It can't cover every nuance in 16 minutes but I thank the IWM for posting.

  • @kippamip
    @kippamip Před rokem +1

    I look forward to part 2.

  • @evelynmccabe3855
    @evelynmccabe3855 Před rokem +103

    Excelllent video but as an Irish person I thought I might add a few items missed out ( perhaps for length of talk) - the United Irishmens Rebellion of 1798 which was defeated by the British Authorities the leaders were either executed ( i.e. Henry Joy McCracken( or transported from Ireland.
    This movement consisted of Presbyterian and Roman Catholics. Their leader though was actually
    Anglican - Wolfe Tone a Dubliner. Their motto was to unite Protestant,Catholic and Dissenter and was largely inspired by the French Revolution I suppose and the dream of a Republic for Ireland Unfortunately around the same time the Orange Order was founded to unite all Protestants no Roman Catholics are allowed to join this organisation to the present day and their parades are every year 12th July and has always caused trouble between the communuties to this day.
    As regards the Civil War in 1922-23 there was a general election held in 1923 with Michael Collins leading the Pro-Treaty side and Eamon DeValera Anti-Treaty side. The Pro-Treaty side won getting elected almost 70% of TDs to the Irish parliament (Dáil)
    The anti-treaty side lost but nevertheless they continued to a civil war at which Michael Collins was shot dead by anti-treaty forces.
    1n 1932 De Valera and his party Fianna Fail(which contained the majority of anti-treaty who now accepted the new state after an election became the new government. A smaller number of anti-treaty(Sinn Fein/ IRA) which over the years broke into smaller groups Republician and larger Provisional IRA. The Provisional IRA/Sinn Fein which was generally the one which continued the fight in N Ireland and ofcourse ended with the Good Friday Agreement of 1998. The name 'Provisional' has been dropped for a number of years and is now just Sinn Fein which is in Stormont. Republician Sinn Fein opposed the Good Friday Agreement but its only a minor player now but ofcourse smaller splinter groups is still active to an extent. Irish history is very complex and can be difficult to understand in so many ways. Maybe this might be of some help.

    • @Dom-fx4kt
      @Dom-fx4kt Před rokem +13

      This fact often gets overlooked a lot, and the the young Ireland movement which many of the leaders and followers were protestant Irish Nationalists in the mid 19thcentury.

    • @casteretpollux
      @casteretpollux Před rokem

      Excellent

    • @johnmchugh8049
      @johnmchugh8049 Před rokem +2

      Thank you for the additional info - I’ll have to read up on if - blessings to you

    • @conorhaywa5690
      @conorhaywa5690 Před rokem +2

      Who fears to speak of 98.

    • @keishaloves1762
      @keishaloves1762 Před rokem +1

      Thank you!

  • @BumberClarke
    @BumberClarke Před 9 měsíci +15

    I was born in Scotland, my grandad is from Dublin gran Italian my mother is English from welsh English grandparents who all fell out over me being christened Church of Scotland Protestant. I am not religious and I have Irish relatives in Belfast also. Sectarian violence breaks my heart
    End the hatred!

  • @Desert-Father
    @Desert-Father Před 3 měsíci +23

    Because of the British. Next question.

  • @trentdiamanti4816
    @trentdiamanti4816 Před rokem

    Impressively even handed effort!

  • @jimbrown5552
    @jimbrown5552 Před rokem

    Thanks again for sharing

  • @bikeman9899
    @bikeman9899 Před rokem +41

    As one of the British officers involved at the time said , "it was a war". Yet, the history of this recent British Civil War is not taught really at school to British students. I have met so many British ppl over the years who are just unaware of what happened in their country for 30 horrible, long years. It's not their fault of course, as the reality clashes with the narrative the UK government prefers to tell in school history classes.

    • @padraigmuldoon4266
      @padraigmuldoon4266 Před rokem

      It's not their Country it is Irish land which is occupied by planted invaders

    • @AlexG-wk3nh
      @AlexG-wk3nh Před rokem +4

      I was born in the 90s and the troubles was never mentioned at school, i never remember seeing it on tv really either. My friends are the same and us now in our 30s im one of the only people out of my friends who knows about the troubles.

    • @timothydexter4027
      @timothydexter4027 Před rokem +10

      We are taught to be ashamed in history now due to the slave trade, ignoring that we (including the Irish) ended it. Woke historians have little appetite for discussing white Vs white wars as it contradicts their views which are built on racialism.

    • @teachugger1044
      @teachugger1044 Před rokem +3

      A 16 year old Brit here, this is spot on my only frame of reference was my mother ( born at the start of the troubles) who saw it was “just terrible” without explaining the history and a substitute teacher(Irish) who when OFF the topic to talk about the troubles as he sadly experienced some of the violence The only reason I am learning about it is due to my love of history and want to explore why events like these happen

    • @Ukraineaissance2014
      @Ukraineaissance2014 Před 11 měsíci +2

      ​@@AlexG-wk3nhsorry but you have to take some responsibility for that yourself, i was born at the same time and it was never off the news and bombings took place in mainland britain constantly, along with being searched along with my mums car around military areas, constant bomb scare evacuations from events as well. It wasn't hidden in any way. If Omagh just passed you by thats nobody elses fault.

  • @saundersdachicken6197
    @saundersdachicken6197 Před 5 měsíci +5

    The Troubles started 800yrs ago. The Brits were never thought their own history with Ireland.

  • @Legitpenguins99
    @Legitpenguins99 Před 9 měsíci

    Nice objective video on a touchy subject. It's really sad and telling that I even need to say this. Objective coverage of this subject is abnormal and deserves praise.

  • @stephenmcmahon5833
    @stephenmcmahon5833 Před rokem +2

    The border was redrawn on 3 occasions. Very good video & the IWM is a fantastic place to visit. For the record 1500 ex B Specials were automatically drafted in to the UDR.. Maybe not the wisest of policies.

  • @damienflinter4585
    @damienflinter4585 Před rokem +3

    For a bit of detail on the conflict read David Burke's 'Kitson's Irish War'.

  • @Schos456
    @Schos456 Před rokem +111

    Very well presented, respectful to both sides, and accurate.

  • @54mgtf22
    @54mgtf22 Před rokem

    Love your work 👍

  • @padraigpearse1551
    @padraigpearse1551 Před rokem +86

    Overall the video is decent but so many incredibly important things were left out. Events such as Burntollet Bridge where a peacefull civil rights march was met by loyalist mobs while the RUC stepped back and made no attempt to stop the attack. As well as this two massacres carried out by British troops against civilians (Ballymurphy and Bloody Sunday) were left out which is interesting. I guess we'll see if they're mentioned in upcoming videos...
    It should also be mentioned that rubber and plastic bullets were often found to have crosses cut into the top with a penny inserted to cause more severe damage.

    • @whitetroutchannel
      @whitetroutchannel Před rokem

      i agree they left out the near genocide of civilians on the border by the i.r.a. during the early 20s and the secterian riots in belfast during the same period, they also missed out hitlers envoy to ireland to meet i.r.a. commanders during the second world war

    • @vonhaig
      @vonhaig Před rokem +22

      Also would've been good to include events like the Burning of Lisburn and the Belfast Pogrom to illustrate how northern nationalists actually experienced partition.

    • @jimcazador6057
      @jimcazador6057 Před rokem +18

      The Civil rights movement started out with the best intentions, but it was hijacked by the far left, I know them, the Official IRA in particular, as for Ballymurphy and Bloody Sunday, the IRA were not entirely blameless, they started of the conflict and were killing British soldiers, if they had not have done that the Paras would not have been given the excuse. I remember 1970-71 as a very young lad Paras actually having relationships with local women, many married women from the same area, including relatives of some well known SF members prominent in the 80s and sisters to IRA men, A para used to get dropped off in my street to visit his girlfriend I met him a few times as I ran in and out of her house as I played with her younger brother. Republicans are not the innocent party here.

    • @Mugdorna
      @Mugdorna Před rokem +2

      This is part 1, and it's difficult to provide an overview without getting sucked into specific incidents.

    • @Mugdorna
      @Mugdorna Před rokem +23

      ​@@jimcazador6057 Later inquiries have established that the Paras were the one to shoot first on Bloody Sunday.

  • @paulpayton8238
    @paulpayton8238 Před 4 měsíci +4

    I'm Irish Italian decent on dad's side of the family born in England my great grandparents are from co wexford on dad's side of the family and I lived and married a local lassie in Ireland I only seen the end of the troubles but I pray for all to live in peace ✌ 😊

  • @popeyesailor9571
    @popeyesailor9571 Před měsícem +5

    the "famine" didn't break out it was manufactured.

  • @mats7492
    @mats7492 Před rokem +2

    Walking there STILL feels so eerie..

  • @robbabcock_
    @robbabcock_ Před rokem

    Great video!

  • @petergraves2085
    @petergraves2085 Před rokem +47

    Ireland did NOT "secede" from the UK. The IRA fought an active war against the British military between 1919 and 1921, to attain "independence". A very, very "English" view of a part of the United Kingdom generally of no interest to London.

    • @dod4004
      @dod4004 Před rokem +6

      And that war of independence (at least in the south) ended with the secession of Ireland from the UK with the Anglo-Irish Treaty and the Irish Free State (Agreement) Act 1922 🤷🏼‍♂️ What's wrong about that?

    • @gavinmceneff5612
      @gavinmceneff5612 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Not the South, the republic of Ireland, use our correct name

  • @JacquesPPage
    @JacquesPPage Před 10 měsíci +16

    Interesting, fair and balanced report on this complicated situation. As a Québécois having lived through our own independence movement, in the 60's, 70's, 80's and 90's I'm glad we did not experience such a high level of violence. Even after the hotly contested 1995 referendum's lost by the nationalists, social climate remained quite cool.

    • @MustacheCashStash125
      @MustacheCashStash125 Před 6 měsíci

      I think all people are equals weather you’re English-Canadian or French-Canadian

  • @paulgorman1305
    @paulgorman1305 Před rokem +7

    Got to know a woman who lived on the border she was over a hundred years old when she passed, she used to smuggle jam across the border, that was her bit for Ireland she told me 😂

  • @andrewsteele7663
    @andrewsteele7663 Před rokem +29

    Well, that was an excellent video, and very sobering. As a lad I grew up in the UK and could never understand why there were so many issues in Ireland[northern] I have read a lot over the years about the unrest, but it still leaves me gob smacked that people couldn't sit and work out their issues. Brilliant video, well done.

    • @mintcool4545
      @mintcool4545 Před rokem +53

      Yeah it's a shame Britain continued to destroy Irish culture and heritage. Never forget.

    • @ardakolimsky7107
      @ardakolimsky7107 Před rokem +13

      A little naïve, if you don't mind me saying.
      I feel I can say it because I too was ignorant and naïve.
      It comes down to power in the end...who has it, who doesn't and power is rarely given freely.

    • @michealhand1001
      @michealhand1001 Před rokem +2

      Thanks for your honest portrayal of what caused the Troubles

    • @mattteee2973
      @mattteee2973 Před rokem +2

      Same. I've always felt pretty baffled by it all, hopefully this series continues to explain why people with so much in common came to fight each other so bitterley.

    • @baerlauchstal
      @baerlauchstal Před rokem +26

      The thing is, they weren't "their" issues. Or at least, not in any simple sense. The British state--our country, Andrew, yours and mine--had presided over partition itself, and then permitted gerrymandering, and housing and employment discrimination, and the damn Householder Vote: all things that would not have been tolerated in England, Scotland or Wales. Then the Army, sent by and under control of that state, failed in its stated task to the extent that unarmed protesters were shot dead in the street (I assume this is going to be covered in the next video).
      I don't absolve the paramilitaries on either side for their crimes and atrocities, but it was our country that allowed the situation to fester. These "issues" were ours as well.

  • @skitlow1891
    @skitlow1891 Před rokem +40

    My dad lived in a catholic area but all his family worked in British government jobs, despite this he always told me stories about how as a child he was treated worse than dogs by the British army

    • @bunk95
      @bunk95 Před 5 měsíci

      Whats Irish mum called by you and whats your thoughts on shape of descendants of the old Kings of the souths foreheads, include the primary purpose used to generate the opinion on their head shape.
      (Its sexy here.)

  • @ceonach
    @ceonach Před 2 měsíci +6

    Seen through Union Jack tinted glasses.😂😂

  • @davidspray1239
    @davidspray1239 Před 11 měsíci +6

    I'm British and embarrassed about how our government, monarchy and army behave on other people's land. America and ourselves try to rule with power and fear and are as much of a terrorist nation as we claim others to be. We should give back all the foreign lands we still control. Fully agree with the Republicans.

  • @eaphantom9214
    @eaphantom9214 Před rokem +21

    This means a lot to me
    I am of Irish descent
    👍
    Family background hails from Donegal 🇮🇪

    • @murpho999
      @murpho999 Před rokem +3

      Just so so you know it’s Co Donegal with only one ‘n’.

    • @eaphantom9214
      @eaphantom9214 Před rokem +2

      @@murpho999
      Now been 🍀Corrected

    • @midsouthirish1680
      @midsouthirish1680 Před rokem +1

      🤙🏻

    • @JohnKobaRuddy
      @JohnKobaRuddy Před rokem +8

      So why the Brit flag then?

    • @eaphantom9214
      @eaphantom9214 Před rokem +1

      @@JohnKobaRuddy You're not the 1st to point that out
      It's there out of my personal choice, a little representation when commenting on other presentations 4 1 thing
      Your name had a Hammer and Sickle, are you a communist sympathiser? 😅

  • @alexk7046
    @alexk7046 Před rokem +77

    I'm sure the Imperial War Museums will be impartial in a history of The Troubles.

    • @Mugdorna
      @Mugdorna Před rokem +11

      It's not a bad summation of the conflict.
      Starting in the 1600s is bit recent though.

    • @jrton1366
      @jrton1366 Před rokem +2

      ​@@Mugdorna the notion that it started before then is laughable. If Ireland was colonised in the 1200s then so was England in the 1000s, so we are in the same boat....

    • @jooseppielleese7156
      @jooseppielleese7156 Před rokem +2

      @@jrton1366 The Normans did colonized Ireland with English and Welsh peasants to work the land, the Normans of 1066 didn't colonised England they replaced some nobility and seized their land and claimed crown etc their was no colonization. Most Normans like in England went native so to speak, so the English made laws to stop them going native as well as the peasants in the 1300s, the Irish at the time called Normans Old English so to them it started in 1200s.
      now many English of the said land, forsaking the English language, manners, mode of riding, laws and usages, live and govern themselves according to the manners, fashion, and language of the Irish enemies; and also have made divers marriages and alliances between themselves and the Irish enemies aforesaid; whereby the said land, and the liege people thereof, the English language, the allegiance due to our lord the king, and the English laws there, are put in subjection and decayed...

    • @alawesy
      @alawesy Před rokem +1

      @@jooseppielleese7156 It depends what kind of definition you are using for “colonisation” if you say that the UK colonised India, then to be consistent you have to say the Normans colonised England. The Norman King’s spoke French and most spent almost all of their time in France. France and expanding their French holdings was the main focus and objective of the Norman Kings, the Normans were incredibly oppressive of the native English as well, the castles built all over England were not there to defend England but in order to effectively occupy it.
      While on a smaller scale than India, this was very similar to what Britain did to India. The British Raj didn’t fundamentally change the system of government in India, it simply inserted a British colonial administration at the top.

    • @alawesy
      @alawesy Před rokem +2

      Did you make this comment before or after watching the video?

  • @ynwa73
    @ynwa73 Před rokem +6

    Centuries of tension is a nice way of saying centuries of murder. If England never invaded then thete would be no troubles. Ireland should be reunited and anyone who doesn't like that should be offered a home in England

    • @williamacheson8188
      @williamacheson8188 Před 11 měsíci

      What ignorance are you? How about you're idea being on the other side and get home's in Republic of Ireland, nothing wrong with killer's jumping the border. Also Protestant, Unionist, Loyal British citizens where never greedy about land. Happy with the 6 county's.

  • @Richard1A2B
    @Richard1A2B Před 6 měsíci +1

    I was surprised how balanced this video is. Well done.

  • @exsoulagent
    @exsoulagent Před 10 měsíci

    Well narrated

  • @LtColwtf
    @LtColwtf Před rokem +13

    Definitely a conflict that is worth studying. You can see aspects of it in the wider culture in the West, these days. Thinking about the way the parties to the conflict perceived events very differently, makes me think of how divided the US seems to be, these days.

  • @columbmurray
    @columbmurray Před 10 měsíci +10

    I served in the British Marines during the troubles , but thankfully didnt go there , and the soldiers hated going to Nr Ireland more than anywhere else in the world.. I remember written on a wall , British Army go Home ,and a squadie adding , Wish We Could.

  • @phays10
    @phays10 Před 11 měsíci

    My family is from county Cork. It's good to learn about where my family comes from.

  • @GrandAdmThrawn
    @GrandAdmThrawn Před rokem +1

    Longer videos about this please.

  • @oldbikedavey
    @oldbikedavey Před rokem +4

    When things come off the handle, it's impossible to know what to do for the best. Apart from stopping digging if you're in a hole...?

  • @petertimowreef9085
    @petertimowreef9085 Před 11 měsíci +31

    Been learning about the 16th and 17th century of European history recently and it just blows my mind how the religious wars of that era shaped Europe. A division across an entire continent that runs so deep that 500 years later it still flares up in armed conflict, like it did during The Troubles.

    • @senna1995
      @senna1995 Před 9 měsíci +10

      The troubles was an ethno-nationalist war, not a religious war.

    • @korosuke1788
      @korosuke1788 Před 9 měsíci +3

      And it was alll so a King could marry. It's a ridiculous religión.

    • @FINNSTIGAT0R
      @FINNSTIGAT0R Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@senna1995
      Many, many religious wars have lots of other components to them as well, so while the religiousness maybe wasn't the actual driver of the thing it still was one major component in making the parties in conflict to suspect and feel the other side as fundamentally "the other".

    • @warrenpaine
      @warrenpaine Před 9 měsíci +1

      I think the conflict has more to do with ethnic and political allegiance than it does with religion.

    • @darrenstanners7195
      @darrenstanners7195 Před 8 měsíci

      england invaded over 1,000 years ago that is 500 years before your quoted times

  • @sealove79able
    @sealove79able Před rokem

    A very interesting video.

  • @TroupeGoal
    @TroupeGoal Před rokem +2

    If this whetted your appetite, the BBC's Peter Taylor's excellent trio of documentaries, Provos, Loyalists and Brits tell the events from each perspective and are very good. I think they're on CZcams.

  • @chetcalhoun613
    @chetcalhoun613 Před rokem +7

    Very interesting. And the facts that are being presented here are followed with neither side can agree on what really happened….sounds like what is happening here in the U.S. in 2023. Looking forward to the next episodes. I enjoy your channel. Can only hope that the world can learn from this bit of history….

    • @mickeencrua
      @mickeencrua Před rokem

      @Chet Calhoun: Check out the Burntollet Ambush to get a better picture of what kicked off the "Troubles".

  • @Rabhadh
    @Rabhadh Před rokem +19

    One thing that needs to be stated is that the Irish people have always had the undeniable right to freedom and to be free from the malevolent influence of the British state that has always sought to exploit Ireland and it's people for it's own ends.

  • @user-hh9qz1fj1e
    @user-hh9qz1fj1e Před 2 měsíci +2

    May God bless northern ireland and the Irish Republic with nothing but peace of prosperity for all.

  • @mjgasiecki
    @mjgasiecki Před 9 měsíci +3

    What a weird situation…I couldn’t even tell you the difference between a catholic and a Protestant…as an American, it is super weird to see a wall like that splitting a neighborhood. I understand we have something like that at the southern border but this seems different…

    • @GiaBasquiAi-ho7hf
      @GiaBasquiAi-ho7hf Před 2 měsíci

      It is weird and it doesn't make sense, seems like Brit wanted to conquer the whole world but I don't understand why 😂. If everything is made up and we're all playing pretend why go as far as to harm and rob other people instead of letting them live in peace.

  • @MCGreen13
    @MCGreen13 Před rokem +7

    It’s crazy that the British talk about the troubles as if it was something that is long in the past, that they’ve moved on from and that wasn’t their fault.
    NI from the beginning was a British project to keep the Irish from being able to ever cause trouble from British rule.
    Gross.

  • @jacoblind5390
    @jacoblind5390 Před rokem +31

    Fun fact- for the 20 years of the Troubles the killing rate in Northern Ireland was about the same as the US murder rate for those same 20 years.

    • @DaChaGee
      @DaChaGee Před rokem +2

      Very fun!

    • @joprocter4573
      @joprocter4573 Před rokem +8

      99.98 % accounted for by ira

    • @ardakolimsky7107
      @ardakolimsky7107 Před rokem +30

      @@joprocter4573 Oh dear.
      Do you think that bare-faced lie is going to help?

    • @stephendeane7509
      @stephendeane7509 Před rokem +26

      @Jo Procter This just isn't true. You can hate the IRA all you like but simply lying about these things is wrong.

    • @charlesjohn7492
      @charlesjohn7492 Před rokem

      @@joprocter4573 A complete lie, which is disproved by the Sutton index of deaths during the conflict.

  • @joehart7260
    @joehart7260 Před rokem

    One series I would like to see again is the BBCs Provos, it does not seem to be available anywhere now.

  • @chrissanchez2998
    @chrissanchez2998 Před rokem

    Awesome history I like it

  • @PatrickJOHanlon
    @PatrickJOHanlon Před 8 měsíci +5

    I am an Irishman and as far as I can see it is the people in the North of Ireland are divided .No other Irish City has to have a high dividing fence between two housing estates If England took down their tent and went home totally and financially it would help a lot because then we Irish could sort out our own problems like we did in 1922.

  • @chapsnaps1
    @chapsnaps1 Před rokem +2

    There was an infamous wall built across a road in Oxford in the 1950s.
    At one end of the street was Council housing (shock horror!).
    The Posho's at that end of the street, did not want their kids associating with the Plebs at the opposite end.
    The result was a very high brick wall.
    It was eventually demolished (I'm not sure when).
    The Irish walls divided religious communities.
    The Oxford wall divided the affluent from those in social housing.
    Protestants and Catholics, affluent and poor, newly arrived, and established communities. There has always been division in the UK and Northern Ireland and to some degree there still is. The internet is facilitating division and polarization.

  • @markwebster4996
    @markwebster4996 Před rokem +15

    Not much if anything about the troubles is taught to students in the US unless you seek it out yourself. Very insightful video and overall summary of the conflict. Its clearly incredibly complex and opinionated. It os kind of mind blowing a war broke out within a 1st world nation/nations. Cant help but compare/contrast to the civil rights movements in the USA at the same time and the ongoing Vietnam war. People dying over religion, race, government etc. Humanity doesn’t seem to learn sadly

    • @bikeman9899
      @bikeman9899 Před rokem +3

      The US civil rights protests in the late 60s had a big impact on the civil rights in Northern Ireland. TV showed what was happening in the States, and certainly influenced Catholics in NI to take a similar approach. Indeed, the parallels between the Jim Crow South and Northern Ireland are very real.

    • @cindyschneider4728
      @cindyschneider4728 Před rokem

      So true, to get real history in the US, you must seek it out. I did because " The Plantation of Ulster" was part of my own immigrant story from Staffordshire England, to Ulster, to the pre-revolutionary American colonies in time for the Revolutionary War, to payment for service in land grants in the neutral Kentucky lands still in posession of the Shawnee to the North and Cherokee to the South. Nearly 300 years of conflict on three continents.
      I truly appreciate this in depth look at this part of the story.

  • @bobbythompson3544
    @bobbythompson3544 Před rokem +4

    I worked for many years with Irish people in Australia and built a great respect with them all!

    • @JamesG89
      @JamesG89 Před rokem

      Do they constantly tell you how great Ireland is?

  • @cushyglen4264
    @cushyglen4264 Před rokem +5

    Mostly English history was taught in Northern Ireland schools - in both Catholic & Protestant schools - post-partition. The 1960s generation were kept ignorant of their history & therefore were easily manipulated.

    • @malsmith1618
      @malsmith1618 Před rokem

      Even my generation of the early eighties were to my secondary school taught nothing but nazi Germany in history

  • @lostinaroom5551
    @lostinaroom5551 Před 11 dny +1

    As an American, I surely do love learning about other countries plight

  • @boc234
    @boc234 Před rokem +2

    Centuries of tension. Well, that's one way of putting it.

  • @davidlally592
    @davidlally592 Před rokem +7

    Mm please remember that originally Carson and Craig ("Ulster" this and "Ulster" that) were offered all 9 Cos of that ancient Irish province. But that then would have meant 52/48 split just in favour of unionism (too close to call). So they abandoned the 3 (just as much in Ulster as the other 6): Cavan, Monaghan and Donegal which remained in the then Saorstat Eireann/Irish Free State. But even with just the 6 Cos in NI (and now 66/34 split, a clear 2 to 1 majority) they still blatently discriminated in jobs and housing, plus blatent local govt gerrymandering. Look up (all local NI laws) Special Powers Act (included flogging and internment without trial), Promissory Oaths Act (everyone had to take an Oath Of Allegiance for any job incl even being a local roadsweeper), Flags and Emblems Act (Irish Tricolour effecively banned) etc. And meanwhile the UK Govt ignored all of this as the sovereign power, until the "faeces hit the propellor" in the late 1960s. The then NICRA ("one man one vote") peacefully just wanted internal reform, instead, they got RUC baton charges etc. The rest is history.

    • @conlaiarla
      @conlaiarla Před 10 měsíci

      Excellent cogent summation. Well done .

  • @Dublinireland5
    @Dublinireland5 Před rokem +3

    My point of view.... 🇮🇪❤️, 🇮🇪❤️🇮🇪❤️Ireland is one piece of large rock in the Irish Sea this cannot be disputed over the years England has been allowed to exploit ireland.. the young Winston Churchill from England had clearly forced ireland hand in signing the north of Ireland over to England otherwise Winston Churchill was frightening all out war with ireland unfortunately ireland was not so well defended and the agreement was signed.... A big mistake.... I did not see America speaking up for Ireland I did not see Germany speaking up for Ireland or for that matter any other country in the Western world it was very clear nobody in the Western world wanted to come to Ireland's rescue to stop Winston Churchill forcing ireland hand... and if we look at things today in 2023 it seems the Western world is very interested in standing up sending armory and weapons and special forces to Ukraine to stop Russia taking the country back that they once was part of Russia I find it hard to understand that the Western world is more than willing to do anything for Ukraine but is not prepared to do nothing for Ireland,, ireland should have been reunited at the end of the Second World War it did not happen I believe now ireland must be reunited as one country and it is time for the Western world countries?? including the European Union?? to do the same for Ireland that they are doing for Ukraine I do not support the war in Ukraine because they do not support a free and independent ireland,,,, for the love ♥️ of Ireland 🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪.... Winston Churchill dead.,, Mrs Thatcher dead,, and many more,, for the love of Michael Collins ♥️

  • @reamonntreacy
    @reamonntreacy Před 5 měsíci

    The Exhibit on Northern Ireland in Imperial War Museum in London was very well done too.

  • @user-hh9qz1fj1e
    @user-hh9qz1fj1e Před 2 měsíci +2

    My irish Catholic grandfather was a teenager who fought during the irish civil and was saved from further violence after Being imprisoned by the british By his protestant relatives in scotland.
    The conflict had very little to, nothing, do with religion.More about housing voting jobs.

  • @katfoster845
    @katfoster845 Před rokem +9

    My grandparents were from opposite sides of the divide. They married in 1960 and left soon after. The church where they were married later burned down.
    Grandma was a good catholic girl. Grandad was a protestant soldier. They left Belfast because they had to. If they hadn't left, they probably would have been killed. This is why I refer to my family as refugees. They left because they had no other choice.

  • @chuckh5999
    @chuckh5999 Před rokem +3

    During my visit the people of Ulster were absolutely delightful. Didn't ask their religious connections !

    • @peaceformula5830
      @peaceformula5830 Před rokem

      Anyone who drinks alcohol etc is not religious though they may pose as if they are.

  • @rapier1954
    @rapier1954 Před 9 měsíci +2

    The title caption is Why is Ireland Divided? The reason is simple. Lloyd George insisted on the Partition of Ireland during treaty negotiations with the IRA to satisfy Protestant Loyalist demands they be given a state of their own rather than be part of a country where they would be a religious small minority. with no political clout. But at the time only 2 of the most easterly counties in NI had Protestant majority but in order to make for a viable economic entity 4 other counties with RC majorities were drawn into the province to form NI. From its inception RC civil rights were lacking in NI. Elections in RC majority districts such as Londonderry were gerrymandered to guarantee Protestant control of the city council. Jobs and entrance to certain university programs were denied RCs etc. the rise of the civil rights movements in the USA caused people in RCs in NI to push for equal rights in NI initially this was met with extreme abuse by the gov. of NI and police and things escalated from there - the rest is history. The guarantee of a Protestant majority being insured in NI has not come to pass and now there is a slight RC majority in NI which given the demographics of elementary and secondary students is going to increase greatly within 15 years.

  • @BigRed2
    @BigRed2 Před rokem +2

    I’m what they call an Ultser Scott, my ancestors came to the US from Northern Ireland in 1720 after living there for around 80 years.

    • @stevec8243
      @stevec8243 Před 11 měsíci +2

      An Ulster Scot, not an Ultser Scott 😢

  • @stewiegiligan
    @stewiegiligan Před 6 měsíci +3

    I don't know much about Irish politics but I believe we should have one Ireland United....................
    under British rule.

    • @arthurgoodness7865
      @arthurgoodness7865 Před 5 měsíci +1

      We are all born stupid. But with education and life skills we all have the opportunity to progress.
      Unfortunately, some people, like your good self judging by your comment, do not take advantage of the opportunities that a good education can provide and remain stupid.