Publisher: I.B.Tauris & Co Ltd
ISBN: 9781780767529
In 1949, Ireland left the Commonwealth and the British Empire began its long fragmentation. The relationship between the new Republic of Ireland and Britain was a complex one however, and the traditional assumption that the Republic would universally support self-determination overseas and object to ‘imperialism’ does not hold up to historical scrutiny. In reality, for economic and geopolitical reasons, the Republic of Ireland played an important role in supporting the Empire- demonstrated clearly in Ireland’s active involvement in the Cyprus Emergency of the 1950s. As Helen O’Shea reveals, while the IRA formed immediate links with EOKA and the Cypriot rebels, the Irish government and the Irish Church supported the British line- which was to retain Cyprus as the Middle-Eastern base of the British Empire following the loss of Egypt. Ireland and the End of the British Empire challenges the received historiography of the period and constitutes a valuable addition to our understanding of Ireland and the British Empire.
![]() | Helen OSheaDR HELEN O’SHEA, lecturer in modern history at the University of Dundee and associate lecturer at the Open University (Scotland), is author of Ireland and the End of the British Empire: The Republic and Its Role in the Cyprus Emergency (London, 2015). Her research interests focus on comparative decolonisation, the British colonial legal service and modern Irish history in transnational and comparative contexts. Geographical areas of particular interest include Palestine, Kenya, Malaya, Cyprus and Ireland. She is currently working on a history of emergency law and the post-war colonial legal service. |