Автор работы: Пользователь скрыл имя, 01 Февраля 2011 в 21:52, реферат
SYMBOLS USED IN NORTHERN IRELAND
SYMBOLS USED IN NORTHERN IRELAND
Title:
Red Hand of Ulster
Description: The Red Hand of Ulster is the official seal of the
O'Neill family. It is believed to originate from a mythical tale wherein
two chieftains were racing across a stretch of water in a bid to be
the first to reach the land and claim it as his own. Realising his foe
would touch the land first, one chieftain cut off his hand and threw
it onto the shore, thereby claiming the land before his adversary reached
it.
Title: Shamrock
Description: Legend has it that the shamrock was used by St.
Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland, to illustrate the Holy Trinity,
is used on St. Patrick's day on 17 March.
Title: Harp
Description: This instrument has long symbolised the island of
Ireland. It's origins come from when Owen Roe O'Neill, a Gaelic Chieftain,
adopted a green flag incorporating the harp. Being seen as a threat
to the English invaders, playing the harp was banned, despite remaining
on the royal insignia as representing Ireland in the growing British
Empire.
The Ulster Banner, also known as the Ulster flag, the Northern Ireland flag or the Red Hand of Ulster flag, is still used to represent Northern Ireland in some sporting events. The flag is a heraldic banner taken from the coat of arms granted in 1924 which is based on the flag of England and the flag of Ulster, with the addition of a crown to symbolise the loyalty of Ulster unionists to the British Monarchy. As with the flag of Ulster, it contains the Red Hand of Ulster at the centre. The six pointed star represents the six counties that make up Northern Ireland.
The national flag of Ireland is a vertical tricolour of green, white, and orange. It is also known as the Irish tricolour. Officially the flag has no meaning in the Irish Constitution, but a common interpretation is that the green represents the Irish nationalist tradition of Ireland and the orange represents the Orange tradition in Ireland, with white representing peace between them.
The Coat of Arms of Northern Ireland was granted to the Government of Northern Ireland in 1924. The supporters were granted in 1925, and consist of a red lion supporting a blue banner bearing a gold harp and crown, and an Irish elk in proper colours, supporting a banner of the arms of the De Burgo Earls of Ulster, the basis for the Flag of Ulster. In the middle is St. Patrick’s cross with six pointed star in his middle, which contains also Red Hand of Ulster.
GEOGRAPHY AND ECONOMY
Northern Ireland is one of the four countries of the United Kingdom. Situated in the north-east of the island of Ireland, it shares a border with the Republic of Ireland to the south and west.
Northern Ireland consists of six of the traditional nine counties of the historic Irish province of Ulster. It was created as a distinct division of the United Kingdom on 3 May 1921. For over 50 years it had its own government and parliament.
Northern Ireland was for many years the site of a violent and bitter ethno-political conflict—The Troubles—between those claiming to represent nationalists, who are predominantly Roman Catholic, and those claiming to represent unionists, who are predominantly Protestant. Unionists want Northern Ireland to remain part of the United Kingdom, while nationalists wish it to be politically united with the rest of Ireland. Since the signing of the "Good Friday Agreement" in 1998, most of the paramilitary groups involved in the Troubles have ceased their armed campaigns.
This is a land of blue mountains and forest parks, mazy lakes and windswept moors, white Atlantic sands, an inland sea. In fact, it's a country that is just pretending to be small. Dozens of small towns are hidden away down among the green places of the countryside, and fishing villages string out along the shores. Distinctive field patterns, for instance, are especially striking, and so are ruined castles. Built from the 12th century onwards, and once symbols of both oppression and reassurance, they are now among Ulster's finest architectural treasures. Northern Ireland is only 5,500 square miles in area - about the size of Yorkshire or Connecticut - you can see most of the main attractions in a week without clocking up more than 500 miles.
Northern Ireland was covered by an ice sheet for most of the last ice age. The centrepiece of Northern Ireland's geography is Lough Neagh, at 151 square miles (391 km2) the largest freshwater lake both on the island of Ireland and in the British Isles. The largest island of Northern Ireland is Rathlin. Strangford Lough is the largest inlet in the British Isles, covering 150 km2 (58 sq mi).
There are substantial uplands in the Sperrin Mountains with extensive gold deposits, granite Mourne Mountains and basalt Antrim Plateau. None of the hills are especially high, with Slieve Donard in the Mournes reaching 849 metres (2,785 ft), Northern Ireland's highest point.
The Lower and Upper River Bann, River Foyle and River Blackwater form extensive fertile lowlands, with excellent arable land.
The whole of Northern Ireland has a temperate maritime climate. The weather is unpredictable at all times of the year.
The Northern Ireland economy is the smallest of the four economies making up the United Kingdom. Northern Ireland has traditionally an industrial economy, most notably in shipbuilding, rope manufacture and textiles, but most heavy industry has since been replaced by services, primarily the public sector. Tourism also plays a big role in the local economy. More recently the economy has benefited from major investment by many large multi-national corporations into high tech industry. These large organisations are attracted by government subsidies and the skilled workforce in Northern Ireland.
Throughout the 1990s, the Northern Irish economy grew faster than did the economy of the rest of the UK, due in part to the rapid growth of the economy of the Republic of Ireland and the so-called 'peace dividend'. Northern Ireland's macroeconomy is also characterised by considerably longer actual working hours and lower gender income disparity than in the United Kingdom as a whole.
Agriculture in Northern Ireland is heavily mechanised, thanks to high labour costs and heavy capital investment, both from private investors and the European Union's Common Agricultural Policy. The main crops are potatoes, barley, and wheat.
Engineering is the largest manufacturing sub-sector in Northern Ireland, particularly in the fields of aerospace and heavy machinery.
Northern Ireland
has well-developed transport
infrastructure. There are seven motorways
in Northern Ireland. The Northern Irish rail network is notable as being
both the only part of the United Kingdom's railroads operated by a state-owned
company, Northern Ireland
Railways, and the only substantial
part that carries no freight traffic. Northern Ireland is home to three
civilian airports: Belfast
City, Belfast International,
and City of Derry. Major seaports in Northern Ireland include the Port of Belfast
and the Port of Larne.
HISTORIC HIGHLIGHTS
Ulster was part of Catholic Ireland until the reign of Elizabeth I (1558–1603) when the Crown confiscated lands in Ireland and settled the Scots Presbyterians in Ulster. Rebellion in 1641–1651, brutally crushed by Oliver Cromwell, resulted in the settlement of Anglican Englishmen in Ulster. Subsequent political policy favoring Protestants and disadvantaging Catholics encouraged further Protestant settlement in Northern Ireland.
Northern Ireland did not separate from the South until William Gladstone presented, in 1886, his proposal for home rule in Ireland. The Protestants in the North feared domination by the Catholic majority. Industry, moreover, was concentrated in the North and dependent on the British market. When World War I began, civil war threatened between the regions. Northern Ireland, however, did not become a political entity until the six counties accepted the Home Rule Bill of 1920.
In 1966–1969, rioting and street fighting between Protestants and Catholics occurred in Londonderry, fomented by extremist nationalist Protestants. These confrontations became known as “the Troubles.”
The religious communities, Catholic and Protestant, became hostile armed camps. British troops were brought in to separate them but themselves became a target of Catholics, particularly by the IRA, which by this time had turned into a terrorist movement. The goal of the IRA was to eject the British and unify Northern Ireland with the Irish Republic to the south.
In 1977 the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Mairead Corrigan and Betty Williams, founders of the Community of Peace People, an organization dedicated to creating peace in Northern Ireland. But intermittent violence continued. Riots, sniper fire, and terrorist attacks killed more than 3,200 people between 1969 and 1998.
In 1997, Northern Ireland made a significant step in the direction of stemming sectarian strife. The first formal peace talks began on Oct. 6 with representatives of eight major Northern Irish political parties participating, a feat that in itself required three years of negotiations. Two smaller Protestant parties boycotted the talks. For the first time, Sinn Fein, the political wing of the IRA, won two seats in the British parliament. Although the election strengthened the IRA's political legitimacy, it was the IRA's resumption of the 17-month cease-fire, which had collapsed in Feb. 1996 that gained them a place at the negotiating table.
A landmark settlement, the Good Friday Agreement of April 10, 1998, came after 19 months of intensive negotiations. The accord called for Protestants to share political power with the minority Catholics, and it gave the Republic of Ireland a voice in Northern Irish affairs. In October, the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to John Hume and David Trimble, leaders of the largest Catholic and Protestant political parties. But in June 1999, the peace process again hit an impasse when the IRA refused to disarm.
As a result, the British government suspended parliament on Feb. 12, 2000, and once again imposed direct rule. The Council on Foreign Relations has estimated that Protestant paramilitary groups have been responsible for 30% of the civilian deaths in the Northern Irish conflict.
In Nov. 2003 legislative elections, the Ulster Unionists and other moderates lost out to Northern Ireland's extremist parties: Ian Paisley's Democratic Unionists and Sinn Fein. Power sharing between these antithetical parties was out of the question.
A $50 million bank robbery in Dec. 2004 was linked to the IRA, and Sinn Fein's legitimacy as a political organization suffered a severe setback. The brutal murder in Jan. 2005 of Belfast Catholic Robert McCartney by the IRA, and the campaign by his five sisters to hold the IRA accountable, further tarnished the IRA's standing, even in Catholic communities that had once been IRA strongholds.
On July 28, 2005, the IRA announced that it was entering a new era in which it would unequivocally relinquish violence, give up its arms, and pursue its aims exclusively through political means. In late September, the Irish Republican Army made good on its promise to give up all its weapons, and their disarmament was verified by an international mediator.
Shortly after parliamentary
elections in March 2007, Gerry Adams, the leader of Sinn Fein, and Rev.
Ian Paisley, the head of the Democratic Unionist Party, met face to
face for the first time and hashed out an agreement for a power-sharing
government. The historic deal was put into place in May, when Paisley
and McGuinness were sworn in as leader and deputy leader, respectively,
of the Northern Ireland executive government, thus ending direct rule
from London.
POLITICS AND RELIGION
Northern Ireland has devolved government within the United Kingdom. There is a Northern Ireland Executive together with the 108 member Northern Ireland Assembly to deal with devolved matters with the UK Government and UK Parliament responsible for reserved matters. Elections to the Assembly are by single transferable vote with 6 representatives elected for each of the 18 Westminster constituencies. It is also an electoral region of the European Union.
Northern Ireland elects 18 Members of Parliament (MP) to the House of Commons; only 13 take their seats, however, as the 5 Sinn Fein MPs refuse to take the oath to serve the Queen that is required of all MPs. The Northern Ireland Office represents the UK government in Northern Ireland on reserved matters and represents Northern Irish interests within the UK government. The Northern Ireland office is led by the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, who sits in the Cabinet of the United Kingdom.
The main political divide in Northern Ireland is between Unionists or Loyalists who wish to see Northern Ireland continue as part of the United Kingdom and Nationalists or Republicans who wish to see Northern Ireland join the rest of Ireland, independent from the United Kingdom. Unionists are overwhelmingly Protestant, descendants of mainly Scottish, English, Welsh and Huguenot settlers as well as native Irishmen who had converted to one of the Protestant denominations. Nationalists are predominantly Catholic and descend from the population predating the settlement, with a minority from Scottish Highlanders as well as some converts from Protestantism.
The population of Northern Ireland was estimated as being 1,759,000 on 10 December 2008. In the 2001 in terms of community background, 53.1% of the Northern Irish population came from a Protestant background, 43.8% came from a Catholic background, 0.4% from non-Christian backgrounds and 2.7% non-religious backgrounds.
36% of the present-day population define themselves as Unionist, 24% as Nationalist and 40% define themselves as neither.
Christianity is the main religion in Northern Ireland though the main denominations are organised on an all-Ireland basis. After that, though dwarfed by the Christian churches, the country also has small Muslim, Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist and Jewish communities.
The Roman Catholic Church in Ireland is the largest single church though there
is a greater number of Protestants and Anglicans overall. The Presbyterian Church in Ireland, closely linked to the Church of Scotland
in terms of theology and history, is the second largest church and largest
protestant denomination. It is followed by the Church of Ireland
(Anglican) which was the state church of Ireland until it was disestablished
in the nineteenth century. In 2002, the much smaller Methodist Church in Ireland signed a covenant for greater cooperation
and potential ultimate unity with the Church of Ireland. Smaller, but
growing, protestant denominations like the Association
of Baptist Churches in Ireland
and the Assemblies of
God Ireland are also organised
on an all-Ireland basis, though in the case of the AOG this was the
result of a recent reorganisation.
THE MAIN CITIES