The Ulster Protestant or Unionist community (also called the Orangemen, for their distant ancestral connection to William of Orange, aka King William III) was one of the earliest historical ...
The second excerpt from John Wilson Foster's new book asks: What would Irish unification entail for the Republic?
It is worth noting, as David Miller has, that Ulster Protestants before the end of the nineteenth century thought of ...
Her grandfather signed the Ulster Covenant in 1912, but Heather Humphreys always described herself as “a proud Ulsterwoman, a ...
Memories of the violence and betrayal experienced by one generation of protestants in the three counties entrenched an intergenerational Ulster loyalist identity. Subsequently, three-county loyalists ...
Then, as now, rule from Dublin was fiercely resisted by most Protestants in Ulster. “Home Rule means Roman Rule,” cried loyalists amid fears that a legislature in Catholic Dublin would mean ...
The partition of Ireland became official when the Government of Ireland Act (GIA) was passed on December 23, 1920. The partition of Ireland, which was finalized with the passage of the Government ...
Ulster University is inspired by the spirit of its people ... Recent reviews have indicated that the Protestant proportion of applicants to posts at Magee is lower than would be expected and for that ...