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[ju:,naɪtɪd'aɪtrɪʃmən]
история
"Объединённые ирландцы" (буржуазно-революционное движение в Ирландии; в нём участвовали как католики, так и протестанты; выступало за создание независимой ирландской республики, отмену сословных и феодальных привилегий, парламентскую реформу и всеобщее избирательное право, в т.ч. для католиков; вылилось в восстание, кот. было жестоко подавлено; 1791-98)
существительное
общая лексика
информационное агентство Юнайтед пресс Интернэшнл, ЮПИ
синоним
[,mæntʃɪstəju:'naɪtɪd]
общая лексика
"Манчестер юнайтед" (популярный футбольный клуб со стадионом "Олд-Траффорд")
синоним
The Society of United Irishmen was a sworn association in the Kingdom of Ireland formed in the wake of the French Revolution to secure "an equal representation of all the people" in a national government. Despairing of constitutional reform, in 1798 the United Irishmen instigated a republican insurrection in defiance of British Crown forces and of Irish sectarian division. Their suppression was a prelude to the abolition of the Protestant Ascendancy Parliament in Dublin and to Ireland's incorporation in a United Kingdom with Great Britain. An attempt to revive the movement and renew the insurrection following the Acts of Union was defeated in 1803.
Espousing principles they believed had been vindicated by American independence and by the French Declaration of the Rights of Man, the Presbyterian merchants who formed the first United society in Belfast in 1791 vowed to make common cause with their Catholic-majority fellow countrymen. Their "cordial union" would upend Ireland's Protestant (Anglican) Ascendancy and hold her government accountable to a representative Parliament.
As the society replicated in Belfast, Dublin, and across rural Ireland, its membership test was administered to workingmen (and in cases women) who maintained their own democratic clubs, and to tenant farmers organised against the Protestant gentry in secret fraternities. The goals of the movement were restated in uncompromising terms: Catholic emancipation and reform became the call for universal manhood suffrage (every man a citizen) and for an Irish republic. Preparations were laid for an insurrection to be assisted by the French and by new United societies in Scotland and England. Plans were disrupted by government infiltration and by martial-law arrests and seizures, so that when it came in the summer of 1798 the call to arms resulted a series of uncoordinated local risings.
The British government seized on the rebellion to argue the greater security of a union with Great Britain. In 1800 the Irish legislature was abolished in favour of a United Kingdom parliament at Westminster. The attempt to restore the movement by organising on strictly military lines failed to elicit a response in what had been the United heartlands in the north, and misfired in 1803 with Robert Emmet's rising in Dublin.
Since the rebellion's centenary in 1898, Irish nationalists and Ulster unionists have contested its legacy.