Abstract
The Irish Home Rule crisis has never been fully explored as a factor in the chain of events leading to the outbreak of the First World War. Yet, as archives reveal, Germany and Austria-Hungary believed that the Irish question could or would paralyse British foreign policy. Contacts between the Central Powers and advanced Irish nationalists had taken place several years before the onset of the hostilities. France and Russia had doubts whether their British ally could be relied upon. During the final phase of the July Crisis, events in Ireland seemed to indicate that the British government would not be able to intervene in a possible war on the continent.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 657-681 |
| Number of pages | 25 |
| Journal | International History Review |
| Volume | 37 |
| Issue number | 4 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 8 Aug 2015 |
Keywords
- Albert von Mensdorff
- Alexander Benckendorff
- Andrew Bonar Law
- Bachelor's Walk massacre
- Bernhard von Bülow
- Buckingham Palace Conference
- Curragh crisis
- David Lloyd George
- Eugène Beyens
- Frank Hugh O'Donnell
- Franz Conrad von Hötzendorf
- General Friedrich von Bernhardi
- General Sir Henry Wilson
- Georg von Franckenstein
- George Freeman
- Gottlieb von Jagow
- Herbert Asquith
- Home Rule Crisis
- Ireland
- Irish Volunteers
- Irish-Indian-German connections
- John Redmond
- July Crisis
- King George V
- Leopold von Berchtold
- Max von Lichnowsky
- Nationalists
- Nicholas II
- Paul Cambon
- Richard von Kühlmann
- Sergei Sazonov
- Sir Edward Carson
- Sir Edward Grey
- Sir Roger Casement
- Th eodor Schiemann
- Ulster Volunteer Force
- Unionists
- Wilhelm II
- Winston Churchill
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