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The Irish Republican Army evolved from the Irish Volunteers who staged the Easter Rising in 1916. In 1919, an elected assembly was formed in Ireland and the Volunteers were recognized by this assembly as an offical army. For three years the IRA used hit and run tactics against the occupying British forces in the Irish War for Independence.

Following the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921, which established the Republic of Ireland as its own soverign nation, those within the IRA that supported the treaty formed the Irish national Army, those that did not fought a civil war with their former comrades but eventually lost. They remained together afterwards, intending to overthrow the Irish Free State and British controled Northern Ireland and creating a unified free Irish nation.

Keeping the IRA title, the anti-treaty splinter group continued its attacks against both the Republic of Ireland and the British forces in the North until 1969 when the group split once again into the Provisional Irish Republican Army, who supported more traditional Irish republican views and the Offical IRA who began embracing Marxism.

This newest encarnation of the IRA, or Provos, launched a thirty year campaign against British forces in Northern Ireland and various pro-British para-military orginisations that claimed nearly two thousand lives.

The Offical IRA began their own campaign but called a ceasefire in 1972 before disbanding entirely by the end of the decade.

1997 marked the end of the armed campaign for the IRA while its political wing, Sinn Fein, continues to grow more powerful in both Northern Ireland and in the Republic of Ireland.

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15y ago

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