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Irish people in Great Britain or British Irish are immigrants from the island of Ireland living in Great Britain as well as their British-born descendants. Irish migration to Great Britain has occurred from the earliest recorded history to the present. There has been a continuous movement of people between the islands of Ireland and Great ...
The historical immigration to Great Britain concerns the movement of people, cultural and ethnic groups to the British Isles before Irish independence in 1922. Immigration after Irish independence is dealt with by the article Immigration to the United Kingdom since Irish independence .
By 1871, Irish immigrants accounted for one quarter of Australia's overseas-born population. [102] Irish Catholic immigrants – who made up about 75% of the total Irish population [98] – were largely responsible for the establishment of a separate Catholic school system. [103] [104] About 20% of Australian children attend Catholic schools as ...
The English Reformation in the 1500s increased the antagonism between England and Ireland, as the Irish remained Catholic, which became a justification for the English to oppress the Irish. In Ireland, during the Tudor and Stuart eras , the English Crown initiated a large-scale colonization of Ireland with Protestant settlers from Britain ...
People who emigrated from the Kingdom of Ireland to the Kingdom of Great Britain between the 1707 Act of Union between England and Scotland and the 1800 Act of Union which merged Ireland and Great Britain. People who moved after this time may be included in Category:Irish emigrants to the United Kingdom.
In Liverpool, England, where many Irish immigrants settled following the Great Famine, anti-Irish prejudice was widespread. The sheer numbers of people coming across the Irish sea and settling in the poorer districts of the city led to physical attacks and it became common practice for those with Irish accents or even Irish names to be barred ...
In the reign of the Catholic King James II of England, Irish Catholics briefly looked like recovering their pre-eminent position in Irish society. James repealed much of the anti-Catholic legislation, allowed Catholics into the Irish Parliament and the Army and appointed a Catholic, Richard Talbot, 1st Earl of Tyrconnell , as Lord Deputy of ...
People who moved within the United Kingdom prior to the start of 1923 should not be categorized as emigrants. People who moved in the century prior to the formation of the United Kingdom in 1801 are included in the category Irish emigrants to Great Britain