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There were 33 English and British monarchs who were also monarchs of Ireland from 1177 to 1949. Henry II of England first created the title of Lord of Ireland for his youngest son John Lackland in 1177. He had first sought to have John made King of Ireland. This would appear to have been a strategy of his father's to divide his Angevin possessions between his four sons. The approval of Pope Alexander III was sought to have John crowned King of Ireland. Disagreements with first Alexander III and then his successor Pope Lucius III caused this to be delayed and instead John went as only Lord of Ireland. When John arrived in Ireland the people grew to despise him[citation needed], causing John to leave after only eight months. When he later unexpectedly inherited the English crown in 1199, the title Lord of Ireland would come to be held by the monarchs of England. After Henry VIII of England made himself Supreme Head of the Church of England, he also requested and got legislation through the Irish Parliament, in 1541 (effective 1542, see Crown of Ireland Act 1542), naming him King of Ireland and head of the Church of Ireland (which today, both in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland, remains a member of the Anglican communion but is no longer an established church like the Church of England). The title "King of Ireland" was then used until 1 January 1801, the effective date of the second Act of Union, which merged Ireland and Great Britain to create the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. This is a list of the monarchs who ruled Ireland during this time.
[edit] Gaelic kings (before 1607)Main article: List of Irish kings [edit] Lords of IrelandThe Lordship of Ireland (1171–1541) was all-island[citation needed] Irish state created in the wake of the Norman invasion of Ireland in 1169–71. [edit] House of PlantagenetThis long-lived dynasty is usually divided into three houses: the Angevins, the House of Lancaster, and the House of York. [edit] AngevinsAs the leader of the Norman invasion of Ireland Henry II of England created the title of Lord of Ireland for his youngest son John in 1177. The title came to be held by the monarchs of England when John later, and unexpectedly, inherited the English crown in 1199.
[edit] House of Lancaster
[edit] House of York
[edit] House of TudorThe Tudors were of paternal Welsh descent, and in 1536 the Principality of Wales was fully incorporated into the Kingdom of English state (having been a vassal state in the Angevin Empire under a Plantagenet Prince of Wales since 1301). With Henry VIII's break from the Catholic Church the monarch became the Supreme Head of the Church of Ireland.
[edit] Kings and Queens of IrelandIn 1542 Henry VIII passed the Crown of Ireland Act 1542 in the Parliament of Ireland stating that Henry VIII of England and his successors would also be Kings of Ireland.
[edit] House of StuartFollowing the death of Elizabeth I in 1603 without issue, the Scottish king, James VI, succeeded to the English and Irish throne as James I in what became known as the Union of the Crowns. In 1604 he adopted the title King of Great Britain, although the kingdoms remained separate.
[edit] CommonwealthThere was no reigning monarch between the execution of Charles I in 1649 and the Restoration of Charles II in 1660. Despite this, from 1653 the following individuals held power as Lords Protector, during the period known as the Protectorate.
[edit] House of Stuart (restored)Although the monarchy was restored in 1660, no stable settlement proved possible until the Glorious Revolution of 1688, when parliament finally asserted the right to choose whomsoever it pleased as monarch.
[edit] House of HanoverThe Hanoverian succession came about as a result of the Act of Settlement 1701, passed by the English Parliament. In return for access to the economically alluring plantations in North America,[citation needed] the Hanoverian succession and ultimately the Union was ratified by the English Parliament and subsequently the Scottish Parliament in 1707.
During George III's reign The Kingdom's of Great Britain and Ireland merged to become the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland under the Act of Union 1800. In 1949 twenty-six counties in the southern part of Ireland became the Republic of Ireland and thus the British Monarchs continue to rule only over the remaining northern counties of the island that are part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. [edit] House of WindsorFollowing dominion status being conferred on the Irish Free State in 1922, in 1927 the title King of Ireland was re-introduced, and lasted until Ireland became a republic in 1949.
As the British monarchs continue to rule over Northern Ireland, as a constituent part of the United Kingdom, the continuation of this list is at List of British monarchs. [edit] References
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