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  • {{r|Northern Ireland}}
    555 bytes (70 words) - 12:45, 16 May 2008
  • ...known as C.S. (Jack) Lewis, (November 29, 1898 – 22 November 1963) was a [[Northern Ireland|Northern Irish]] writer, scholar and lay theologian. He became known as on {{Image|149269475 4ef5c12b7b.jpg|right|350px|a statue located in Northern Ireland of Lewis looking into a wardrobe.}}
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  • {{r|Extrajudicial detention, U.K., Northern Ireland}}
    625 bytes (81 words) - 16:25, 11 January 2010
  • {{r|Northern Ireland}}
    528 bytes (62 words) - 07:32, 20 April 2024
  • ...-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Extrajudicial detention, U.K., Northern Ireland]]. Needs checking by a human.
    554 bytes (71 words) - 16:27, 11 January 2010
  • '''Carrickfergus''' is a town in County Antrim, Northern Ireland. It had once been a major port and was the site of the landing of King Will
    794 bytes (132 words) - 05:14, 25 February 2011
  • ...[[Nuremberg Trials]]. In politics, he was Conservative shadow Minister for Northern Ireland, assassinated by Irish National Liberation Army shortly before [[Margaret T
    758 bytes (115 words) - 13:03, 19 January 2011
  • ...ally [[trinitarian]] [[Protestant]]. The vast majority of its members in [[Northern Ireland]] are likely to be [[Ulster Unionism|Unionist]] and the organisation itself ...t them up - [[James Craig|Sir James Craig]], the first [[Prime Minister of Northern Ireland]], established a lodge at the [[House of Commons]].
    8 KB (1,242 words) - 22:47, 15 September 2013
  • |conventional_long_name = The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland ...ts (see [[Demography and politics of Northern Ireland]]) in the devolved [[Northern Ireland Assembly]]. The Assembly had been suspended since October 2002 due to a lac
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  • ...his article; for Ireland in the 21st century see [[Ireland (state)]] and [[Northern Ireland]]. * [[Northern Ireland]]
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  • {{r|Northern Ireland}}
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  • ...ing jurisdiction in the island, with six counties in the north-east called Northern Ireland and the other twenty-six counties being governed by a Southern Ireland parl ...ents supported by Collins in Dublin. In January 1921 the new government of Northern Ireland began operations with Craig as Prime Minister.<ref> It moved to the Stormon
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  • '''[[Chronology|Timeline]] of [[The Troubles (Ireland)|The Troubles]] in [[Northern Ireland]]''' ...entenced to life imprisonment for the murder; the UVF is proscribed by the Northern Ireland government shortly after
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  • * Bew, Paul, Peter Gibbon and Henry Patterson, ''Northern Ireland 1921-1994: Political Forces and Social Classes'' (1995) * Patrick Buckland, ''A History of Northern Ireland'' (Dublin, 1981)
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  • ...sity]] students [[Gary Lightbody]] and [[Mark McClelland]], from [[Bangor (Northern Ireland)|Bangor]] and [[Belfast]] respectively, formed ''Shrug'' in 1994 and starte ...y.com/?p=303 ''"Open Your Eyes…Snow Patrol Hits Bangor"''] crea8ivity.com, Northern Ireland's creative digital hub</ref>
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  • ...rved throughout the day. A variation, the Ulster Fry, is more common in [[Northern Ireland]].
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  • {{r|Northern Ireland}}
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  • ...Loyalists had feared a resurgence of IRA activity.<ref>Political Murder in Northern Ireland, P27, Martin Dillon and Denis Lehane</ref> Also, some particularly hardline ...n court on the 28th of June. [[Terence O'Neill]], then Prime Minister of [[Northern Ireland]], outlawed the UVF on the same day.
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  • ...tp://www.nio.gov.uk/the-agreement] - a plan for the devolution of power to Northern Ireland :&nbsp;&nbsp; Northern Ireland Act[http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts1998/ukpga_19980047_en_1] sees the inst
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  • ...1979 ensured legal protection for scheduled monuments, however sites in [[Northern Ireland]] are not included.<ref>"[http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1979/46 Ancie
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  • ...form of '''extrajudicial detention''' of the '''United Kingdom''' for '''[[Northern Ireland]]''', goes back to 1922. <ref name=>{{citation ...signated, as responsible civil authority, the Minister of Home Affairs for Northern Ireland who "may delegate, either unconditionally or subject to such conditions as
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  • ...n oath of allegiance to the British Monarch and the sustained partition of Northern Ireland. It led directly to the [[Irish Civil War]] as many of the [[Irish Republic ...nalist areas such as Tyrone, Fermanagh, Derry City and south Armagh out of Northern Ireland. They also hoped that the threat of a commission would encourage Craig to r
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  • {{r|Northern Ireland}}
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  • ...name given to a violent religious-political conflict that was centred on [[Northern Ireland]], but also saw violence in the [[Ireland (state)|Republic of Ireland]], [[ ...lt of perceived socio-economic inequalities between the two communities of Northern Ireland. Successive [[Ulster Unionism|Unionist]] governments, and the imposition of
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  • ...and]], similar provisions are made by the '''Police and Criminal Evidence (Northern Ireland) Order 1989 (SI 1989/1341)''', a [[statutory instrument]].
    4 KB (599 words) - 07:05, 23 June 2009
  • ...icular regions, such as the [[Scottish National Party]] in [[Scotland]]. [[Northern Ireland]], being part of the UK, also elected MPs, but these parties do not contest
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  • ''Bratty v Attorney General for Northern Ireland [1961]'' Bratty v Attorney General for Northern Ireland [1961]
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  • ...of historic interest or natural beauty" - in [[England]], [[Wales]] and [[Northern Ireland]] (the [[National Trust for Scotland]] does similarly north of the border).
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  • ...at works closely with the party of England and Wales; the [[Green Party in Northern Ireland]] is affiliated with the [[Green Party (Ireland)|Green Party]] in [[Ireland ===Northern Ireland===
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  • *[[Northern Ireland]]
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  • ...er of one of the 'home nations' ([[England]], [[Scotland]], [[Wales]] or [[Northern Ireland]]), or a British territory or dependency, such as the [[Falkland Islands]]
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  • ...rs were members of the [[Irish Republican Army]].<ref>'Political Murder in Northern Ireland', Martin Dillon & Denis Lehane, 1973. P.248, ''"The seeds of their disconte NICRA's main concern had originally been for Northern Ireland's itinerant population, then known locally as 'gypsies'.
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  • ...Vatican]] computer was used to remove information proving a link between [[Northern Ireland]] [[Sinn Fein]] Catholic leader [[Gerry Adams]] and a double murder<ref>''A
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  • ...kina Faso]] and [[Chad]], while maintaining headquarters in [[Belfast]], [[Northern Ireland]]. Its current chief executive is John Cardoo. ...nnections, the UK wide missions alliance, and the [[Evangelical Alliance]] Northern Ireland's mission facilitation organisation, Mission Agencies Partnership.
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  • see also [[Northern Ireland]] * Arthur, Paul. ''Government and Politics of Northern Ireland''
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  • ...icular regions, such as the [[Scottish National Party]] in [[Scotland]]. [[Northern Ireland]], being part of the UK, also elected MPs, but these parties do not contest
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  • [[Image:Red_hand_of_Ulster.gif|thumb|The Flag of Northern Ireland]] '''Ulster Unionism''', or '''Irish Unionism''' is the belief that [[Northern Ireland]] (and, prior to 1921, the whole of [[Kingdom of Ireland|Ireland]]) should
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  • ...icular regions, such as the [[Scottish National Party]] in [[Scotland]]. [[Northern Ireland]], being part of the UK, also elects MPs, but these parties do not contest ...he leader of the [[Democratic Unionist Party]] and First Minister of the [[Northern Ireland Executive]], [[Peter Robinson]], lost his seat to the [[Alliance Party]], w
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  • ...our countries joined in union - [[England]], [[Scotland]], [[Wales]] and [[Northern Ireland]]. These, plus the British territories outside the UK ([[Anguilla]], [[Berm
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  • <td>[[Northern Ireland]]</td> <td>[[Counties of Northern Ireland|6 Counties]]</td>
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  • ...o [[Consolidated PBY Catalina]] flying boats, based on [[Lough Erne]] in [[Northern Ireland]], were sent out to patrol the Atlantic approaches to Britanny and Biscay.
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  • ...istan through February 2002, and implementing the Good Friday agreement in Northern Ireland. It coordinates policies across the various State Department office and div
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  • ...n 1921. By this point partition of Ireland had occurred and the state of [[Northern Ireland]] had been established as a constituent province of the [[United Kingdom]].
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  • ...irst all-races election in South Africa and the Good Friday Peace Talks in Northern Ireland. In 1997 and 1998, his digging in the National Archives produced a series
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  • ...well as in peacekeeping operations under NATO, the United Nations, and in Northern Ireland.
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  • ...r he was appointed chief of staff. His plan to launch a guerrilla war in [[Northern Ireland]] was a non starter, owing as much to his own poor leadership as to flawed
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  • ...l independence from the rest of the UK - i.e. [[England]], [[Wales]] and [[Northern Ireland]] - but supports Scottish membership of the [[European Union]] and other in
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  • ...'Belleek Pottery Works Company Ltd'' in Belleek, [[County Fermanagh]] in [[Northern Ireland]].
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  • {{r|Northern Ireland}}
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  • ...unger and/or better educated voters were more likely to vote to remain. In Northern Ireland, Unionists tended to vote to leave, Irish Nationalists to remain.
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  • <td>[[Ireland (state)|Ireland]]<ref>Excludes [[Northern Ireland]], administered by the UK.</ref></td><td>{{headofstate|Ireland (state)}}</t ...our countries joined in union - [[England]], [[Scotland]], [[Wales]] and [[Northern Ireland]].</ref></td><td>{{headofstate|United Kingdom}}</td><td>{{headofstate-enter
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  • ...ref>Strictly, the Green Party of England and Wales, those for Scotland and Northern Ireland being independent.</ref> and UKIP. ([http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/0/uk-e In Northern Ireland there was a polarization towards the two more hard-line parties, with all o
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  • Parties in [[Northern Ireland]] do not contest seats in [[Great Britain]] and are unchallenged by or stan
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  • ...ritish Crown with full internal self-government rights, partitioned from [[Northern Ireland]] which remains part of the United Kingdom.
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  • ...anism|republican]] whose party does not recognise British sovereignty in [[Northern Ireland]], declined to apply for a Crown appointment which would have formally disq
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  • *Trimble, D. (2004). "The Lesson of Northern Ireland". ''Wall Street Journal''.
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  • ...e in Scotland later the same year, and the UK Parliament introduced it for Northern Ireland in 2019, during a period when the devolved legislature was suspended.
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  • ...epresented the Free State and a Belfast lawyer; [[J.R Fisher]] represented Northern Ireland (After [[James Craig|Craig]] refused to send a representative. A South Afri ...ured minimal change, and his opinion carried great weight. Fisher kept the Northern Ireland government well informed, but it became clear that Mc Neill had done likewi
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  • :*[http://www.ni-environment.gov.uk/ Northern Ireland Environment Agency]
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  • ...1894 - 28 May 1972) was King of the [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland]] and other [[commonwealth realms]] and [[Emperor of India]] from 20 Januar
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  • ...icular regions, such as the [[Scottish National Party]] in [[Scotland]]. [[Northern Ireland]], being part of the UK, also elected MPs, but these parties do not contest
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  • A daughter house was established at Grey Abbey in [[Northern Ireland]] in 1193.
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  • ...d built from 1909 at the Harland and Wolff shipyard in Belfast, today in [[Northern Ireland]], by a workforce of over 3,000 people over two years. By the time it was f ...er passengers in using it for a [[snow]]ball fight.<ref>''National Museums Northern Ireland'': '[http://www.nmni.com/titanic/Home/Audio-%281%29/Edith-Rusell.aspx Titan
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  • ...]] nationals are all [[British citizen]]s without distinction. Citizens of Northern Ireland are also entitled to Irish citizenship through the Republic of Ireland, and ...greement between the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the Government Of Ireland
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  • ...'Historical Dictionary of the United Kingdom. Vol. 2: Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland.'' Scarecrow, 1998. 465 pp.
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  • {{r|Northern Ireland}}
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  • ...ations]]') that together make up the [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland]]. It is situated in the west of mainland Britain, with [[England]] to its
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  • *[[United Kingdom|United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland]], joined 24/10/1945
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  • ...he iconic [[Battle of the Boyne]] in 1690, some unionists and loyalists in Northern Ireland have appropriated William as a symbol of successful defence of Ireland as B
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  • ...1 December with 120 Army paratroopers and supplies bound for [[Belfast]], Northern Ireland. Later that month an Atlantic storm caused more damage than had enemy actio
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  • ...orge VI''' (1895-1952) was king of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, and until June 22, 1948, emperor of India. A reluctant king who took the t
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  • ...times Taoiseach (Prime Minister) of Ireland 1997-2008 Joint patron of the Northern Ireland peace process. ...mber of Parliament. Former Prime Minister (1990- 1997} - originator of the Northern Ireland peace process as Prime Minister, and subsequently a supporter of Tony Blai
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  • ...However, they are not independent of each other. While Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have a level of autonomy through recent devolution of powers, they remain a ...widely recognised constituents ([[England]], [[Scotland]], [[Wales]] and [[Northern Ireland]]) that, for example, compete in many sports separately at international le
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  • ...f them wealthy landowners; they stayed and prospered but some emigrated to Northern Ireland, especially in the border counties of Monaghan, Cavan and Donegal. The Iris
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  • ...996)</ref> The Scots language is used by about 30,000 [[Ulster Scots]]<ref>Northern Ireland Life and Times Survey, 1999</ref> and is known in official circles as [[Uls | title = Peace at Last?: The Impact of the Good Friday Agreement on Northern Ireland
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  • ...west and by the [[Irish Sea]] to the east, and shares a land border with [[Northern Ireland]] (part of the [[United Kingdom]]) to the north. Ireland has one of the fas ...e [[Schengen Treaty]] travel regime because of the [[Common Travel Area]]. Northern Ireland is aligned with the EU for goods rules, so there are no checks on the land
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  • ...at they ''should'' be accepted in payment of a debt. In [[Scotland]] and [[Northern Ireland]], no banknotes are legal tender, and each bank which issues banknotes does ...d]], even though they say "Sterling" and are regularly accepted as such in Northern Ireland. Other Northern Irish pound sterling notes include those issued by the [[Fi
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  • :* [[Environment and Heritage Service]] in [[Northern Ireland]]
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  • ...ng made an important conciliatory speech before the opening session of the Northern Ireland ("Storemont") Parliament on 22 June 1921. The British Cabinet had a signifi
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  • ...the National Assembly for Wales]</ref> and with representatives from the [[Northern Ireland Assembly]],<ref>[http://archive.defra.gov.uk/corporate/about/with/devolve/f
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  • *Northern Ireland Arms Decommissioning Act 1997[http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1997/7/co ...ssion_on_Decommissioning](The Decommissioning Act, 1997 in Ireland and the Northern Ireland Arms Decommissioning Act 1997 in the United Kingdom)
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  • ..., when it was replaced by the present "United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland". The transfer of decision-making powers began with the monarch's assent to
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  • * February. The ''Hillsborough Castle Agreement'' on the continuation of Northern Ireland devolution [http://www.nio.gov.uk/agreement_at_hillsborough_castle_5_februa
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  • ...Russia. The American army also came during the war and set up bases around Northern Ireland, which led to a boost to local economies and excitement to those at home. W
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  • ...of America, and the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland for the prosecution and punishment of the major war criminals of the Europe
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  • ...ed at the end of 1921, which in turn ratified the Better Government Act. [[Northern Ireland]] exercised its right to remain a part of the United Kingdom, with a devolv ...ti-Treaty factions, some of it spilling over the newly-created border into Northern Ireland.
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  • {{R|Northern Ireland}}
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  • In England, Wales and Northern Ireland, the rights in the translation are exercised (on behalf of the Crown) by Ox ...the USA, but also including the church founded by the late Ian Paisley in Northern Ireland. Some of these groups, in practice, sometimes even in theory, treat the KJV
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  • ...ican Army]] bombings, starting on "Bloody Friday" (July 21), took place in Northern Ireland.
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  • ...htm Government of Ireland Act] - Devolved government ([[Home Rule]]) for [[Northern Ireland]] and [[Southern Ireland]]. 1968-69 Start of [[The Troubles]] in Northern Ireland.
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  • ...n Ireland]]. Its formal title is "The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland". It is often referred to as "Britain", including by the government. Its p ...members its empire, and devolved a degree of legislative independence to [[Northern Ireland]], [[Wales]] and [[Scotland]]. It joined the [[European Union]] but did not
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  • | title = Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (Northern Ireland)}}</ref> jointly direct VMS, currently using the BlueFinger VMS supporting
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  • *2014-16 Northern Ireland: evangelical preacher James McConnell prosecuted after calling Islam satani
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  • ...of the island, though the majority of the members were in the protestant [[Northern Ireland]], which remained part of the United Kingdom. Irish Quakers continued thei
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  • ...being, [[Loyalists (United Kingdom)#Ireland and Scotland|Loyalist]]s in [[Northern Ireland]] were also to adopt him as a symbol as a defender of Ulster's borders (the
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  • ...the decision of the British government in 1971 to introduce internment in Northern Ireland. Internment - detention of terrorist suspects without trial, was a response ...Ulster Constabulary, the Ulster Defence Regiment, and economic targets in Northern Ireland, but it also included sectarian killings such as the Kingsmill massacre of
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  • ...the decision of the British government in 1971 to introduce internment in Northern Ireland. Internment - detention of terrorist suspects without trial, was a response ...Ulster Constabulary, the Ulster Defence Regiment, and economic targets in Northern Ireland, but it also included sectarian killings such as the Kingsmill massacre of
    42 KB (6,280 words) - 07:33, 20 April 2024
  • ...'Historical Dictionary of the United Kingdom. Vol. 2: Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland.'' Scarecrow, 1998. 465 pp.
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  • *[[Aideen McGinley]] (Trustee for Northern Ireland) *[[Fabian Monds|Professor Fabian Monds]] (National Governor for Northern Ireland)
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  • ...eland, and particularly extrajudicial detention, U.K., Northern Ireland|in Northern Ireland.
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