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1971 in Ireland

Events in the year 1971 in Ireland.

Incumbents

Events

January

February

March

April

May

July

August

  • 9 August – Internment without trial was introduced in Northern Ireland. Over 300 republicans were arrested in pre-dawn raids by British security forces and interned in Long Kesh prison. Some Loyalists were later arrested. Twenty people died in riots that followed, including eleven in the Ballymurphy Massacre.
  • 12 August – British troops began clearing operations in Belfast following the worst rioting in years. Taoiseach Jack Lynch called for an end to the Stormont administration.
  • 21 August – The Irish Independent reported that RTÉ had made the decision to restrict the broadcasting of an album of Irish rebel songs entitled "Up The Rebels" (featuring The Wolfe Tones), which had been recently re-released by Dolphin Records. A spokesman for RTÉ said that the broadcaster had decided "not to play records which could create tension in Northern Ireland", but assured that the decision would be rescinded once the problems in Northern Ireland had subsided.

September

  • 7 September – The death toll in The Troubles reached 100 after three years of violence, with the death of 14-year-old Annette McGavigan, who was killed by a gunshot during crossfire between British soldiers and the IRA.
  • 25 September – A rally took place in Dublin in support of a campaign of civil disobedience in Northern Ireland.
  • 27 September – Prime ministers Edward Heath, Jack Lynch, and Brian Faulkner met at Chequers to discuss the Northern Ireland situation.

October

  • 13 October – The British Army began to destroy roads between Ireland and Northern Ireland as a security measure.
  • 23 October – Two women were shot dead by soldiers in Belfast when their car failed to stop at a checkpoint.
  • 31 October – The Standard Time (Amendment) Act, 1971 reversed the main provision of the Standard Time Act 1968, returning Irish winter time to UTC+0 (Western European Time).

November

December

Undated

Arts and literature

Sports

All-Ireland Senior Football Championship: Offaly 1–14 Galway 2–8

All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship: Tipperary 5–17 Kilkenny 5–14

Births

Full date unknown
* Amanda Coogan, performance artist.
* Róisín McAliskey, political activist.

Deaths

See also

References