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Monarchy in the Irish Free State

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, the first monarch to reign in the Irish Free State. In 1927 he became 'King of Ireland'. The King was the head of state of the 1922-1937 Irish Free State. Under the Free State constitution, the state was governed under a form of constitutional monarchy. The King exercised a number of important duties, including appointing the Executive Council (cabinet), dissolving the legislature and promulgating the law. Nonetheless, by convention the King's role was largely ceremonial. The King's duties were exercise on his behalf by his official representative, the Governor-General. Most of the King's functions were taken from him in the final days of the Irish Free State, under a constitutional amendment adopted in 1936.

As a dominion of the British Commonwealth, the Free State's king was the same individual who reigned over the United Kingdom. However, while from 1922-1927 he reigned in the Irish Free State as 'King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland', from 1927 onwards he reigned as 'King of Ireland'. This change of position had important constitutional implications.

Table of contents
1 Duties and functions
2 Oath of Allegiance
3 Major constitutional changes
4 List of monarchs
5 List of Governors-General
6 See also

Duties and functions

Oath of Allegiance

Main article: Free State Oath of Allegiance

Under the Free State constitution members of the Oireachtas were required to take an oath of fidelity to the King before being permitted to assume their seats. This oath was strongly objected to by many republicans and was one of the causes of the Irish Civil War. The oath was eventually abolished in 1936. The Oath of Allegiance read as follows:

I ................ do solemnly swear true faith and allegiance to the Constitution of the Irish Free State as by law established, and that I will be faithful to H. M. King George V., his heirs and successors by law in virtue of the common citizenship of Ireland with Great Britain and her adherence to and membership of the group of nations forming the British Commonwealth of Nations.

Major constitutional changes

Change of title in 1927

Prior to 1927 the British monarch reigned over the entire Commonwealth, including the Irish Free State, as 'King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland'. The Royal and Parliamentary Titles Act 1927 replaced the concept of a single crown ruling the Commonwealth with multiple crowns, so that each dominion became a separate kingdom. From this time onwards, therefore, the King wore not one crown but several, and so henceforth he reigned in Australia as 'King of Australia', in Canada as 'King of Canada', etc. Nonethless, because all of the dominions shared, as monarch, a single individual, they were united under a personal union.

After 1927 the King reigned over the Irish Free State as 'King of Ireland'. This change had important implications. Before the change of title the British government had the right both to designate the Governor-General and to secretly advise both the King and his Governor-General in the exercise of their functions in the Irish Free State. For example, after his appointment Governor-General Tim Healy was instructed by the British government to withhold assent from any bill that sought to abolish the Oath of Allegiance.

After the Act the Free State government assumed the right to chose the Governor-General and both the 'King of Ireland', and the Governor-General, only accepted advice from the government of the Free State. The Free State government also assumed full responsibility for its foreign affairs, as the King began, for the first time, to concluded treaties on behalf of the state and to accept the credentials of international ambassadors to the Irish state. The King also granted the Irish Free State its own Great Seal, at a time when the rest of the Commonwealth continued to use Great Britain's Great Seal of the Realm. The first occasion on which King formally concluded a treaty on the Free State's behalf was in 1931, when he George V signed a treaty presented to him by the Free State's Minister for External Affairs, Patrick McGilligan, in the absence of a British minister.

Constitutional changes of 1936

In 1936 the Fianna Fáil government of Eamon de Valera carried out a major revision of the constitution aimed at all but eliminating the role of the King in the Irish state. After abolishing the Oath of Allegiance the Oireachtas passed the Constitution (Amendment No. 27) Act. This removed all explicit reference to the King from the constitution, abolished the office of Governor-General, and shared all of the King's former functions amongst various other organs of government.

However, without mentioning him by name, the amendment also introduced a provision permitting the government to "avail of" the King as a "constitutional organ" for the "appointment of diplomatic and consular agents and the conclusion of international agreements". Thus, henceforth, the King was still the head of state for the purposes of foreign affairs, but retained no other constitutional role.

List of monarchs

List of Governors-General

See also


The Irish Free State
(1922-1937)
Anglo-Irish Treaty | Provisional Government | Constitution of the Irish Free State | Statute of Westminster | Great Seal of the Irish Free State | Monarchy in the Irish Free State

Executive
King of Ireland | Governor-General | President of the Executive Council | Vice-President of the Executive Council | Executive Council | Extern Minister | Ministers and Secretaries Act

''Legislative:
Oireachtas Éireann (made up of the King, Dáil Éireann & Seanad Éireann) |
Royal Assent | Ceann Comhairle | Cathaoirleach | Oath of Allegiance

Judiciary
Supreme Court | High Court | Chief Justice | Courts of Justice Act, 1924

Other topics: General elections: 1922 | 1923 | 1927 (June) | 1927 (Sept) 1932 | 1933 | 1937
See also: External Relations Act | Executive Authority (Consequential Provisions) Act | Constitution (Amendment No. 27) Act


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Queenslanders for Constitutional Monarchy defend the soverienty of the Queen of England/Australia Queenslanders for Constitutional Monarchy defend the soverienty of the Queen of England ...
The Official UK Monarchy website covers the monarch's role and the history of the monarchy; gives biographies of the Royal Family, tourist information ... Palaces and the Royal Collection. The Official UK Monarchy website covers the monarch's role and the history of the monarchy; gives biographies of the Royal Family, tourist information ...
Detailed histories of the monarchies of England and Scotland from inception to 1603 and of the United Kingdom to the present day. Includes family trees of royal houses (in PDF format). Detailed histories of the monarchies of England and Scotland from inception to 1603 and of the United Kingdom to the ...
... the Kingsford NSW branch of Australians for Constitutional Monarchy No Republic (Kingsford) Incorporated is the Kingsford NSW branch of Australians for Constitutional Monarchy
Ongoing collection of news, comment and analysis plus backgrounders, constitutional documents, interactives, quizzes, forum. Web resources including pressure groups and other royal families. Ongoing collection of news, comment and analysis plus backgrounders, constitutional documents, interactives, quizzes, forum. Web resources including pressure groups and other royal families.
... reign of Edward VII from the official British Monarchy website. Profile of the reign of Edward VII from the official British Monarchy website.
An organisation opposing monarchy. An organisation opposing monarchy.
Details of a group who would like to see the Queen of England remain as Australia's Head of State. Details of a group who would like to see the Queen of England remain as Australia's Head of State.
The Queen should abdicate so the monarchy does not become an institution of the elderly ... think tank. The Queen should abdicate so the monarchy does not become an institution of the elderly ...
... years, from the official site of the British monarchy. Articles on the various descendent's of Malcolm ... years, from the official site of the British monarchy.

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