On the morning of 24 April 1916 C.E., a schoolteacher and poet named Patrick Pearse stepped outside the General Post Office on Sackville Street in Dublin and read aloud a document that would change Irish history. It was a Monday — Easter Monday — and the words Pearse read declared Ireland a sovereign, independent republic, free from British rule. The Easter Proclamation was short, visionary, and radical for its time. Within days, the Rising it launched would be crushed. Within years, those words would help reshape an entire nation.
Key facts about the Easter Proclamation
- Easter Proclamation: The document was issued jointly by the Irish Volunteers and the Irish Citizen Army on 24 April 1916 C.E., read aloud by Patrick Pearse at the GPO in Dublin at the start of the Easter Rising.
- Irish Republic signatories: Seven leaders signed the Proclamation — Thomas Clarke, Seán Mac Diarmada, Thomas MacDonagh, P. H. Pearse, Éamonn Ceannt, James Connolly, and Joseph Plunkett — all of whom were executed by British authorities in the weeks that followed.
- Liberty Hall printing: The document was printed in two halves on a single press at Liberty Hall, Dublin, by typesetters Willie O’Brien, Michael Molloy, and Christopher Brady, working with a shortage of matching typeface — giving surviving originals their distinctive, slightly mismatched appearance.
What the proclamation actually said
The text of the Easter Proclamation was remarkable for 1916 C.E. — not just in its assertion of Irish independence, but in what it promised to Irish citizens. It guaranteed “religious and civil liberty, equal rights and equal opportunities to all its citizens,” and pledged to cherish “all the children of the nation equally.”
Crucially, it addressed “Irishmen and Irishwomen” — a direct, equal acknowledgment of women at a time when most political documents ignored them entirely. Ireland’s suffrage movement had been active for years, and women such as Constance Markievicz played combat roles in the Rising itself. The Proclamation’s inclusive language was not accidental.
The document also drew on a long tradition of Irish resistance, referencing “six times during the past three hundred years” that the Irish people had asserted their freedom in arms. It modeled itself partly on a similar proclamation from the 1803 C.E. rebellion led by Robert Emmet. The authors were positioning the Rising not as a spontaneous act but as one chapter in an ongoing, centuries-long struggle.
The people who made it possible
Behind the words were layers of labor and risk that history often compresses into a single dramatic image of Pearse at the GPO steps. The proclamation was physically produced by three typesetters working through the night at Liberty Hall — the headquarters of the Irish Transport and General Workers’ Union, and a center of working-class Irish political life.
James Connolly, one of the seven signatories, was a labor organizer and socialist as much as a nationalist. His presence among the leaders — and the use of Liberty Hall as the printing base — reflected a coalition of motivations behind the Rising: republican nationalism, labor rights, and a vision of Ireland that went beyond simply swapping one ruling class for another.
The Irish Citizen Army, which Connolly led, had been formed in 1913 C.E. to protect striking workers from police violence. That it joined forces with the Irish Volunteers in 1916 C.E. was an act of strategic unity across ideological lines. The Proclamation was, in part, the product of that unlikely alliance.
Women’s contributions extended beyond Markievicz. The Cumann na mBan — an Irish women’s paramilitary organization — provided couriers, nurses, and fighters during the Rising. Their role is often understated in mainstream accounts of the rebellion.
How a failed rising became a founding myth
The Easter Rising lasted six days before rebel forces surrendered on 29 April 1916 C.E. Dublin was badly damaged. Irish public opinion was initially hostile — the leading Irish nationalist newspaper, the Irish Independent, called for the executions of the leaders.
Then the British military executed all seven signatories, along with eight other leaders. James Connolly, wounded during the fighting, was shot while tied to a chair. The executions — carried out over several weeks — transformed public sentiment. What had seemed like a reckless failure became, in Irish memory, a sacrifice. British Prime Ministers H. H. Asquith and David Lloyd George later acknowledged the executions were a catastrophic political error.
By 1922 C.E., the Irish Free State existed. By 1937 C.E., a new Irish constitution had been adopted. By 1949 C.E., the Republic of Ireland was formally declared. The path from proclamation to republic took more than three decades and passed through a brutal War of Independence and a civil war — but the Easter Proclamation remained its symbolic foundation throughout.
Lasting impact
The Easter Proclamation’s influence spread well beyond Ireland. It became a reference point for anti-colonial movements worldwide — a short document asserting that a small nation could declare itself sovereign, and mean it, and eventually achieve it.
Within Ireland, the text has acquired the status of a founding document. Full original copies — about 30 survive — are treated as national treasures. One sold at auction for €390,000 in December 2004 C.E. Copies are displayed in the National Museum of Ireland, Trinity College Library, the GPO itself, and Irish schools and pubs around the world. Each year on Easter Sunday, an officer of the Irish Defence Forces reads the Proclamation aloud outside the GPO — the same steps where Pearse first delivered it.
The document’s promise of equal rights for all citizens has been invoked in Irish political debates ever since — including during the campaigns for marriage equality in 2015 C.E. and for reproductive rights in 2018 C.E. Its language, written under pressure in the days before a doomed uprising, turned out to have a very long life.
Blindspots and limits
The Proclamation’s ideals and the Ireland that followed were not always the same thing. The Irish Free State that emerged after independence imposed strict Catholic social norms, restricted women’s roles in public life, and treated many marginalized communities — including Travellers and children in institutional care — with profound cruelty. The document’s promise to cherish “all the children of the nation equally” became, for many, a bitter irony.
Northern Ireland, where roughly a million unionists and Protestants did not share the Rising’s goals, was partitioned off in 1921 C.E. — a division that produced decades of conflict. The Proclamation’s vision of a united Ireland remained, a century later, unresolved. The text’s legacy is real and consequential; so is the gap between its promises and what was built in its name.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Proclamation of the Irish Republic — Wikipedia
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous land rights and 160 million hectares recognized at COP30
- Global suicide rate has fallen by 40% since 1995
- The Good News for Humankind archive on Ireland
About this article
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