In November, a month before the second poll, the Ulster Unionist Council under the leadership of Sir Edward Carson forms a secret committee to buy weapons and form an army to resist Home Rule.
Conservative opposition Third Home Rule Bill introduced in 1912 - Conservative leader Andrew Bonar Law promises to oppose it and encourages resistance in Ulster.
On September 28, nearly 500,000 Protestants sign the 'Solemn League and Covenant' to defend Ulster against Home Rule.
UVF formed The Home Rule Bill is passed by the Commons in 1913 but rejected by the Lords. The next day, the Ulster Volunteer Force is formed and begins arming.
Catholics form the Irish Volunteers as a counter-balance and in opposition to proposals that Ulster should remain within the Union.
Preparations for revolt In March 1914, the British Army commander in Ireland, Sir Arthur Paget, asks his officers if they are prepared to force Ulster into joining an independent Ireland. Sixty at the Curragh camp including its commander say they would not - the 'Curragh Mutiny'.
The UVF smuggles in 24,000 rifles and 3m rounds of ammunition in April, bringing their total of rifles to 40,000. The Irish Volunteers smuggle in a small quantity of rifles at Howth three months later. A British regiment tries to stop them, fails and later fires on a crowd of civilians, killing three.
Home Rule and the World War The Home Rule Bill passes the Commons again in May 1914, but war breaks out between Britain and Germany in August. Home Rule becomes law in September, but is shelved for 12 months or until the war is ended, whichever is the longer.
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Irish Nationalist leader John Redmond commits the Irish Volunteers to serve in the British Army, believing this would earn Home Rule.
The war drags on longer than expected.
Many Irish regiments serve on the Western Front and at Gallipoli. Carson joins Asquith's war cabinet in 1915.
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Easter Rising About 1,000 members of the Irish Volunteers and Irish Citizen Army seize key buildings in Dublin on Easter Monday, April 24.
They make their headquarters in the General Post Office where Patrick Pearse proclaims an Irish Republic.
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English troops are shipped to Dublin and five days later, the rebels surrender and are heckled by many Dublin residents as they are led away.
The leaders of the rebellion are executed in May.
Irish nationalist feeling begins to grow as the list of those shot rises to 15.
Ulster exclusion Carson accepts Lloyd George's offer in June of excluding the six north-eastern counties of Ulster from Home Rule.
Casement executed The total of executions from the Easter Rising ends at 16 when Sir Roger Casement, who tried to import weapons for the rebellion from Germany, is hanged in England in August.
Christmas amnesty All those interned as a result of the Easter rebellion are released, including future IRA leader Michael Collins.
1997-98: Second IRA ceasefire to the Nobel Peace Prize
1995-96: Clinton's visit and the end of the IRA ceasefire
1993-94 The Downing Street Declaration and the IRA ceasefire
1990-92: Start of the talks process
1988-89: Gibraltar killings and release of the Guildford Four
1985-87: The Anglo-Irish Agreement
1981-84: Hunger strikes and the Brighton bomb
1976-80: The violence continues
1972-75: The failure of Sunningdale
1970-72: Internment and Bloody Sunday
1968-69: The troops are sent in
1939-67: Relative calm before the storm
1923-38: The fixing of the Irish border
1921-22: The Irish Free State and civil war
1917-20: The road to partition
1910-16: The 'winning' of Home Rule to the Easter Rebellion
1850-1909: Parnell, Gladstone and the battle for Home Rule
1695-1850: A time of revolution and the Great Famine
1170-1691: From Strongbow to the establishment of Protestant ascendancy