The role played by Michael Joseph O'Reilly (also called "O'Reilly") in the Easter rebellion of 1916 has not been discussed much, and in my opinion it made it even more appealing. In a sense, many people will feel that he is "writing history". Olahir is a person who believes that Irish people can not achieve British independence without fighting in armed conflict. It was for this reason that he participated in most of Ireland's volunteer activities in 1913.
Resurrection of the Easter of 1916 The resurrection of the Easter festival in 1916 has had a major impact on the history of Ireland since that time. Known as the "Irish Revolutionary War", it is an important event that eventually guarantees the independence of the Republic of Ireland. Over the centuries, Ireland was under British rule, and Britain believes that the Irish people are barbarians to be trained. In the 12th century the British invasion of King Henry II, the future British monarch tried to colonize Ireland in English, a massacre carefully planned by Cromwell (1652)
If I allowed myself to quote a man named William Butler Yeats, my favorite poet wrote a poem about Ireland called Easter 1916 in 1916. That year, Indians and Irish people shared what they tried to stand up with British. This is the first revolt in Ireland in the 20th century. He wrote a poem called Easter in 1916. In that poem he tried to describe his Ireland at the time, but I think he better depicts the state of the world we discovered today.
(This is a poem contrasting the Easter uprising held in Ireland with the Easter uprising during British rule in 1916. The uprising failed and most of the leaders of the Republic of Ireland were executed with treason. Between May and September it was first published in the series of Michael Robert and dancer in 1921. Friend Coneance Gore-Booth and Maud Gonne's husband, Major John McBride, and Ye Zizhi are long and meaningful He fell in love with someone who does not think he is a "drunk vanity bad sweetheart" but he also acknowledged his nobility by his heroism.
These words were written by William Butler Yeats in a poem titled "Easter of 1916" to commemorate the first rising in Ireland in the 20th century. At that time he used them to explain his Ireland, but I carefully proposed that these words better explain the world than Yeats Ireland in 1915. Since everything has changed, it has changed completely. Because Ireland celebrates the 100th anniversary of the Easter Festival in 1916, I think about a line in Yeat's poetry, and our world is better than the Irish people who explained his Easter festival in 1919 today I think. You will remember this line. "Everything has changed, it has changed fundamentally, a terrible beauty was born," he said.