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De Valera, Eamon

De Valera, Eamon (ā'mun de vulâr'u) [key], 1882–1975, Irish statesman, b. New York City. He was taken as a child to Ireland. As a young man he joined the movement advocating physical force to achieve Irish independence and took part in the Easter Rebellion of 1916. He was sentenced to life imprisonment (escaping execution because he was a U.S. citizen) but was released under a general amnesty in 1917. Elected that same year a member of Parliament and president of Sinn Féin, De Valera was arrested again in May, 1918. However, he escaped from prison (Feb., 1919) and went to the United States, where he raised funds for Irish independence. In the meantime he had been elected president of Ireland by the Dáil Éireann, the revolutionary parliament that had declared the country independent. In 1920, when he returned to Ireland, the country was in a state of virtual war against British rule. In 1921 the British government opened the negotiations that led to the establishment of the Irish Free State. De Valera, however, repudiated the final treaty because it excluded Northern Ireland and required Irish officeholders to swear allegiance to the British crown. He resigned from the Dáil in Jan., 1922. Nominal leader of the republican intransigents, De Valera greatly deplored the period of civil war that followed. He maintained his opposition to the government, however, and did not enter the Dáil with his party, Fianna Fáil, until 1927. In the general election of 1932 his party gained control of the Dáil, and De Valera became head of the government. He immediately abolished the oath of allegiance and refused to pay land annuities to Britain. A tariff war followed that was not ended until 1938. In 1937, De Valera introduced a new constitution declaring Ireland a fully sovereign state. He kept Ireland neutral throughout World War II, refusing to let the British use southern Irish ports and vigorously protesting Allied military activity in Northern Ireland. Fianna Fáil was defeated in the election of 1948, but De Valera returned as prime minister with independent support (1951–54) and with an absolute party majority (1957–59). Hampered by failing vision, in 1959 he moved to the less demanding office of president of the republic, to which he was reelected in 1966. He retired in 1973.

See his speeches edited by M. Moynihan (1980); biographies by F. P. Longford and T. P. O'Neill (1971), O. Edwards (1988); C. Younger, A State of Disunion (1972); J. O'Carroll and J. Murphy ed., De Valera and His Times (1986).

The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.

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'Dev': the career of Eamon de Valera: Phil Chapple examines a titanic and controversial figure in modern Irish history.(Profiles in Power) (History Review)

THE son of Eamon de Valera, complained about being bombarded by virgins over the condoms controversy 30 years ago, State papers reveal. (Irish Independent (Dublin, Republic of Ireland))

THE son of Eamon de Valera, complained about being bombarded by virgins over the condoms controversy 30 years ago, state papers reveal. (Irish Independent (Dublin, Republic of Ireland))

OFFICIALS burned hundreds of secret files on the orders of Taoiseach Eamon de Valera as panic grew in Ireland over a possible Nazi invasion during World War II. (Irish Independent (Dublin, Republic of Ireland))

Ireland Standing Firm and Eamon de Valera: a Memoir.(Black Back the Classics)(Brief Article)(Book Review) (Irish Literary Supplement)

When Eamon de Valera talked about comely maidens dancing at the crossroads, he may not have had this type of thing in mind. The All-Ireland Talent Show is in-your-face, ultra-confident modern Ireland, as contest- ants possessed of terrifying self-belief often unallied to any discernible talent, line up to launch their bids for global domination. (Irish Independent (Dublin, Republic of Ireland))

IRELAND'S longest serving Defence Force member officially brought the curtain down yesterday on a remarkable career that began when Sean Lemass was Taoiseach and Eamon de Valera had just become Ireland's third President. (Irish Independent (Dublin, Republic of Ireland))

Fianna Fail's house organ.(De Valera, Fianna Fail and the Irish Press)(Book Review) (Irish Literary Supplement)

De Valera's legacy.(The Making of the Irish Constitution 1937)(Book review) (Irish Literary Supplement)

Big Fellow, Long Fellow: A Joint Biography of Collins and De Valera.(Review) (World of Hibernia)

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