9 March – The British Prime Minister proposed to allow the Ulster counties to hold a vote on whether or not to join a Home Rule parliament in Dublin.
20 March – Curragh incident: British Army officers stationed in Ireland at the Curragh Camp resigned their commissions rather than be ordered to resist action by Unionist Ulster Volunteers if the Government of Ireland Act ("Third Home Rule Bill") was passed in the Parliament of the United Kingdom.[2] The government backs down and they are reinstated.
6 April – The second reading of the Home Rule Bill was carried in Westminster.
24–25 April – Larne Gun Running: 35,000 rifles and over 3 million rounds of ammunition from a German dealer were landed at Larne, Bangor, and Donaghadee for the Unionist Ulster Volunteers and were quickly distributed around Ulster by motor transport.[2]
23 June—14 July – the Government of Ireland Bill passed through the House of Lords. It allowed Ulster counties to vote on whether or not they wanted to come under Dublin's jurisdiction. Because of the outbreak of war in Europe and later developments in Ireland, the Act was never implemented in its original form and the wishes of Fermanagh and Tyrone were eventually ignored.
10 July – The Provisional Government of Ulster met for the first time in the Ulster Hall. It vowed to keep Ulster in trust for the King and the British constitution.[4]
21 July – A conference (called on 19 July) was opened at Buckingham Palace by the King. It was hoped that unionists and nationalists attending would break the impasse over Home Rule.
24 July – The Buckingham Palace conference ended in failure. Nationalists and Unionists present could not agree in principle or in detail.
26 July – Howth gun-running: Former British civil servant and novelist Erskine Childers and his wife Molly sailed into Howth in his yacht Asgard and landed 2,500 guns for the nationalist Irish Volunteers from a German dealer. Troops of the King's Own Scottish Borderers, returning to Dublin having been called out to assist police in attempting to prevent the Volunteers from moving the arms to the city, perpetrated the Bachelor's Walk massacre, firing on a crowd of protestors at Bachelors Walk, killing three; a fourth man died later from bayonet wounds and more than 30 others were injured.[5]
September – The Ulster Division was formed as a division of the British New Army from Ulster Volunteers.
18 September – The Government of Ireland Act (the Home Rule Act) received Royal Assent (although George V had contemplated refusing it)[7] but was postponed (as projected on 30 July) for the duration of World War I[2] by the simultaneous Suspensory Act and in practice never came into effect in its original form.
27 October – World War I: Royal Navy super-dreadnought battleship HMS Audacious (23,400 tons), was sunk off Tory Island, north-west of Ireland, by a minefield laid by the armed German merchant-cruiser Berlin.
June – James Joyce's Dubliners, a collection of fifteen short stories depicting the Irish middle classes in and around Dublin during the early 20th century, was published in London.
Terence MacSwiney's contemporary play The Revolutionist was published (first performed 1921).[12]
^Sellers, Leonard (1997). Shot in the Tower: the story of the spies executed in the Tower of London during the First World War. London: Leo Cooper. p. 31. ISBN9780850525533.
^Tierney, Michael (1980). Eoin MacNeill. Oxford University Press. pp. 171–172. ISBN0198224400.
^"General John Regan: The Westport Riots – Claim For £1,000 Compensation". The Irish Times. 11 April 1914.
^Brugha, Máire MacSwiney (2006). History's Daughter: A Memoir from the Only Child of Terence MacSwiney. Dublin: The O'Brien Press. ISBN978-0-86278-986-2.
^ abcHayes, Dean (2006). Northern Ireland International Football Facts. Belfast: Appletree Press. p. 162. ISBN0-86281-874-5.