1992 in Ireland

List of events

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1992
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See also:1992 in Northern Ireland
Other events of 1992
List of years in Ireland

Events from the year 1992 in Ireland.

Incumbents

Events

  • 20 January – Peter Brooke offered to resign as Secretary of State for Northern Ireland following criticism of his singing on The Late Late Show only hours after an Irish Republican Army (IRA) bomb exploded.
  • 30 January – Charles Haughey resigned as Taoiseach and as leader of the Fianna Fáil party.
  • 31 January – The Government sold the B+I Shipping Line to the Irish Continental Group.
  • 4 February
  • 5 February – Loyalist gunmen killed five Catholics in an attack on a bookmaker's shop in Belfast.
  • 6 February – Albert Reynolds was elected the fifth leader of Fianna Fáil.
  • 11 February – Charles Haughey resigned as Taoiseach and was succeeded by Albert Reynolds.
  • 18 February – Albert Reynolds discussed the situation with other party leaders as the High Court prevented a 14-year-old rape victim from going to Britain for an abortion.
  • 26 February – The Supreme Court lifted the High Court ruling preventing a girl from travelling to Britain for an abortion; it was duly performed.
  • 15 March – Proinsias De Rossa led a breakaway group from the Workers' Party to form what would shortly become Democratic Left. The majority of the breakaway group including De Rossa joined the Labour Party in 1999.
  • 13 April – Two hundred and fifty years after the first performance of Handel's Messiah in Dublin, the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields performed the oratorio at the Point Theatre.
  • 7 May – Bishop Eamon Casey of Galway resigned following the revelation that he was the father of a teenage boy.
  • 8 May – The third People In Need Telethon was held.
  • 9 May – Linda Martin won the Eurovision Song Contest for Ireland with Why Me?. This was the first of three consecutive Irish wins.
  • 31 May – Christy O'Connor Jnr won the British Masters golf tournament.
  • 18 June – A referendum approved the Maastricht Treaty on European Union: 69.1% voted in favour; 30.9% against.
  • 25 June – The issue of a new, smaller 5 pence coin meant that, after 21 years, it was no longer the same size as a shilling.
  • 8 July – President Mary Robinson addressed both houses of the Oireachtas.
  • 23 September – The IRA destroyed the forensic science laboratory in Belfast with a huge bomb.
  • 5 November – The Government lost a confidence motion and the Dáil was dissolved. Two former Taoisigh, Charles Haughey and Garret FitzGerald, announced their retirement from politics.
  • 6 November – A new purple £20 note depicting Daniel O'Connell was issued.
  • 25 November – Three referendums were held on abortion-related issues. The right to abortion-related travel and the right to abortion-related information were supported.
  • 31 December – Unemployment reached record levels: 290,000 people were out of work.

Undated

Arts and literature

Sport

Association football

Gaelic football

Golf

  • Carroll's Irish Open was won by Nick Faldo (England).

Hurling

Olympics

Births

Full date unknown

Deaths

  • 9 January – Bill Naughton, playwright and author (born 1910).
  • 20 March – Michael McLaverty, novelist (born 1904).
  • 28 April – Francis Bacon, painter (born 1909).
  • 12 May – Joseph Raftery, archaeologist.
  • 13 May – F. E. McWilliam, sculptor (born 1909).
  • 20 May – James Tully, former Labour Party TD and Cabinet Minister (born 1915).
  • 3 June – Patrick Peyton, the Rosary Priest (born 1909).
  • 6 July – Bryan Guinness, 2nd Lord Moyne, lawyer and poet.
  • 21 July – Aloys Fleischmann, composer and musicologist (born 1910).
  • 17 August – Tom Nolan, Fianna Fáil TD, Minister of State and MEP (born 1921).
  • 23 September – Ivar Ivask, Estonian poet and literary scholar (born 1927).

Full date unknown

See also

References

  1. ^ Buckley, Christine (19 May 2009). "A long journey in search of justice for victims of abuse". The Irish Times. Retrieved 12 December 2009.
  2. ^ "History". Irish Film Institute. Retrieved 30 July 2012.
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