Orange Order

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The Orange Order is the largest Unionist organisation in Northern Ireland with at least 75,000 members, some of them in the Republic of Ireland.

William of Orange and James

The Order was founded in memory of King William III, who had been Prince of Orange in Holland. When the Parliament in Westminster became increasingly dissatisfied with the rule of James II, a group of Whig MPs encouraged William, had been leading the European war against Louis XIV of France and was the grandson of Charles I of England, to bid for the throne. James fled to France in 1688, and the throne having been deemed vacated, William acceded the following year, ruling jointly with Mary II, his wife and James's daughter. Because of the peaceful change of power coupled with a Bill of Rights, it was termed the Glorious Revolution in England.

The change of sovereign was not so bloodless in Ireland. James returned from France to make a claim for the throne, with the Irish Catholic peasanty an able breeding ground for new soldiers as part of his military campaign. He regrouped his Jacobite forces in Ireland and summoned a parliament in Dublin. He had widespread support from the Roman Catholic population of Ireland, as he was a Roman Catholic himself. An area of the country where James notably failed to win support was the city of Derry, where his army laid siege to the city for 105 days. William arrived in Ireland in 1690, defeating James at the Battle of the Boyne. James fled back to France, but his forces fought on, now in an attempt to secure religious liberty. The Jacobites suffered defeat at the Battle of Aughrim, fought 12 July 1691, a date remembered as Orangemen's Day. They eventually surrended at Limerick in September, where both sides signed the Treaty of Limerick, which offered reasonable terms to the defeated Jabobites. The Treaty was not, however, approved by the Irish Parliament, which used the continuing threat of Jacobitism to justify the introduction of penal laws and other repressive measures on ordinary Irish Catholics. This era has been dubbed the 'penal years' and is a particular source of rhetoric for many Irish Catholics who dub this period, as well as the Irish Famine as a testament to the negative impact British rule had left on the island.

Foundation of the Order

In 1795, a clash between Protestants and Catholics at the "Battle of the Diamond" led to some of those involved to swear a new oath to uphold the Protestant faith and be loyal to the King and his heirs, giving birth to the Orange Order. Since then, the Order's principles and aims, and those of similar organisations it is related to, have changed little.

Civil and religious liberty

It regards itself as defending civil and religious liberties of Protestants and seeks to uphold the rule and ascendancy of a Protestant monarch in the United Kingdom.

The order is organised into "lodges". Lodges are created where and when members wish to set them up - Sir James Craig, the first Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, established a lodge at the House of Commons.

Orangeism is also active in former British colonies - principally Canada, New Zealand, Australia and the two west African countries of Togo and Ghana. There is also a Grand Lodge in the United States.

Today, the annual 12 July events across Northern Ireland, the most important date in the Orange calendar, commemorate the victory at the Battle of the Diamond - regarded by the order as a victory for liberty - and the Protestant faith. It is a commonly believed error that it is the Battle of the Boyne which is celebrated in the 12th July; this battle was infact fought on the 14th of July.

Opponents of the organisation say the parades stand for bigotry and sectarianism and symbolise a Northern Ireland organised to uphold the rights of only one part of the population. The Order has also received criticism from insisting on marching through Nationalist or Republican areas, whose communities often clash with the paraders. In recent years however the annual marches have been more regulated, and the issue of marching through these areas has become more sensitive.

Religious and political

The Orange Order has never been simply a religious organisation. When the Home Rule movement emerged in the nineteenth century, the Orange Order steadily moved towards the unionist position. The organisation opposed Home Rule and partition but concluded that the newly created Northern Ireland would be the defender of its cultural, civil and religious rights. The Independant Orange Order was formed in the 1900's by members of the Order who disagreed with the political involvement of the Order with the newly formed Ulster Unionist Council.

The first unionist Members of Parliament were drawn from the ranks of the loyal orders. Almost every minister in the Northern Ireland government from 1921 until the imposition of Direct Rule in 1972 was an Orangeman.

Ian Paisley was once a member, however has not been since the late 1960's. The sash he can be seen wearing at events (usually Independant Orange Order demonstrations) is that of the Apprentice Boys of Derry.

As the violence of the Troubles deepened, the Orange Order supported the security forces against republicanism and its members opposed any political agreement seen as ceding ground to republicans or giving Dublin a say in Northern Ireland affairs.

Cultural

The Order also provided a community and social structure. Orange halls host many things including Gospel missions, youth groups, musical bands, credit unions and political parties. Charitable work is also part of he order with recent donations to Cancer Research UK, The Londonderry Hospice and the Northern Ireland Chest, Heart and Stroke Association (the latter donation by the Royal Black Institution). The Orange Order also has several home grown charities such as the Lord Enniskillen Memorial Orange Orphan Society (Ireland), Orange Foundation (USA), Loyal Orange Orphan Society Of England (England), Scottish Orange Home Fund (Scotland), McCrea Memorial Trust (Youth/Juniors), Adelaide Hospital Society (Republic of Ireland), The Orange Benevolent Society (Canada) amongst others.

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