Abstract
Ireland’s being England’s oldest, and India’s being its largest colony, there was a natural relationship that developed between the nationalist movements of Ireland and India in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. That relationship succeeded an earlier one, in which Ireland, being a part of the metropolis was also a co-sharer in the empire. There was yet a third source of complexity, partitions as the price of freedom. This essay aspires to examine the various aspects of what is both a comparative and connected history.
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