Kamat's Potpourri Kamat Research Database  
Kamat's PotpourriNew Contents
About the Kamats
Feedback
History of India
Women of India
Faces of India
Indian Mythologies
geographica indicaArts of India
Indian Music
Indian Culture
Indian Paintings
Dig Deep Browse by Tags
Site Map
Historical Timeline
Master Index
Research House of Pictures
Stamps of India
Picture Archive
Natives of India
Temples of India
Kamat Network
Blog Portal


(Keyword Search)

Formula may have to be found: Ireland, India, and the headship of Commonwealth

Title:Formula may have to be found: Ireland, India, and the headship of Commonwealth
Author:McIntyre David W.
Publication:The Round Table / Routledge
Enumeration:Vol. 365 pp. 391 - 413/ July 01, 2002
Abstract:During 50th anniversary commemorations of the 1949 Declaration that had facilitated the Republic of India's continued membership of the Commonwealth, only The Round Table recalled other events of 1949. The Republic of Ireland left the Commonwealth just nine days before the member nations accepted the King as symbol of their free association and as such Head of the Commonwealth. The origins of the symbolic headship are examined, from Eamon de Valera's proposal for external association in 1921 and Eire's recognition of the King for diplomatic formalities only in 1936, to Nehru's acceptance of the symbol and head in 1949. After clinging tenaciously to the concept of 'common allegiance to the Crown' for over a quarter-of-a-century, British policy-makers relaxed the requirements remarkably quickly in face of India's intention to become a republic. Attlee tried hard to persuade Nehru to find a rôle for the King, and British officials considered the Eire model as a possible compromise. In the end, Nehru accepted the idea of a non-constitutional 'head of the association', and the traditional concept of 'allegiance to the Crown' was quietly set aside for the Commonwealth.

Source of Abstract: Provided by Publisher

See Also:
Tools:

Kamat Reference Database

Kamat's Potpourri Research Database Abstracts

.

© 1995-2024 Kamat's Potpourri All Rights Reserved. Do not reproduce without prior permission. Some disclaimers apply.