| A | B |
| Set up in 1893 to help revive the Gaelic language | Gaelic League |
| Set up in 1884 to encourage Irish sports | The Gaelic Athletic Association |
| Two Irish sports | Hurling and Gaelic Football |
| The founder of Sinn Fein | Arthur Griffith |
| Formed in 1905 to represent Protestant opinion in Ulster | Ulster Unionist Council |
| Liberal Prime Minister in 1906 | Henry Campbell-Bannerman |
| Introduced in April 1912 | Third Home Rule Bill |
| Leader of the Ulster Unionists | Sir Edward Carson |
| Protestant paramilitary force | Ulster Volunteer Force |
| Conservative leader from 1911 | Andrew Bonar Law |
| How Asquith's policy for Ireland is usually described | 'Wait and See' |
| Catholic paramilitary force | Irish Volunteers |
| Where the UVF successfully brought in guns | Larne |
| Where a Conference was held in July 1914 | Buckingham Palace |
| Where the Irish Nationalists tried to bring in guns | Houth |
| This made Home Rule a possibility | Parliament Act 1911 |
| Leader of the Irish Parliamentary Party from 1900 | John Redmond |
| The number of MPs Ireland would send to Westminster under the terms of the Home Rule Bill | 42 |
| Signed by over 250,000 Ulstermen as a protest against Home Rule | Solemn League and Covenant |
| Where there was a serious 'mutiny' in March 1914 | The Curragh |
| Where the Conservatives held a rally in July 1912 | Blenheim Palace |
| What the Conservatives started to call themselves | Unionists |
| Secretary of State for War who was forced to resign after the Curragh Mutiny | J.E.B. Seely |
| Revived in the 1880s to defend Protestant interests in Ireland | The Orange Order |
| The number of Irish MPs elected in January 1910 | 82 |
| The other name for the Irish Republican Brotherhood | Fenians |
| Two of Ireland's important industries | shipbuilding and distilling |
| Chief Secretary for Ireland in 1906 | Augustine Birrell |
| A slogan first used by Lord Randolph Churchill in 1886 | 'Ulster will Fight and Ulster will be Right' |
| A slogan used by the Ulster Unionists | 'Home Rule is Rome Rule |
| Commander of the British troops in Ireland | Sir Arthur Paget |