Bonjour il faut que je fasse une carte mentale avec ce texte ci dessous sauf que je ne comprends vraiment rien, est ce que quelqu’un pourrait me faire la carte mentale svp? c’est à rendre demain ! WHY MEN OF IRELAND VOLUNTEERED TO FIGHT IN THE FIRST WORLD WAR At the outbreak of war in August 1914 there were around 30,000 Irish men serving in the British Army. Those serving overseas were recalled back to Britain and another 30,000 reservists were called up. After the outbreak of the First World War, men flocked to recruiting stations in Ireland. Their motivations were often the same as those who joined up in England, Scotland and Wales: a sense of duty, the belief that the war was a just cause, a desire for adventure, the bonds of friendship and economic reasons. Seventeen-year-old Tom Barry enlisted 'for no other reason than that I wanted to see what war was like, to get a gun, to see new countries and to feel a grown man', whilst Wexford man James English calculated that his family income would increase by over 150 per cent if he were to enlist. Estimates of how many Irish men fought in the First World War vary, but it is now generally accepted that around 200,000 soldiers from the island of Ireland served over the course of the war. The majority of them would not be the professional soldiers and Territorials who fought in those first clashes in 1914, but volunteers. THE EASTER RISING Not all Irish men and women supported Britain's cause. This photograph shows a captured Irish rebel being led away by British soldiers during the 1916 Easter Rising in Dublin. On 24 April 1916, Easter Monday, Irish republican rebels began an armed revolt to further the cause of Irish independence. Their insurrection did not go as planned.
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Bonjour il faut que je fasse une carte mentale avec ce texte ci dessous sauf que je ne comprends vraiment rien, est ce que quelqu’un pourrait me faire la carte mentale svp? c’est à rendre demain ! WHY MEN OF IRELAND VOLUNTEERED TO FIGHT IN THE FIRST WORLD WAR At the outbreak of war in August 1914 there were around 30,000 Irish men serving in the British Army. Those serving overseas were recalled back to Britain and another 30,000 reservists were called up. After the outbreak of the First World War, men flocked to recruiting stations in Ireland. Their motivations were often the same as those who joined up in England, Scotland and Wales: a sense of duty, the belief that the war was a just cause, a desire for adventure, the bonds of friendship and economic reasons. Seventeen-year-old Tom Barry enlisted 'for no other reason than that I wanted to see what war was like, to get a gun, to see new countries and to feel a grown man', whilst Wexford man James English calculated that his family income would increase by over 150 per cent if he were to enlist. Estimates of how many Irish men fought in the First World War vary, but it is now generally accepted that around 200,000 soldiers from the island of Ireland served over the course of the war. The majority of them would not be the professional soldiers and Territorials who fought in those first clashes in 1914, but volunteers. THE EASTER RISING Not all Irish men and women supported Britain's cause. This photograph shows a captured Irish rebel being led away by British soldiers during the 1916 Easter Rising in Dublin. On 24 April 1916, Easter Monday, Irish republican rebels began an armed revolt to further the cause of Irish independence. Their insurrection did not go as planned.
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