1992 in Ireland
From Biocrawler, the free encyclopedia.
See also: 1991 in Ireland, other events of 1992, 1993 in Ireland and the list of 'years in Ireland'.
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Events
- January 20 - Peter Brooke offers to resign as Secretary of State for Northern Ireland following criticism of his singing on The Late Late Show only hours after an IRA bomb explodes.
- January 30 - Charles Haughey resigns as Taoiseach and as leader of Fianna Fáil.
- February 4 - Mary Robinson becomes the first President of Ireland to visit Belfast. On the same day an off-duty RUC officer in Belfast kills three people in a Sinn Féin office before committing suicide.
- February 5 - Unionist gunmen kill five Catholics in an attack on a bookmaker's shop in Belfast.
- February 6 - Albert Reynolds is elected the fifth leader of Fianna Fáil.
- February 11 - Charles Haughey resigns as Taoiseach. Albert Reynolds collects his seal of office as his successor.
- February 18 - An Taoiseach, Albert Reynolds, discusses the situation with other party leaders as the High Court prevents a 14-year-old rape victim from going to Britain for an abortion.
- February 26 - The Supreme Court lift the High Court ruling preventing a 14-year-old girl from going to Britain for an abortion.
- April 13 - 250 years after the first performance of Handel's Messiah in Dublin, the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields performs the oratario at the Point Theatre.
- May 7 - Bishop Eamon Casey of Galway resigns following the revelation that he is the father of a teenage boy.
- May 9 - Linda Martin wins the Eurovision Song Contest for Ireland.
- May 31 - Christy O'Connor Jnr wins the British Masters golf tournament.
- June 18 - A referendum in the Republic approves the Maastricht Treaty on European Union: 69.1% in favour; 30.9% against.
- July 8 - President Robinson addresses both houses of the Oireachtas.
- September 23 - The IRA destroys Belfast's forensic science laboratory with a huge bomb.
- November 5 - The government loses a confidence motion and the Dáil is dissolved. Two former Taoisigh, Charles Haughey and Garret FitzGerald, announce their retirement from politics.
- November 25 - Three referenda are held in the Republic on abortion-related issues: the right to travel and the right to (abortion-related) information is supported.
- December 31 - Unemployment reaches record levels in 1992. 290,000 people are out of work.
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Arts and literature
- Vincent Woods' play At the Black Pig's Dyke is performed by the Druid Theatre Company.
- Samuel Beckett's first novel, Dream of Fair to Middling Women, is finally published.
- Eugene McCabe's novel Death and Nightingales and Patrick McCabe's novel The Butcher Boy are published.
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Sports
- August 8 - Michael Carruth wins Ireland's first gold medal in 36 years at the Olympic Games in Barcelona. Wayne McCullough wins a silver medal.
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Births
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Deaths
- January 9 - Bill Naughton, playwright.
- March 20 - Michael McLaverty, novelist.
- April 28 - Sir Francis Bacon, artist.
- May 12 - Joseph Raftery, archaeologist.
- May 13 - F. E. McWilliam, sculptor.
- July 6 - Bryan Guinness, 2nd Lord Moyne, lawyer and poet.
- July 21 - Aloys Fleischmann, composer.

