Depends on which side of the fence you sit I suppose. The Irish had many wars against the British, Scot and Scandinavians (each of whom ruled Ireland at some stage) so you could say that they were revolutionary wars or acts.
The 1917(?) Revolution is probably the most famous of all when the Irish stood up and fought the Brits out. The Brits were so shell shocked that they asked for peace talks. The talks resolved in Eamon De Valera becoming the first Irish PM of the Republic but the problem was that it separated the North or Ireland (and its four counties) into a separate kingdom still under rule britannia.
Since then there have been more uprisings in the North and more attempts to reunite Ireland but to no avail.
Revolutionary Struggle - Ireland - ended in 1985.
Revolutionary Struggle - Ireland - was created in 1975.
Revolutionary Marxist Group - Ireland - ended in 1978.
Revolutionary Marxist Group - Ireland - was created in 1972.
Robert H. Murray has written: 'Revolutionary Ireland and its settlement' -- subject(s): History, Ireland War of 1689-1691
Pie
he was in the revolutionary war
The Revolutionary War was America's war for liberty from Britain.
That would be the revolutionary war. That was the war in which the U. S. won it's independence from Great Britain.
Revolutionary Nationalism in Ireland is believing in the right of nationalists to use physical force and violence as their method to achieve their ultimate aim - an independent Ireland completly free of British control.
No it was 2 years after the revolutionary war.
No. It was not. The Revolutionary War was fought from 1775 to 1783.