Constance Markievicz Explained

Constance Markievicz
Office:Minister for Labour
Term Start:April 1919
Term End:January 1922
Predecessor:New office
Successor:Joseph McGrath
Office1:Teachta Dála
Term Start1:August 1923
Term End1:15 July 1927
Term Start2:May 1921
Term End2:June 1922
Constituency2:Dublin South
Term Start3:December 1918
Term End3:May 1921
Constituency3:Dublin St Patrick's
Office4:Member of Parliament
Predecessor4:William Field
Successor4:Constituency abolished
Term Start4:28 December 1918
Term End4:15 November 1922
Constituency4:Dublin St Patrick's
Birthname:Constance Georgine Gore-Booth
Birth Date:1868 2, df=yes
Birth Place:London, England
Death Place:Dublin, Ireland
Spouse:Casimir Markievicz (m. 1900)
Children:Maeve Markievicz (1901–1962)
Relations:Eva Gore-Booth (Sister)
Restingplace:Glasnevin Cemetery,
Dublin, Ireland
Serviceyears:1913–1923
Rank:Lieutenant[1]

Constance Georgine Markievicz (Polish: Markiewicz pronounced as /pl/; Gore-Booth; 4 February 1868 – 15 July 1927), also known as Countess Markievicz and Madame Markievicz,[2] was an Irish politician, revolutionary, nationalist, suffragist, socialist, and the first woman elected to the Westminster Parliament. She was elected Minister for Labour in the First Dáil, becoming the second female cabinet minister in Europe. She served as a Teachta Dála for the Dublin South constituency from 1921 to 1922 and 1923 to 1927. She was a Member of Parliament (MP) for Dublin St Patrick's from 1918 to 1922.

A founding member of Fianna Éireann, Cumann na mBan and the Irish Citizen Army, she took part in the Easter Rising in 1916, when Irish republicans attempted to end British rule and establish an Irish Republic. She was sentenced to death but her sentence was commuted to life imprisonment[3] on the grounds of her sex. On 28 December 1918, she was the first woman elected to the UK House of Commons, though, being in Holloway Prison at the time and in accordance with party policy, she did not take her seat. Instead, she and the other Sinn Féin MPs (as TDs) formed the first Dáil Éireann. She was also one of the first women in the world to hold a cabinet position, as Minister for Labour, from 1919 to 1922.

Markievicz supported the anti-Treaty side in the Irish Civil War. She continued as an (abstentionist) Dáil member for Sinn Féin until 1926 when she became a founding member of Fianna Fáil. She died in 1927.

Early life

Constance Georgine Gore-Booth was born at Buckingham Gate in London in 1868, the elder daughter of the Arctic explorer and adventurer Sir Henry Gore-Booth, 5th Baronet, an Anglo-Irish landlord who administered a 100abbr=onNaNabbr=on estate, and Georgina, Lady Gore-Booth, née Hill. During the famine of 1879–80, Sir Henry provided free food for the tenants on his estate at Lissadell House in the north of County Sligo in the north-west of Ireland. Their father's example inspired in Gore-Booth and her younger sister, Eva Gore-Booth, a deep concern for working people and the poor. The sisters were childhood friends of the poet W. B. Yeats, who frequently visited the family home Lissadell House, and were influenced by his artistic and political ideas. Yeats wrote a poem, "In Memory of Eva Gore-Booth and Con Markiewicz", in which he described the sisters as "two girls in silk kimono, both beautiful, one a gazelle" The gazelle being Eva, whom Yeats described as having "a gazelle-like beauty".[4] Eva later became involved in the labour movement and women's suffrage in Great Britain, although initially Constance did not share her sister's ideals.

Gore-Booth wished to train as a painter, to her family's dismay; in 1892, she went to study at the Slade School of Art in London,[5] where she lived at the Alexandra House for Art Pupils, Kensington Gore, founded five years before by Sir Francis Cook, a wealthy great-uncle of Maud Gonne. One of her contemporaries there was Blanche Georgiana Vulliamy.[6] It was at this time that Gore-Booth first became politically active and joined the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies (NUWSS). Later she moved to Paris and enrolled at the prestigious Académie Julian where she met her future husband, Casimir Markievicz, an artist from a wealthy Polish family from present-day Ukraine.[7]

The Markieviczes settled in Dublin in 1903 and moved in artistic and literary circles, with Constance gaining a reputation as a landscape painter.[8] In 1905, along with artists Sarah Purser, Nathaniel Hone, Walter Osborne and John Butler Yeats, she was instrumental in founding the United Arts Club, which was an attempt to bring together all those in Dublin with an artistic and literary bent. This group included the leading figures of the Gaelic League founded by the future first President of Ireland, Douglas Hyde. Although formally concerned only with the preservation of the Irish language and culture, the league brought together many patriots and future political leaders. Sarah Purser, whom the young Gore-Booth sisters first met in 1882, when she was commissioned to paint their portrait, hosted a regular salon where artists, writers and intellectuals on both sides of the nationalist divide gathered. At Purser's house, Markievicz met revolutionary patriots Michael Davitt, John O'Leary and Maud Gonne. In 1907, Markievicz rented a cottage in the countryside near Dublin. The previous tenant, the poet Padraic Colum, had left behind copies of The Peasant and Sinn Féin. These revolutionary journals promoted independence from British rule. Markievicz read them and was propelled into action.[9]

Politics

In 1908, Markievicz became actively involved in nationalist politics in Ireland. She joined Sinn Féin and Inghinidhe na hÉireann ('Daughters of Ireland'), a revolutionary women's movement founded by the actress and activist Maud Gonne, muse of WB Yeats. Markievicz came directly to her first meeting from a function at Dublin Castle, the seat of British rule in Ireland, wearing a satin ball gown and a diamond tiara. Naturally, the members looked upon her with some hostility. This refreshing change from being "kowtowed"-to as a countess only made her more eager to join, she told her friend Helena Molony. She performed with Maud Gonne in several plays at the newly established Abbey Theatre, an institution that played an important part in the rise of cultural nationalism. In the same year, Markievicz played a dramatic role in the women's suffrage campaigners' tactic of opposing Winston Churchill's election to Parliament during the Manchester North West by-election, flamboyantly appearing in the constituency driving an old-fashioned carriage drawn by four white horses to promote the suffragist cause. A male heckler asked her if she could cook a dinner, to which she responded, "Yes. Can you drive a coach and four?" Her sister Eva had moved to Manchester to live with fellow suffragist Esther Roper and they both campaigned against the anti-suffragist Churchill with her. Churchill lost the election to Conservative candidate William Joynson-Hicks, in part as a result of the suffragists' dedicated opposition.[10]

In 1909 Markievicz founded Fianna Éireann, a nationalist scouting organisation that instructed teenage boys in scouting, in the style of Robert Baden-Powell's then-paramilitary Boy Scouts. At the Fianna's first meeting in Camden Street, Dublin, on 16 August 1909, she was almost expelled on the basis that women did not belong in a physical force movement. She had drawn in Bulmer Hobson, who had earlier founded a less successful boy scout group in Belfast. He supported her, and she was elected to the committee.[11] She was jailed for the first time in 1911 for speaking at an Irish Republican Brotherhood demonstration attended by 30,000 people, organised to protest against George V's visit to Ireland. During this protest, Markievicz handed out leaflets, erected great banners emblazoned Dear land thou art not conquered yet, participated in stone-throwing at pictures of the King and Queen and attempted to burn the giant British flag taken from Leinster House, eventually succeeding, but then seeing James McArdle imprisoned for one month for the incident, despite Markievicz testifying in court that she was responsible.[12] Her friend Helena Molony was arrested for her part in the stone-throwing and became the first woman in Ireland to be tried and imprisoned for a political act since the time of the Ladies Land League.

Markievicz joined James Connolly's socialist Irish Citizen Army (ICA), a volunteer force formed in response to the lock-out of 1913 to defend the demonstrating workers from the police. Markievicz recruited volunteers to peel potatoes in the basement of Liberty Hall while she and others worked on distributing the food. Markievicz was forced to take out loans and to sell her jewellery. That year, with Inghinidhe na hÉireann, she ran a soup kitchen to feed poor children and enable them to attend school.

In the Inghininidhe na h-Éireann magazine Bean na h-Éireann, Markievicz's advice to women was: "Dress suitably in short skirts and strong boots, leave your jewels in the bank and buy a revolver."[13]

Easter Rising

As a member of the Citizen Army, Markievicz took part in the 1916 Easter Rising. She was deeply inspired by the founder of the ICA, James Connolly. Markievicz designed the Citizen Army uniform and composed its anthem, based on the tune of a Polish song.[14]

Markievicz fought in St Stephen's Green, where on the first morning —according to the only two pages surviving of the diary of an alleged witness — she shot a member of the Dublin Metropolitan Police, Constable Lahiff, who subsequently died of his injuries.[15] [16] Other accounts place her at City Hall when the policeman was shot, only arriving at Stephen's Green later.[17] It was long thought that she was second in command to Michael Mallin, but in fact it was Christopher "Kit" Poole who held that position.[18] Markievicz supervised the setting-up of barricades on Easter Monday and was in the middle of the fighting all around Stephen's Green, wounding a British army sniper.[19] Trenches were dug in the Green, sheltered by the front gate; however, after British machine gun and rifle fire from the rooftops of tall buildings on the north side of the Green including the Shelbourne Hotel, the Citizen Army troops withdrew to the Royal College of Surgeons on the west side of the Green.

The Stephen's Green garrison held out for six days, ending the engagement when the British brought them Pearse's surrender order. The British officer, Captain (later Major) de Courcy Wheeler, who accepted their surrender was married to Markievicz's first cousin, Selina Maude Beresford Knox.[20] [21]

They were taken to Dublin Castle and then to Kilmainham Gaol through what Matt Connolly described as "several groups of hostile people".[22] There, she was the only one of 70 women prisoners who was put into solitary confinement. At her court-martial on 4 May 1916, Markievicz pleaded not guilty to "taking part in an armed rebellion...for the purpose of assisting the enemy," but pleaded guilty to having attempted "to cause disaffection among the civil population of His Majesty".[23] Markievicz told the court, "I went out to fight for Ireland's freedom and it does not matter what happens to me. I did what I thought was right and I stand by it." She was sentenced to death, but the court recommended mercy "solely and only on account of her sex". The sentence was commuted to life in prison. When told of this, she said to her captors, "I do wish your lot had the decency to shoot me".[24]

Markievicz was transferred to Mountjoy Prison, Holloway Prison and then to Aylesbury Prison in England in July 1916. She was released from prison in 1917, along with others involved in the Rising, as the government in London granted a general amnesty for those who had participated in it. It was around this time that Markievicz, born into the Church of Ireland, converted to Catholicism.[25]

First Dáil

Along with other leading Sinn Féin members, she was jailed again in 1918 for her part in the supposed German Plot. At the 1918 general election, Markievicz was elected for the constituency of Dublin St Patrick's, beating her opponent William Field with 66% of the vote, as one of 73 Sinn Féin MPs. The results were called on 28 December 1918.[26] This made her the first woman elected to the United Kingdom House of Commons.[27] However, in line with Sinn Féin abstentionist policy, she did not take her seat in the House of Commons.[28]

Markievicz was in Holloway prison when her colleagues assembled in Dublin at the first meeting of the First Dáil, the Parliament of the revolutionary Irish Republic. When her name was called, she was described, like many of those elected, as being "imprisoned by the foreign enemy" (fé ghlas ag Gallaibh).[29] She was re-elected to the Second Dáil in the elections of 1921.[30]

Markievicz served as Minister for Labour from April 1919 to January 1922, in the Second Ministry and the Third Ministry of the Dáil. Holding cabinet rank from April to August 1919, she became both the first Irish female Cabinet Minister and at the same time, only the second female government minister in Europe. She was the only female cabinet minister in Irish history until 1979 when Máire Geoghegan-Quinn was appointed to the cabinet post of Minister for the Gaeltacht for Fianna Fáil.Her Labour department was concerned with setting up Conciliation Boards, arbitrating labour disputes, surveying areas and establishing guidelines for wages and food prices.[31]

Civil War and Fianna Fáil

Markievicz left the government in January 1922 along with Éamon de Valera and others in opposition to the Anglo-Irish Treaty. She worked actively for the Republican cause in the Irish Civil War, including directing the Citizen Army in the occupation of Moran's Hotel in Dublin.[32] After the civil war she toured the United States. She was not elected in the 1922 Irish general election but was returned in 1923 for the Dublin South constituency. In common with other Republican candidates, she did not take her Dáil seat. She was arrested again in November 1923. In prison, she went on a hunger strike, and within a month, she and other prisoners were released.[33]

She left Sinn Féin and joined the Fianna Fáil party on its foundation in 1926, chairing the inaugural meeting of the new party in La Scala Theatre. In the June 1927 general election, she was re-elected to the 5th Dáil as a candidate for Fianna Fáil, which was pledged to return to Dáil Éireann, but died only five weeks later, before she could take her seat.[34] Her fellow Fianna Fáil TDs signed the controversial Oath of Allegiance and took their seats in the Dáil on 12 August 1927, less than a month after her death.[35] The party leader Éamon de Valera described the Oath as "an empty political formula".[36]

Family life

Constance's husband, Casimir Markievicz, was known in Paris as Count Markievicz, a title that was the norm for large landowners in Poland at this time. When the Gore-Booth family enquired as to the validity of the title, they were informed through Pyotr Rachkovsky of the Russian Secret Police that he had taken the title "without right", and that there had never been a "Count Markievicz" in Poland.[37] However, the Department of Genealogy in Saint Petersburg said that he was entitled to claim to be a member of the nobility. Markievicz was married, though separated, at the time they met; his wife died in 1899 and he and Gore-Booth married in London on 29 September 1900.[38] She gave birth to their daughter, Maeve, at Lissadell in November 1901. The child was mainly raised by her Gore-Booth grandparents. Stanislas, Casimir's son from his first marriage, accompanied the couple to Ireland after their honeymoon visit to his homeland.

In 1913 Markievicz's husband moved back to Ukraine, and never returned to live in Ireland. However, they did correspond and he was by her side when she died.

Death

Markievicz died at the age of 59 on 15 July 1927, of complications after two appendicitis operations, a dangerous surgery in the days before antibiotics. She had given away the last of her wealth, and died in a public ward "among the poor where she wanted to be".[39] [40] One of the doctors attending her was her revolutionary colleague Kathleen Lynn.[41] Also at her bedside were Casimir and Stanislas Markievicz, Éamon de Valera and Hanna Sheehy Skeffington. Prior to her death, Esther Roper maintained a vigil at Constance's bed with Marie Perolz, Helena Molony, Kathleen Lynn and other friends. Refused a state funeral by the Free State government, she was laid out in the Rotunda, where she had spoken at so many political meetings. Thousands of the Dubliners who loved her lined O'Connell Street and Parnell Square to pass by her body and pay their respects to 'Madame'. It took four hours for the beginning of the funeral, starting from the Rotunda, to reach the gates of Glasnevin Cemetery. Eamon de Valera gave the funeral oration, while Free State soldiers stood on guard to prevent the rifle salute that Michael Collins had called “the only speech which it is proper to make above the grave of a dead Fenian”.[42]

Her former Citizen Army colleague the playwright Seán O'Casey said of her: "One thing she had in abundance—physical courage; with that she was clothed as with a garment."[43]

Tributes

In County Sligo Markievicz Road and Markievicz Park (the main GAA stadium in the county) both bear her name.[44] In Dublin, the flat complex Countess Markiewicz House also bears her name. [45]

In 2018, a portrait of Markievicz was donated by the Irish parliament to the British House of Commons to commemorate the 1918 Representation of the People Act, under which, some women were allowed the right to vote for the first time in the United Kingdom.[46]

In 2019, a Dublin City Council Commemorative Plaque was unveiled at Markievicz's former home in Dublin, Surrey House on Leinster Road in Rathmines.[47]

In 2008, a Ukrainian village of Zhyvotivka, where Constance stayed with the Markievicz family in 1903, opened a room dedicated to the couple with the documents brought from Lissadel. [48]

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. [Bureau of Military History]
  2. News: . Sligo and Madame Markievicz. The Irish Times. Dublin. 29 June 1917.
  3. British National Archives WO 35/211
  4. Memoirs, Ed by Dennis Donoghue (1972) Quoted in Everyman edition of, Yeats, The Poems.(1992)p694.Rosemary . Rodgers . The Rebel Countess . . June/July 2015. pp. 42–3 . 11 May 2015 . 22 November 2018 . . 28 July 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200728194645/https://issuu.com/irishamerica/docs/ia_june_july_2015 . live . Web site: Rosemary . Rodgers . The Rebel Countess . . June/July 2015 . 13 May 2015 . 23 November 2018 . Irish America website . https://web.archive.org/web/20181123130609/https://irishamerica.com/2015/05/the-rebel-countess/ . 23 November 2018 . live .
  5. Web site: Countess Markievicz (Constance Markievicz). Centre for Advancement of Women in Politics. 6 June 2008. 16 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160316014707/http://www.qub.ac.uk/cawp/Irish%20bios/TDs_2.htm#markievicz. dead.
  6. Book: Naughton, Lindie . Markievicz: A Most Outrageous Rebel . 2016 . 37 . Merrion Press . Newbridge, Co. Kildare . 978-1-78537-084-7 . 22 November 2018.
  7. Web site: Constance Markievicz: The Countess of Irish Freedom. https://web.archive.org/web/19980505065850/http://thewildgeese.com/pages/ireland.html. dead. 5 May 1998. The Wild Geese today.
  8. Gore-Booth, Eva, The one and the many, London: Longmans, Green & Co., 1904. Copy with hand-painted illustrations by Constance Markievicz [née Gore-Booth] held in the Manuscripts & Archives Research Library, The Library of Trinity College Dublin. Available in digital form on the Digital Collections website.
  9. Anne Haverty, Constance Markievicz: Irish Revolutionary (Liiliput Press: Dublin, 2016), pp. 73-74.
  10. Book: Marecco, Anne. The Rebel Countess. 1967. Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
  11. Book: Townshend. Charles. Easter 1916: The Irish Rebellion. 2006. Penguin Books. London. 978-0-14-190276-0. 21–2. 27 March 2016. 29 July 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200729162647/https://books.google.com/books?id=g6FNKxBJXMYC. live.
  12. Book: Ward . Margaret . Unmanageable Revolutionaries: Women and Irish Nationalism . 1983 . Pluto Press . London . 978-0-86104-700-0 . 78 .
  13. Book: Sigillito, Gina. The Daughters of Maeve: 50 Irish Women Who Changed World. 2007. Kensington Publishing Corp.. New York. 978-0-8065-3609-5. 87. 11 May 2014. 29 July 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200729180725/https://books.google.com/books?id=XfUCl5tHDNUC&pg=PA87. live.
  14. Book: Markievicz, Constance. A Battle Hymn. c. 1917. Irish Traditional Music Archive. 11 May 2014. 29 September 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150929192205/http://www.itma.ie/digitallibrary/book/battle-hymn. live.
  15. Book: Matthews. Ann. Renegades: Irish Republican Women 1900–1922. 2010. Mercier Press Ltd.. 978-1-85635-684-8. 129–30. 22 March 2016.
  16. Web site: Arrington . Lauren . Did Constance Markievicz Shoot the Policeman? . Conference of Irish Historians in Britain . 26 January 2016 . 23 March 2016 . 4 April 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160404200516/http://irishhistoriansinbritain.org/?p=18 . live .
  17. Book: Haverty, Anne . Constance Markievicz: Irish Revolutionary . Anne Haverty. 1988 . Pandora . London . 978-0-86358-161-8 . 148 .
  18. Millar. Scott. Not for fame or for name. Liberty. December 2013. 12. 10. 23.
  19. Book: McKenna. Joseph. Guerrilla Warfare in the Irish War of Independence, 1919–1921. 2011. McFarland. 978-0-7864-8519-2. 112. 22 March 2016.
  20. Web site: Mauser pistol handed to me by Countess Markievicz when she surrendered to me at the College of Surgeons Dublin in 1916 with Commandant Mallin. H. E. de C. Wheeler. This was presented to me by General Lowe. Catalogue. National Library of Ireland. 5 January 2016. 1916. 5 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160305094345/http://catalogue.nli.ie/Record/vtls000652512/HierarchyTree. live.
  21. Web site: Bunbury. Turtle. Dorothea Findlater – One Hundred Years On. 5 January 2016. Perhaps the most awkward arrest Wheeler made was Countess Markievicz, his wife’s first cousin.. 5 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160305185235/http://www.turtlebunbury.com/interviews/interviews_misc/interviews_misc_dorotheafindlater.html. live.
  22. https://www.militaryarchives.ie/collections/online-collections/bureau-of-military-history-1913-1921/reels/bmh/BMH.WS1746.pdf Matthew Connolly Bureau of Military History witness statement
  23. Book: Foy. Michael T.. Barton. Brian. The Easter Rising. 2011. The History Press. 978-0-7524-7272-0. 303. 30 March 2016. 29 July 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200729161714/https://books.google.com/books?id=wUI7AwAAQBAJ&pg=PA303. live.
  24. Book: Dowler. Lorraine. Flint. Colin. The Geography of War and Peace: From Death Camps to Diplomats. 2004. Oxford University Press. 978-0-19-534751-7. 144. https://books.google.com/books?id=Za08XQfp3ZwC&pg=PA144. 30 March 2016. Amazonian Landscapes: Gender, War, and Historical Repetition.
  25. Kenny . Mary . Would the countess have supported repeal of the 8th? . History Ireland . November–December 2018 . 9 December 2021 . 9 December 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211209120459/https://www.historyireland.com/volume-26/issue-6-november-december-2018/would-the-countess-have-supported-repeal-of-the-8th/ . dead .
  26. Web site: Countess Markievicz—'The Rebel Countess'. Irish Labour History Society. 17 December 2017. 18 April 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200418145050/http://www.irishlabourhistorysociety.com/pdf/Markievicz.pdf. live.
  27. Book: Bell, Jo . On this day she : putting women back into history, one day at a time . 2021 . Tania Hershman, Ailsa Holland . 978-1-78946-271-5 . London . 127 . 1250378425.
  28. Web site: Archives – The First Women MPs . UK Parliament . 23 November 2018 . 7 October 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181007183548/https://www.parliament.uk/business/publications/parliamentary-archives/explore-guides-to-documentary-archive-/archives-highlights/archives-the-suffragettes/archives-the-first-women-in-parliament-1919-1945/ . live .
  29. Web site: Internment – Women Internees 1916–1973. John. McGuffin. 1973. 22 March 2009. 13 September 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190913203048/http://www.irishresistancebooks.com/internment/intern6.htm. live.
  30. Web site: Countess Constance de Markievicz. ElectionsIreland.org. 22 March 2009. 28 September 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190928132858/https://www.electionsireland.org/candidate.cfm?ID=994. live.
  31. Book: McNamara, Maedhbh. A Woman's Place is in the Cabinet: Women Ministers in Irish Government 1919-2019. Drogheda (Ireland). Sea Dog Books. 2020. 978-1-913275-06-8.
  32. https://www.militaryarchives.ie/collections/online-collections/bureau-of-military-history-1913-1921/reels/bmh/BMH.WS0749.pdf#page=8 Annie Farrington Bureau of Military History witness statement
  33. Web site: Markievicz, Constance Georgine. Pašeta. Senia. Dictionary of Irish Biography. 2009. Royal Irish Academy. 8 January 2022.
  34. Web site: Constance Georgina de Markievicz . Houses of the Oireachtas . 23 November 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181123131545/https://www.oireachtas.ie/en/members/member/Co%EF%BB%BFnstance-Georgina-de-Markievicz.D.1919-01-21/ . 23 November 2018 . live.
  35. Web site: New Deputies take their seats – Dáil Éireann debate – Friday, 12 Aug 1927 . 9 December 2018 . 28 August 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190828093602/https://www.oireachtas.ie/en/debates/debate/dail/1927-08-12/2/ . live .
  36. Web site: BBC's Short History of Ireland . https://web.archive.org/web/20100820044651/http://www.bbc.co.uk/northernireland/ashorthistory/archive/intro236.shtml . dead . 20 August 2010 . Bbc.co.uk . 1 January 1970 . 21 August 2013 .
  37. Book: Arrington, Lauren . Revolutionary Lives: Constance and Casimir Markievicz . Princeton University Press . 2015 . 978-1-4008-7418-7 . Princeton, NJ . 21–2 . 29 March 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200729155758/https://books.google.com/books?id=ZzRJCgAAQBAJ . 29 July 2020 . live.
  38. Web site: Constance Georgine Gore-Booth . https://web.archive.org/web/20071118172244/http://www.constancemarkievicz.ie/marriage.php . 18 November 2007 . 8 August 2011 . The Lissadell Estate.
  39. Book: Depuis, Nicola. Mná Na HÉireann: Women who Shaped Ireland. 2009. Mercier Press Ltd. Cork. 978-1-85635-645-9. 171. 14 May 2014. 29 July 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200729171243/https://books.google.com/books?id=heeon5xC5KwC&pg=PA171. live.
  40. Book: Levenson. Leah. Natterstad. Jerry H.. Hanna Sheehy-Skeffington: Irish Feminist. 1989. Syracuse University Press. New York. 978-0-8156-2480-6. 452. 14 May 2014. 29 July 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200729171229/https://books.google.com/books?id=MCJO7AX9tjsC&pg=PA152. live.
  41. News: Death of Madame Marcievicz. Irish Independent. 15 July 1927.
  42. News: The Late Madame Marcievicz: An Impressive Funeral. Irish Independent. 18 July 1927.
  43. Book: Ratcliffe, Susan. People on People: The Oxford Dictionary of Biographical Quotations. 2001. Oxford University Press. Oxford. 978-0-19-866261-7. 235.
  44. Web site: Ulster Bank, Stephen Street, Markievicz Road, RATHQUARTER, Sligo, SLIGO . buildingsfireland.ie . National Inventory of Architectural Heritage.
  45. Web site: Countess Markiewicz House, 115-140 Townsend Street, Mark's Lane, Dublin 2, DUBLIN . buildingsfireland.ie . National Inventory of Architectural Heritage.
  46. Web site: Picture of Constance Markievicz, first woman elected to House of Commons, gifted to UK by Ceann Comhairle – 19 Jul 2018, 11.20 – Houses of the Oireachtas. Oireachtas. Houses of the. 19 July 2018. www.oireachtas.ie. en-ie. 4 March 2019. 6 March 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190306111510/https://www.oireachtas.ie/en/press-centre/press-releases/20180719-picture-of-constance-markievicz-first-woman-elected-to-house-of-commons-gifted-to-uk-by-ceann-comhairle/. live.
  47. Web site: Countess Markievicz is honoured with a plaque at Rathmines home . 17 July 2019 . Dublingazette.com . 17 July 2019 . 17 July 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190717152837/https://dublingazette.com/news/news-city-edition/markievicz-plaque-89230/ . live .
  48. Web site: 2008-10-01 . Irish flag flies high as Markievicz room opens in Ukrainian village . 2024-04-21 . Irish Independent . en.