Maze prison, prison located 10 miles (16 km) west of Belfast, N.Ire., that was a symbolic centre of the struggle between unionists and nationalists during the “Troubles” in Northern Ireland in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.
Located on the site of a former Royal Air Force airfield, the prison opened as an internment camp in 1971 and at times housed up to 1,700 prisoners, including many of the most notorious paramilitary offenders. The prison population was divided along paramilitary lines, with each prisoner responsible to his “commanding officer.” As a result, the prison was the site of many protests and violent activities, including hunger strikes, mass escape attempts, and murder; it was considered by some to be a “university of terror,” where both unionist and nationalist prisoners learned how to commit deadlier terrorist offenses after their release. Perhaps its most famous prisoner was the Irish Republican Army (IRA) officer Bobby Sands; he was twice imprisoned for possession of firearms, and he died at the Maze in 1981 following a 66-day hunger strike. Under the terms of the Belfast Agreement, most prisoners—including many who were convicted of murder—were released, and the prison was closed in 2000.