Charles Stewart Parnell, (born June 27, 1846, Avondale, County Wicklow, Ire.—died Oct. 6, 1891, Brighton, Sussex, Eng.), Irish nationalist leader. He studied at the University of Cambridge but was suspended for a relatively minor breach of discipline and decided not to return. Back in Ireland he was elected to the British Parliament in 1875 as a supporter of Home Rule. In 1877 he was elected president of the Home Rule Confederation, and in 1880 he was elected chairman of the Home Rule group in Parliament. He also became the first president of the Irish Land League. He was jailed in October 1881 for making violent speeches against the new land act, and suppression of the Land League and a winter of sporadic local terror followed. The government realized that only Parnell could restore order, and an agreement was reached whereby tenants were to obtain concessions and Parnell was to use his influence to decrease agitation. Reaction against the Phoenix Park murders, which occurred days after his release in May 1882, enabled him to unite factions in Ireland to win support for parliamentary measures, such as William E. Gladstone’s Home Rule proposals. He remained popular in Ireland. In 1889 Capt. William O’Shea, an Irish nationalist colleague of Parnell’s, filed for divorce from his wife, Katherine O’Shea, Parnell’s mistress since 1880. The divorce was granted in November 1890, and its aftermath ultimately led to Parnell’s loss of political leadership.
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