The Ambassador from the United Kingdom to Ireland is the United Kingdom's foremost diplomatic representative in Ireland and is in charge of the UK's diplomatic mission in Ireland.
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For several decades the British and Irish governments disputed the respective names of their States: the United Kingdom of Great Britiain and Northern Ireland and Ireland respectively. The UK's official policy was to refer to Ireland as the Republic of Ireland. The UK styled its Ambassador in Ireland as Her Majesty's Ambassador to the Republic of Ireland. Up to and including the year 1999, the Diplomatic List issued by the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office referred to the Republic of Ireland. However, this dispute over names was ended following the Good Friday Agreement. Consequently, since 2000 the British Diplomatic List has referred to Ireland, and the credentials presented by the British ambassador, Stewart Eldon, in 2003, were addressed to the President of Ireland.[1] The British Ambassador to Ireland has since been styled officially as Her Majesty's Ambassador to Ireland.[2]
The first British diplomatic representatives to Ireland did not have the title of Ambassador, instead having the title of "Representative". In 1949, when the Oireachtas passed the Republic of Ireland Act and thereby left the British Commonwealth, the office was upgraded to ambassador status.[3]
The appointment of the first United Kingdom representative in the late 1930s was a matter of some political discussion in the UK cabinet, the cabinet's minutes of September 1939 recording the following extract:[5]
The Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs reported that Mr de Valera had expressed himself as willing to receive a representative of the United Kingdom Government in Dublin. He proposed that this representative should have the title of Ambassador, but it had been intimated that this was impossible from our point of view and the title "Representative" had been agreed. The Secretary of State thought that until [the United Kingdom] representative had been appointed, it would be undesirable that the Defence Departments should raise with the Éire Government, the grant of any major defence facilities (e.g. the use of Brerhaven)